Facebook Pixel Success & Luck | Philosophy Now - lifestyle - Lees dit verhaal op Magzter.com

Poging GOUD - Vrij

Success & Luck

Philosophy Now

|

February/March 2024

Carlo Filice argues that we should share our success, even if it's hard earned, because we often don't deserve it as much as we'd like to think.

- Carlo Filice

Success & Luck

In thinking about slightly redistributive economic policies, it is essential to address a belief many people hold deeply. This is the belief that honest, hard-working people always deserve most or all that they earn. This belief is bound up with notions of fairness, of self-ownership, and with ideas of the very essence of what a person is. Unfortunately these are also the very notions that undermine the belief in absolute deserving, once examined.

Let's start with the part that's hard to dispute. Those who end up toiling hard in low paid physical or mental labor deserve their pay, and much more. At the opposite end are those who end up fabulously wealthy who have often been targeted as undeserving of their sheer amounts of money. A case in their defense could be made if their success was attained fairly and was a necessary by-product of the best possible market system meaning the one that benefits people more than any of the alternatives. But neither of these conditions are empirically true.

First, most current market systems do not benefit all people, or even a greater percentage of people, more than all alternative systems. Scandinavian countries often do best on overall happiness, and they operate extensive welfare systems. Second, the neo-liberal free market system is not like Monopoly, where chance and skill combine to produce winners fairly because all the players start out with equal resources. Rather, the starting points are always deeply unequal. Not surprisingly, most children of upper class families remain in the upper classes as adults, and most children of lower class families remain in the lower classes. This is so even if there is no formal cheating by the upper class parents and children. The sociological data supporting this seems incontrovertible.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Nosferatu

Stefan Bolea considers two very different artistic approaches to love and death.

time to read

6 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Heidegger's Ghost

Raymond Tallis wonders where Heidegger's body went when he was philosophising.

time to read

7 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Is Comedy Good For Us?

Damaris Stock has a laugh with Plato and friends.

time to read

10 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

In Defense of Idleness

Wendell O'Brien says, 'Just Don't Do It'.

time to read

10 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Leaving Nothing to Chance by Carl Knight

LEAVING NOTHING TO Chance (2025) by Carl Knight, is an informed, proficient and lucid defence of luck egalitarianism.

time to read

3 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Star Maker by Olaf Stapledon

THE 1937 SCIENCE FICTION novel Star Maker was written by philosophy professor Olaf Stapledon in the dark days as Europe awaited the onslaught of Nazi Germany. This casts a shadow over the whole book.

time to read

6 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Love & Emptiness in the Sufi Tradition

Medha Ninad Tambe meditates on Rumi, love and self-negation.

time to read

7 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

The Hedgehog's Dilemma: A Metaphor About the Challenges of Human Intimacy

Krishna Chaubey explains Arthur Schopenhauer's poignant thought experiment.

time to read

4 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

The Mirror & the Flame

Rebwar Fatah imagines Attar's & Hegel's shared path.

time to read

4 mins

April/May 2025

Philosophy Now

Philosophy Now

Free and Equal by Daniel Chandler

DANIEL CHANDLER, AN economist and philosopher based at the London School of Economics, begins Free and Equal: What Would a Fair Society Look Like? (2023) by asking an intriguing question. How is it, he wonders, that the most influential political philosopher of the last century has had almost no practical impact on politics or policy? The philosopher in question is John Rawls, whose magnum opus was A Theory of Justice (1971).

time to read

5 mins

April/May 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size