Luck had something to do with it

Filed under: Ideas by Jeremy on Friday, 26th August 2011 at 3:29 pm

 
Gorgeous Georgie–Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks

 

Sam Harris is nothing if not direct when speaking his mind. While I agree with a lot of what he says, I would have thought that, by now, he would have said everything he could have said that would have offended his fans and readers. But he apparently just hit the jackpot of offensiveness recently when he suggested that billionaires–yes billionaires–should pay higher taxes:

You can declare the world’s religions to be cesspools of confusion and bigotry, you can argue that all drugs should be made legal and that free will is an illusion. You can even write in defense of torture. But I assure you that nothing will rile and winnow your audience like the suggestion that billionaires should contribute more of their wealth to the good of society.

His post clarifies his position without going back on what he originally said and contains one gem of a paragraph:

And lurking at the bottom of this morass one finds flagrantly irrational ideas about the human condition. Many of my critics pretend that they have been entirely self-made. They seem to feel responsible for their intellectual gifts, for their freedom from injury and disease, and for the fact that they were born at a specific moment in history. Many appear to have absolutely no awareness of how lucky one must be to succeed at anything in life, no matter how hard one works. One must be lucky to be able to work. One must be lucky to be intelligent, to not have cerebral palsy, or to not have been bankrupted in middle age by the mortal illness of a spouse.

Many of us have been extraordinarily lucky—and we did not earn it. Many good people have been extraordinarily unlucky—and they did not deserve it. And yet I get the distinct sense that if I asked some of my readers why they weren’t born with club feet, or orphaned before the age of five, they would not hesitate to take credit for these accomplishments. There is a stunning lack of insight into the unfolding of human events that passes for moral and economic wisdom in some circles. And it is pernicious. Followers of Rand, in particular, believe that only a blind reliance on market forces and the narrowest conception of self interest can steer us collectively toward the best civilization possible and that any attempt to impose wisdom or compassion from the top—no matter who is at the top and no matter what the need—is necessarily corrupting of the whole enterprise. This conviction is, at the very least, unproven. And there are many reasons to believe that it is dangerously wrong.

I know, I know, I’ll get back to talking about science and health soon but sometimes I like to reflect on the goals I think science and health should be serving.

One Response to “Luck had something to do with it”

  1. [...] a liberal nor a conservative because the real world clearly falls between those two extremes. A Sam Harris quote I posted a couple weeks ago sums this up nicely: Many of my critics pretend that they have been entirely self-made. They seem [...]

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