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Sarkar promotes a set of ten principles that encapsulate cardinal human values.149 The first three are concerned with the avoidance of violence, deceitfulness and theft as described above. To act according to cardinal principles of morality, says Sarkar, is virtue and to act against them is sin. The central idea in virtue is “to serve the collective interest, to accelerate the speed of the collective body…” To retard the speed of the collective body is sin.150 Note that the ‘speed of the collective body’ to which Sarkar refers is the collective movement from crude to subtle encapsulated in his definition of progress. We must flag this as a critical concept in Sarkar’s philosophy – virtue and sin, good and bad, are defined by reference to collective social progress and not in terms of some prevailing religious idea. The cardinal human principles have five important characteristics: 1) they are a natural system of morality in the sense that, without them, the natural developmental sequence of expansion and subtlification of mind cannot occur; 2) they are not ends in themselves but the means to individual and collective progress; 3) in particular they provide the necessary foundation for a healthy inner spiritual life; 4) their practice builds trust and therefore the quality of 48 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 cooperation in society; and 5) they are egalitarian because they are of benefit to all – their practice, by definition, excludes group or class interest. Of the ten principles, one is of particular importance because it encapsulates the others: non-objectification.151 Objectification is the use of people (or indeed anything animate and inanimate) as objects for one’s own purposes without regard for their well-being. It is interesting to note that economic exploitation is defined in a similar way.152 This principle appears in Neohumanism as the distinction between utility value and existential value. To recognize the existential value of a person is to recognize that their joys and sorrows are as important to them as my joys and sorrows are to me. We may therefore describe non-objectification as the empathic principle. It requires an ability to put oneself into the mind of another – to expand one’s consciousness beyond its limited ego boundary.153 Environmentalism infused with the empathic principle becomes deep ecology,154 whose significant feature is to acknowledge the existential value of the natural world in addition to its utility value for humans. Recall also that social capital is defined in terms of the trust and empathy inherent in social relationships. It is now clear that the building of social capital has a moral dimension.155 The practical translation of ethical principles into good social outcomes is performed by a society’s legal system.156 The law defines crime and the corresponding punishments. The larger the gap between crime and sin (the latter defined as that which impedes social progress), the more problems a society will face. Put another way, social progress depends on reducing the gap between morality and legality. Of course differences in climate and local circumstances will require minor differences in the application of the law from place to place, but the intention of the law should always be to give expression to cardinal human principles. If we try to expand the scope of the few fundamental cardinal human principles and draft the constitution, legal code, administrative and judicial systems in adjustment with the expanded scope of those cardinal principles, that will pave the way for the greater unity of human society. Humanity or Neohumanism will thereby acquire accelerated speed, which is one of the essential factors for the path of proper movement… This should not remain a utopian dream. It should be the first expression of the practical wisdom of humanity.157 Contemporary society offers many examples of a harmful gap between morality and legality. Consider CEO salaries, concerning which the word ‘obscene’ is used time and again. It was justifiably used to describe the £10.9m payouts received by Scottish Power’s former chief executive and colleagues just three months after they warned customers about severe increases in power bills.158 And in Scotland again, Sir Goodwin, former boss of the Royal Bank of THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 49 Scotland, had to have police protection after public anger over the announcement that he would receive a £650,000 annual pension entitlement on leaving the bank which had collapsed under his stewardship. CEOs defend their astronomical incomes as not breaking any law and as justified by ‘market forces’. A cardinal human principle relevant to CEO salaries would be contentment.159 To maintain contentment, one must struggle against greed. It requires, says Sarkar, “being contented with the earnings of normal labour”. How might we give this principle economic and legal expression? Sarkar’s proposal is to provide a guaranteed minimum income (GMI) to all, sufficient to cover the basic requirements of life, and then to set the maximum remuneration at some fixed ratio to the GMI. This policy is already part of cooperative ethics and has been practised by cooperative businesses in Mondragon and Maleny for many years. However, due to the contributory role that excessive CEO salaries played in precipitating the Global Financial Crisis, the proposal to set a maximum salary at some ratio to the minimum is finding broader support.160 Another gap between morality and legality in contemporary capitalist society concerns the waste of material resources. The relevant cardinal principle is non-acquisitiveness,161 or the avoidance of superfluous material consumption. Material goods should be acquired only to the extent required for a fruitful life. Note that this definition implies a legitimacy to consume something beyond basic needs, in contrast to Marx’s ‘needs slogan’ that limits individual consumption to the basic requirements. The justification for placing a moral constraint on material consumption is that material resources are finite. One person’s inconsiderate use of finite resources disturbs the welfare of others and upsets environmental balance. From a social perspective, therefore, this principle offers the moral justification to pursue economic efficiency. As we have mentioned earlier, those who argue for productive efficiency do have a valid moral argument. But that same argument must also extend to efficiency of consumption, the issue which so worries environmentalists. Profligate consumption of fossil fuels (because capitalism considers Nature to be free for the taking) has brought planet Earth to a dire situation. The green slogan, reduce, reuse and recycle has a moral imperative. Neo-ethics The cardinal human principles define virtuous conduct for individuals. By contrast, Neo-ethics162 is more concerned with the ethics of groups, that is, social groupings whose identity is defined by race, language, gender, economic class and so on. Neo-ethics is not an alternative to the cardinal human principles – the two are complementary. As the name implies, Neo-ethics is the ethics associated with Neohumanism. 50 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 Recall that the purpose of Neohumanism is to expand the circle of those who are included in the cooperative embrace. The existence of a circle, however, implies two groups, those on the inside and those on the outside. Within the circle there is cooperation and outside the circle is the other, those with whom there is not necessarily felt a need or even a willingness to cooperate. Groups are inevitable in society and they cannot simply be wished away. The problem to be addressed by Neo-ethics is the pathological tendency for some groups to coalesce around the desire to exercise power over the ‘other’. Sarkar labels this problem imperialism, a term he uses quite generally to refer to the endeavour of any group to wield power over another. The imperialist urge is a psychic ailment “rooted deep in the human psyche”. Goaded by this psychic ailment, a superpower forces its own selfish national interests on other weaker states to establish its suzerainty politically, militarily, etc. An imperialist power wants to dominate and exploit other socio-politico-economic units as an expansion, perpetration and consolidation of its vested interests; a powerful linguistic group suppresses other minority linguistic groups; the so-called upper castes subjugate the so-called lower castes in society; and opportunistic males curtail the rights of women in various ways. In all these cases, the same inherent psychological malady of imperialism prevails.163 Whether expressed as capitalism, nationalism, caste-imperialism, male chauvinism or lingualism, imperialism is anti-human. “It runs counter to the spirit of Neohumanism and the ethics of human life… it thwarts human progress and creates global wars and all sorts of divisive and destructive forces in society.” Imperialists “cultivate a psychology based on slavery, inferiority complex, pseudo-culture and psycho-economic exploitation”.164 Concerning the problem of imperialism, socialists in the 19th century, both utopian and scientific, were quite naive. They appeared to believe that the imposition of material and social equality would somehow obliterate groups and therefore obliterate the group psychology giving rise to imperialism. But the imperialist impulse runs deep. George Orwell, in Animal Farm, identified it as the source of what went wrong with the socialist revolution but, as we have previously noted, he apparently still believed in the healing power of an imposed material and social egalitarianism. An appropriate concentration of political power in society is required for stable governance – nowhere does Sarkar give the anarchist agenda any credence. Furthermore, individuals and groups will differ naturally in their social influence, quite apart from any power granted to them by a democratic process. We may view power as a neutral instrument which can be used for good purposes or bad. The question is whether power necessarily corrupts those on whom it is endowed and, if so, what can be done about it. Sarkar recognizes the seriousness of the problem and approaches it from two sides. On the external or objective side he advocates, among other things, the separation of powers and THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 51 the checks and balances that have gradually developed in Western democracies.165 But external checks and balances are not enough – something is required on the internal or subjective side. We have already noted that the natural sequence of human development gives rise to increasing intellectual subtlety, empathy and moral intuition. This constitutes the starting point for Prout’s understanding of individual and collective progress. Unfortunately, for many different reasons, the developmental sequence is sometimes frustrated, in which case some intervention is required to remove the impediment and to encourage healthy development to resume. Sarkar views the imperialist tendency as a psychic ailment, that is, as a failure to develop to maturity. It arises when a person or group fails to maintain a healthy balance in life, that is, fails to maintain a balance between their outer (material) and inner (spiritual) lives, or to use Sarkar’s unusual terminology, to maintain a balance between the carbonic and non-carbonic pabula required to sustain those lives. When people get detached from non-carbonic pabula and become increasingly engrossed in carbonic pabula, there are two ill-effects as a consequence. First, the arena of one’s own carbonic pabula will increase and the mind will gradually and steadily drift towards crude matter. Secondly, one’s mind will think in terms of devouring other’s carbonic pabula. This is the psychological explanation of imperialism. That is, imperialism has its origin in the psyche and functions in the psychic arena.166 This passage addresses the internal or subjective side of the problem of power. To protect against the corrupting influence of power it is important to remain ‘attached’ to one’s inner spiritual life. The lust for power grows in intensity when one fails to maintain a healthy spiritual life. This idea is pivotal in Sarkar’s social philosophy but it is very difficult for Westerners to understand because Western culture is predominantly materialistic – we have little understanding of the tremendous social importance of a healthy spiritual life. Social dynamism is the resultant of a myriad of social forces, some of them noble, some ignoble, some magnanimous, some selfish and so on. Just as in individual life, so too in society, there is a never ending struggle between progressive and degenerating influences. Sometimes the former are predominant, sometimes the latter. In the worst case, degenerating forces dominate to such an extent that they ultimately lead to the complete destruction of a society. The rise and fall of various fascist regimes in the 20th century are obvious examples. Fortunately, many steps can be taken to tip the balance of social dynamism in favour of progress. One of them, says Sarkar, is to promote the conscious acceptance of the two principles of Neo-ethics. The first states that spirituality, being that which promotes all human virtue and subtle consciousness and therefore ultimately drives all social progress, “must be accepted as the 52 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 supreme desideratum in human life”. The second principle concerns maintaining balance in life. “There should be happy adjustment and balanced blending between carbonic and non-carbonic pabula.” It must be emphasized that in Sarkar’s view spirituality is not something imposed or unnatural. It is certainly not religiosity. Rather it is an attribute latent in all human beings and its expression is to be encouraged because it promotes all that is noble, charming and impressive about the human species. Hence the first principle – without the conscious acceptance of the importance of spirituality in individual and collective life, social progress becomes uncertain, hesitant and difficult to sustain. Leaders fall prey to their cruder ambitions and a blind populous follows to their ultimate destruction. In order to accommodate social progress, a second principle becomes necessary. Progress requires that the structure of society, including its economic structure, be continually adjusted. If we understand an economy as producing the many kinds of pabula required for human health and fulfilment, progress requires a gradual shift in emphasis from producing carbonic pabula to producing more and more subtle non-carbonic pabula. Sarkar describes that part of an economy producing non-carbonic pabula as the psycho-economy. Its role is to find new and creative solutions to economic problems so as to encourage the maximum utilization of psychic and spiritual potentialities.167 We live in an era where human intellect and aspirations have attained some degree of subtlety, but the most powerful of our political and economic institutions are still mired in the dysfunctional materialism of previous centuries. The choice is rather stark – imperialism or cooperation – but there is a choice nonetheless. Given the human proclivity for abuse of power and the tremendous impact that this disturbing facet of the human character has had in history generally and in the history of the cooperative movement and of failed socialist endeavours, it deserves investigation from as many perspectives as possible, the political, but also including the psychological and the spiritual.168 The biopsychology of ethics Since the acceptance of ethical principles is essential to sustain a cooperative society, it is clear that training in ethical decision making cannot be left to chance. It is encouraging to find that courses on business ethics are now multiplying in universities around the world, but something more than reading books on the subject is required. Soldiers cannot learn to fight from books alone and the same applies to those wishing to acquire ethical muscle. The learning of ethics requires exposure to real moral dilemmas because, as recent research has revealed, much more than the logical brain is involved. Brain scans have opened a huge field of research into what parts of the brain are involved during different kinds of activity. In one recent study,169 neuroTHE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 53 scientists wanted to discover those parts of the brain associated with different states of mind such as empathy, compassion, altruism, emotional stability, selfunderstanding and pro-social attitudes. They found that pondering a situation calling for altruism or compassion activated a brain region known as the medial prefrontal cortex. However, moral decision making involved the joint activity of several distinct parts of the brain – the medial prefrontal cortex just mentioned (sometimes described as the social-empathic cortex), the rational cortex (dorso-lateral prefrontal) which plays a role in sustaining attention and working memory, the conflict detection cortex (“sixth sense” anterior cingulated) and the limbic system (a part of the brain usually associated with primitive emotions, such as sex, fear and anger). The authors concluded that the neuro-biology of wisdom may involve an optimal balance between the more primitive brain regions and the newest ones. For those teaching ethics in MBA courses, the conclusion is clear. If the goal is to help students acquire ethical muscle, they will need to be exposed to situations which exercise all these different parts of the brain at the same time. It turns out that all decision making involves the emotional parts of our brain. Even decisions which are not apparently emotionally or morally charged still engage parts of the brain associated with emotion. Far from being opposites, emotion and rationality are interdependent. Neuro-physiologist Antonio Damasio170 has shown that people who lose the ability to perceive or experience emotions as a result of a brain injury also find it hard, if not impossible, to make decisions. Another important finding, this time by cognitive psychologists,171 is that intuitive judgements of right and wrong operate quite independently of religious affiliation. Atheists are just as ethical and have just as strong a moral compass as persons with religious beliefs. Harvard psychologist Marc Hauser says that his investigations, designed to test the kinds of moral decisions made by people from different cultures and backgrounds, lead him to believe that there might be something like a universal moral grammar, a set of principles that every human is born with regardless of culture. It is a tool kit in some sense for building possible moral systems. The analogy here is to Noam Chomsky’s idea of a universal grammar, a basic linguistic tool kit that underlies all the languages of the world, but which nevertheless permits much variation in lexicon and grammar. Likewise, Hauser says, there is a suite of universal (innate) principles that strongly influence how all humans think about the nature of harming and helping others, but each culture has some freedom, within constraints, to determine how those principles are expressed. Although in many cultures religious beliefs have become the standard way to conceptualize or articulate moral intuitions, religious conviction is not the origin of those intuitions. Hauser takes an evolutionary point of view and views the selective advantage of a universal moral grammar within our brains as a mechanism that facilitates 54 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 making rapid decisions when confronted with ethical dilemmas. Part of the substrate for a universal grammar must surely be the proclivity for cooperation, altruism and empathy that also appears to have evolved with the human species and that is demonstrated even in infants as young as 15-24 months.172 From this perspective cooperation and ethics cannot be disentangled; they are simply two different views on the same facet of the human character. They are both supported by the same biological mechanisms which, according to evolutionary anthropologist Michael Tomasello, have: …very likely supported humans’ earliest forms of complex collaboration and, ultimately, our unique forms of cultural organization, from the evolution of tolerance and trust to the creation of such group-level structures as cultural norms and institutions.173 Egalitarianism Recall the assertion (possibly the most important made in this essay) that a cooperative society can be built where there is some reasonable effort to do so. That effort involves two parts, the first of which was discussed in the previous section, the personal struggle with ethics. We now turn to the collective struggle to establish a cooperative society, where the focus is on egalitarianism. We have noted the communist attempt to impose material equality and found it to be a disastrous failure. However, we have also reviewed some of the accumulating evidence that more equal societies perform better on virtually all social indicators than less equal societies. Even the rich are happier. People appear to be deeply sensitive, even subconsciously so, to differences in social status and relationships. The greater the differences, the more tension people experience. The increased trust, cooperation and well-being that accompany greater equality are associated with a reduction in social stress. The balance of equality So the question arises – if 100% equality is both impossible and undesirable, and yet equal societies are happier, what should be the balance of equality/inequality? Those on the left and right of politics take different positions on this question because they attach different values to the achievement of equality over other goals, such as productive efficiency. We have suggested that there is a legitimate policy debate here because both equality and efficiency have a moral dimension. The moral requirement for productive efficiency places a legitimate constraint on the virtue of income equality. If talent and hard work are not rewarded, both productivity and cooperation suffer. The Proutist solution has two components: first, to divide the Gross Domestic Product into two parts, one part to guarantee the minimum requirements of life to all and the other to reward effort and talent; and second, to set the maximum THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 55 income as a fixed ratio to the minimum income. As a community accumulates more wealth, the quantity and quality of the minimum requirements can be increased. The commitment to egalitarianism in this incomes policy is evident in three respects. First is the commitment to provide the minimum requirements to all (humans, animals and plants). This corresponds to Marx’s dictum – to each according to need. Second is the commitment to increase purchasing capacity by increasing the quality and availability of the minimum requirements: …increasing the purchasing capacity of each individual is the controlling factor in a Proutist economy. The purchasing capacity of common people in many undeveloped, developing and developed countries has been neglected; hence the economic systems of these countries are breaking down and creating a worldwide crisis. The first thing that must be done to increase the purchasing capacity of the common people is to maximize the production of essential commodities, not the production of luxury goods. This will restore parity between production and consumption and ensure that the minimum requirements are supplied to all.174 Third is the commitment to reduce income inequality by gradually reducing the gap between the maximum and the minimum income. After the needs of all have been met, Sarkar proposes to reward those who have demonstrated talent and effort. Fairness and the desirability to maintain productivity justify such an approach. The concept of equal distribution is a utopian idea. It is merely a clever slogan to deceive simple, unwary people. Prout rejects this concept and advocates the maximum utilization and rational distribution of resources. This will provide incentives to increase production.175 Rewarding talent and effort can be interpreted as the meritocratic component of Prout because, quite obviously, those so rewarded will rise in social position. Many socialists oppose the meritocratic concept because, as the word implies, it can lead to the entrenchment of a class that monopolizes access to merit, thereby perpetuating its own power and privilege. Sarkar is clear that the necessity to reward talent should not be at the expense of needs (however they are defined in any particular age) and he also advocates checks and balances on public power. But the positive outcomes are too obvious to ignore: work satisfaction, work place efficiency, the possibility for self-improvement and so on. The productivity increase so achieved creates more wealth which can be used to increase the standard of ‘needs’. However the egalitarian versus meritocratic impulses are always likely to be in political conflict – to hope otherwise is to hope for the discredited socialist utopia. Rather than ignore or suppress the associated political tensions, it is sensible to recognize them and provide a forum in which they can be expressed constructively. 56 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 Ultimately the degree of egalitarianism in a particular community and the rate at which egalitarian indicators can be increased is a matter of culture and collective social consciousness. These do not change easily, which is why the sudden imposition of equality will always fail if culture cannot sustain it. The egalitarian principle in Neohumanism is referred to as the Principle of Social Equality. It is a social mentality as much as an economic state. And significantly it is defined in terms of needs: It is the realization that all the creatures which have come to live in this world, do not want to leave it – they all want to survive. Thus we must grant them their right to remain in this world, their right to survive. We must continue to fulfil all their needs so that they will not have to leave this world prematurely. We must make arrangements for the food, clothes, education, shelter and medical treatment of each and every individual, so that all can live in this world as long as possible, and become assets to the earth.176 In the context of Neohumanism, creatures is a reference to humans, animals and plants. Those who wish to create a better society, says Sarkar, will have to “stage a fight against all crude forces, a pauseless struggle against inequality and cowardliness”. He then adds curiously that “complete one hundred percent equality is an impossibility”, so for those wishing to create a better society, “Where is the opportunity for them to have rest?”177 This is the way of the world – we must struggle for social equality while recognizing that complete equality is impossible due to the relentless dynamism of nature. Coordinated cooperation Sarkar makes a distinction between ordinary cooperation, coordinated cooperation and subordinated cooperation. He opposes subordinated cooperation and wants to promote coordinated cooperation: …for the maintenance of any organism, there must be a close cooperation between each of its component parts. Humanity is not inert, and the relationships between human beings depend on more than mere cooperation. This cooperation instead of being based on a master-servant relationship, must be constructed in a warmly cordial atmosphere of free human beings. It should be a coordinated cooperation and not a subordinated one.178 The features of coordinated cooperation that distinguish it from ordinary or “mere” cooperation are: 1) coordinated cooperation “must be constructed”, that is, it is intentional; 2) the affect is positive for all concerned because part of the process is to create “a warmly cordial atmosphere”; and 3) coordinated cooperation must be voluntary, which is one of the internationally accepted principles of cooperation. THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 57 Although the distinction between coordinated and subordinated cooperation is quite general, Sarkar uses it most often in relation to the position of women in society: In the annals of human history we do find women whose memory glorifies not only womanhood, but the entire human world. In philosophy and spirituality, social reform and educational pursuits, science and technology, they stand second to none. Women are found discussing the riddles of philosophy, solving problems of social and educational reform, and are inspiring men in times of struggle. They have their potentiality no less than men. The difference in natural and biological characteristics between men and women speaks only of coordinated cooperation, not of subordinated cooperation.179 The progress of society is impossible when women are in a subjugated or subordinated position. Sarkar cites his own country as an example. Take the case of India. We are not as developed as we should be. Why? One of the reasons is that we have kept women confined within the walls of their homes, resulting in the progress of only fifty percent of the population – the males. And as only the men are progressing, they will have to carry the load of fifty percent of the population. Thus the speed of progress is reduced. Ideally, women should also move with their own strength and with the same speed as their male counterparts. In the process of movement, if they feel pain in their legs, if they fall on their faces, they should be physically lifted up. But not only women may need assistance: the males may also fall down, and then it will be the duty of women to extend their helping hand to carry the load of their male counterparts. We cannot expect that, in relation to men, the position of women will remain one of subordinated cooperation: it may also be one of coordinated cooperation. The position of males may even be one of subordinated cooperation. Nothing can be said emphatically in this world. The fact is that we must move together in unison with all.180 There are two points to note from this passage. First is the clear hint that, while the preferred future is coordinated cooperation, men could well find themselves in the subordinated position. There are surely enough clues in the changing dynamics of contemporary society to suggest this possibility. According to the UK trend forecaster Future Laboratory, “the future of business is feminine”. In the wake of the Global Financial Crisis, even in the high powered world of global finance, women are now more sought after because they are more inclined to be team players and less inclined to take testosterone-fuelled risks.181 A second observation is that Sarkar never advocates the obliteration of “natural and biological” differences between groups as the solution to antagonisms between them. In order to bring an end to patriarchy, one might propose three possibilities: matriarchy, coordinated cooperation or androgyny. The first of these is a distinct possibility; the second is to be preferred but what about the 58 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 third? Androgyny could be understood as the attempt to stop gender exploitation by diminishing the physical and psychological differences between men and women. Sarkar never appears to favour this strategy. His approach to class antagonisms, for example, is not to impose material equality (communist states tried this and failed) but to allow class dynamics to unfold progressively while remaining vigilant against the tendency for one class to exploit the others.182 More generally, the dynamics that arise from the interaction of the many different groups in society should be allowed to play out naturally. Differences naturally endowed can be used to help one another. Service psychology underpins Sarkar’s approach to coordinated cooperation. Political leanings
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