The Collectivistic Premise: Economics in a New Key
By Eli Merchant
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About this ebook
While this explanation may account for some aspects of economic behavior in the marketplace that can be labeled as utilitarian and individualistic, this book takes note of a new principle, the collectivistic premise, whether reflected in consumption, work, and trade, which has not received its merited attention. Human beings act not only out of self-serving motives but also out of communal ones so that the marketplace assumes a character and personality larger than its constituent parts. Far from being irrelevant, ethical, political, and communal considerations are central to comprehending its nature and function. The role of the emerging global economy and advances in technology provide even stronger incentives to examine in detail this neglected aspect of human motivation and conduct.
Eli Merchant
Eli Merchant, PhD, lives in New York City, where he has taught at a number of colleges and has written and pursued interdisciplinary research on a variety of subjects. AuthorHouse, an Author Solutions, Inc. self-publishing imprint, is a leading provider of book publishing, marketing, and bookselling services for authors around the globe and offers the industry’s only suite of Hollywood book-to-film services. Committed to providing the highest level of customer service, AuthorHouse assigns each author personal publishing and marketing consultants who provide guidance throughout the process. Headquartered in Bloomington, Indiana, AuthorHouse celebrated fifteen years of service to authors in Sept. 2011.
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The Collectivistic Premise - Eli Merchant
2015 Eli Merchant. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 06/23/2016
ISBN: 978-1-5049-0014-0 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-5049-0013-3 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-5049-0012-6 (e)
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
CONTENTS
Preface
Introduction
Chapter I
The Market Place
Chapter II
Consumption: The Concept of Commodity
Chapter III
Work: The Concept of Role
Chapter IV
Trade: Buying and Selling
Chapter V
Games: A Collectivistic Perspective
Chapter VI
The Decline and Fall of Markets
Chapter VII
Weapons: The Anti-Collectivistic Tool
TO DIANA
PREFACE
It may be opportune at this moment in history to begin the reassessment of our most basic assumptions and premises concerning human and economic behavior. This is not an easy task either for an individual or society at large. An individual will usually not question the premises or assumptions motivating his conduct, or even be aware of them, until experience forces him to do so when his actions produce consequences that do not match his expectations and may in fact go counter to them. Even then he may decide to experience these frustrations in adhesion to previous practice if they do not totally interfere with his modus operandi. However if they occur often enough and exact a sufficiently costly toll, he will have to rethink his course of action and modify his behavior accordingly, beginning the difficult process of self-examination involved.
Are we culturally, sociologically and above all economically at a similarly crucial point in our policies and the ways we look at the world? Are we facing obstacles and impediments particularly now that the globe has shrunk and geographic distances no longer matter, or matter as profoundly in the way they did previously, sabotaging the assumptions and premises clung to for generations in shaping our economic practices and beliefs?
Let us look at some of these assumptions and premises.
It is generally accepted by many economists that humans are actuated by self-interest at least in the economic sphere. But is it true in an absolute universal sense? Are there no exceptions to this principle? Does not experience provide us with daily examples of regressive and destructive behavior that defy all rational utilitarian calculations and belie this principle? If we look at institutions military, ecclesiastic, eleemosynary, cultural, artistic, and the people who populate them, the soldier ready to sacrifice his life for his country, the philanthropist genuinely devoted to eradicating social wrongs, the artist who will forego economic rewards to remain true to his artistic vision, the nun and monk who forsake worldly satisfactions, we realize that the paradigm of self-interest is no more acceptable than the opposite premise underlying so much of discredited Communist ideology of human perfectibility where the individual can shed his bourgeois instincts for the greater good.
Another premise is that the nation state can control economic events and phenomena within the market place, and that through the appropriate regulative action can shelter its citizenry from the economic storms that interfere with the fulfillment of its function. However, given the globalization of commerce where every part of the world is a part of a larger mosaic, it is unlikely that any nation state can perform this function in any genuine and effective sense. Hence the arguments between conservative and liberal theories concerning regulation and its role in the economy seem academic and irrelevant. Whether the state should or should not take measures to regulate the economy becomes increasingly academic, that is, if the state does not have the means to successfully implement these measures. In fact, are political entities known as states
that emerged in post-feudal Europe where an agricultural economy gave way to an industrial one still relevant and meaningful in today’s world? Or are they going the way of the dinosaur given the emergence of a new global economic environment?
The same can be said of the nation state from a military point of view. It was not that long ago when a country like Germany and Japan could entertain with some degree of plausibility and credibility, at least as far as its peoples were concerned, military ventures that would result in the domination of other parts of the world. What was the point of these military ventures? Was it defense of national interests? Was it attainment of economic advantage? Was it political and ideological domination in and for itself? It is interesting to note that even small nations like Belgium and Holland, which now seem the embodiment of democracy and neutrality, sought militaristic ventures to advance their economic agendas in former times in their conquest of the Congo and Indonesia. All of this seems so remote, implausible and unreal in the world as constituted today where war provides no advantage either for the aggressor or the victim nation that it is hard to reconstruct the motivation that led nations to these policies to begin with.
A person like a Caesar and Alexander, Genghis Kahn or Attila the Hun, Napoleon or Hitler seems as remote as a prehistoric species from a distant past.
It is interesting moreover that the most fundamental threat to global peace is a stateless creature, Al Qaeda, operating outside conventional geographical boundaries.
There have been important climacteric moments in the lives of people and nations. One occurred when man shifted from land