The Mythology of Individualism
by Brian Cooney article link
June 10, 2011 | OpEdNews
In her Textbook of Americanism, GOP saint Ayn Rand wrote: "The basic principle of the United States of America is Individualism." At a 2005 celebration honoring Rand, Republican young gun Paul Ryan declared that every battle fought by Republicans "usually comes down to one conflict - individualism versus collectivism."
Randian conservatives are ok with private collectives--even corporations powered by the activities of hundreds of thousands of employees and revenues larger than many nations. What they fear and loathe is the political collective, a people or community pursuing a common good through government action.
As the influential libertarian philosopher Robert Nozick put it, "There is no social entity with a good ... There are only individual people, different individual people, with their own individual lives." In other words, society is nothing but a multitude of individuals for whom there is no public good, only private goods sought by different individuals and groups.
Nozick would add that, in a free society, no individual or group should use the power of government to force others to contribute to their private goals such as food or medicine. Doing so amounts to enslavement. As Rand Paul said, if you want to legislate universal healthcare, "you believe in slavery."
The only acceptable role for government is to protect individuals' property and liberty from aggressors.
Individualists want a political system built around self-made, self-reliant and value-creating agents whose connections to other humans are purely voluntary or contractual. That's why they see the free market as society itself, as the natural environment for human nature.
Of course, the very idea of a market society is hard to reconcile with the individualist picture of humans. Our constant transactions with each other show our dependence on goods and services provided by others.
Individualists would respond that these transactions are voluntary in a free-market society. Each of us can choose with whom to deal and which things we do for ourselves rather than rely on others.
We make ourselves who we are and we create values by these choices. When we get what we want through market transactions, we draw on our own resources to offer something that another person needs in return.
Behold the individualist's new Adam--a gift to the world from our exceptional culture. This muscular ego is the creature of what Herbert Hoover called "the American system of rugged individualism."
There is something very appealing about this picture. All of us want our children to become self-reliant and value-creating individuals, and a healthy society needs to nurture these traits in all its citizens.
However, this picture is deeply flawed because what it leaves out is just as important as what it includes. No one is self-made. A society makes individuals just as much as individuals make a society.
Nothing is closer to the very core of an individual than their thought processes. Yet it is language that makes thought possible by supplying the mind with ideas and rules for combining them. There is no private language--it's community property.
A few individuals manage to put words or ideas together in very original ways, like Shakespeare or Einstein. Yet even they would have been impossible without their societies' language and education, and without institutions (such as the theater and science) which they did not create.
Every individual's life is an intersection of pre-scripted roles (e.g. being parents, spouses or professionals) that we did not invent, and without which our behavior would be unintelligible to others or to ourselves. Like actors on a stage, we play these roles more or less well.
All our labor, however skilled, is a social product, a joint production of the labors of countless others such as teachers, farmers and city employees. They build and maintain the environment or infrastructure without which our own work would be impossible.
The self-made individual touted by Randian individualists is a fiction, a distortion. People who believe in this fiction suffer from what we can call Trumpism.
Donald Trump is the perfect symbol of the craziness of individualism. His brief candidacy collapsed as he was laughed off the political stage. Because of his ridiculous self-importance and exaggerated sense of power, people quickly saw him as a clown.
Trumpism makes Americans tolerant of extreme inequality in wealth and income. The top 5% owned 62% of the nation's wealth in 2007. Trumpists would say that these numbers reflect the immensely greater individual contributions of the very rich.
Finally, it's simply false to say that there are only private goods, and the only legitimate function of government is to protect them. The society that makes our individual lives possible has many important and essentially public goods.
These include infrastructure, education, a clean environment, social insurance, and basic scientific research of the sort that created the internet and will launch nanotechnology. These public goods empower and liberate our individual lives.
Brian Cooney: I'm a retired philosophy professor at Centre College. I also am a regular columnist for our local paper, The Danville Advocate-Messenger. My columns have also appeared in the Lexington Herald-Leader and Buzzflash.com. My last book was Posthumanity-Thinking Philosophically about the Future (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004). I am a strong opponent of the gung-ho version of capitalism peddled here and abroad as the "Washington consensus."
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