It
is human nature to eat when you are hungry, to drink when you are
thirsty, and to sleep when you are tired. Nothing can alter this
least of all socialists. However ,what is meant by human nature as an
objection to socialism , is not human nature at all, but human
behaviour. Human behaviour roots are to be found principally in one's
environment and the economic conditions which influences one's
physiological make-up. Mankind behaves in the way it does, very
largely, although not completely, because of the conditioning he
receives , since we are social animals and lives in a community.
How
we behave is not "innate"
or governed by our "instincts"
or our genes, but can and does vary depending on the sort of society
we were brought up in and live in. The docility and passivity of the
world's population has contributed greatly to keeping intact the
increasingly unequal, barbaric and rapacious society that is global
capitalism. Because people believe there is no alternative to
capitalism, it keeps on existing. Now we are witnessing a change in
people's views and there is an increased activism centred around our
planet and its eco-systems. The idea of a zero-growth, sustainable
society has been put forward by those in the environmentalist
movement. Even though the declared aims of the environmentalists
appear to be highly desirable the fatal flaw is that they stand for
the continuation of the market system. This means the continuation of
the capitalist system which is the cause of the problems of pollution
in the first place.
Even
though the most ardent eco-warrior advocates a society based on
cooperation and production-for-use, and where a sustainable
production is in harmony with the environment and public affairs are
run in a decentralised and democratic manner these ideas are firmly
wedded to a form of capitalism, holding a belief that capitalism can
be reformed so as to be compatible with achieving an environmentally
sustainable society. It is perfectly clear that their sustainable
society is not socialism, for the continuance of money and the market
is assumed, together with private ownership. The ultimate aim is a
participatory economy, based on smaller-scale enterprise, with a
greatly-reduced dependence on the world market. What is being
proposed is the abolition both of the world market, with the
competition for resources and sales it engenders, and of existing
centralised states, and their replacement by a worldwide network of
smaller human communities providing locally for their own needs. It
is setting out to impose on capitalism something that is incompatible
with its nature. If the climate crisis is to be solved, this system
must go. What is required is political action - political action
aimed at replacing this system by a new and different one.
Socialism
does not require us all to become altruists, putting the interests of
others above our own. In fact socialism doesn't require people to be
any more altruistic than they are today. We will still be concerned
primarily with ourselves, with satisfying our needs, our need to be
well considered by others as well as our material and sexual needs.
No doubt too, we will want to
“possess” personal
belongings such as our clothes and other things of personal use, and
to feel secure in our physical occupation of the house or flat we
live in, but this will be just that – our home and not a financial
asset.
Such “selfish”
behaviour will still exist in socialism but the acquisitiveness
encouraged by capitalism will no longer exist. The coming of
socialism will not require great changes in the way we behave,
essentially only the accentuation of some of the behaviours which
people exhibit today (friendliness, helpfulness, co-operation) at the
expense of others which capitalism encourages. Socialism is a society
where would all be considered of equal worth and be able to have an
equal say in the way things are run and in which we recognise
ourselves as members of an interdependent community where different
people perform different functions and where everybody, irrespective
of their function, has access to what they need to live and enjoy
life just because they are members of the human race. And this
doesn't require us to be any less selfish or more altruistic than we
are today – it's not about changing human nature but about changing
the basis of society.
We don't need to change human nature; it is
only human behaviour that needs to change. While our genes can't be
ignored, they only intervene in our behaviours in an indirect way, by
programming the development of our brains. Therefore, to understand
the complexities of our behaviour, it is to our brains, not directly
to our genes, that we have to look. When we do this we find that our
brains allow us, as a species, to adopt – and, as prehistory and
history bear out, we have in fact adopted – a great variety of
different behaviours depending on the natural, economic and social
environments we have found ourselves in.
No comments:
Post a Comment