You probably don’t spend too much time wondering where all
the pundits get the ideas for their op-ed columns. I don’t either.
I am on occasion struck by the
fact that a columnist picks up on a subject that I have posted about. Last
Saturday, 2/16, I posted about, “The Pursuit of Leisure.” Today, Ross Douthat
wrote a column about leisure in The New York Times.
I was not the first to address the topic. As I duly noted, I found it on Lifehacker. It also appeared in the Harvard Business Review.
Douthat does not mention any of these sources, so I have to
assume that it’s all coincidence, but still….
Currently, Douthat is the best of the New York Times op-ed
columnists, so I am not surprised to see that he approaches the question cogently.
After observing that hard work has increasingly become the
province of the wealthy, he moves on to describe blue collar work as pure
drudgery. He adds that a society that has become very good at producing goods
and services will also encourage people to indulge their taste for leisure. Then,
in a twist, he concludes that when people spend their life pursuing leisure, society
loses.
In Douthat’s words:
Those
riches mean that we can probably find ways to subsidize — through public means
and private — a continuing decline in blue-collar work. Many of the Americans
dropping out of the work force are not destitute: they’re receiving disability
payments and food stamps, living with relatives, cobbling together work here
and there, and often doing as well as they might with a low-wage job. By historical
standards their lives are more comfortable than the left often allows, and the
fiscal cost of their situation is more sustainable than the right tends to
admits. (Medicare may bankrupt us, but food stamps probably will not.)
There
is a certain air of irresponsibility to giving up on employment altogether, of
course. But while pundits who tap on keyboards for a living like to extol the
inherent dignity of labor, we aren’t the ones stocking shelves at Walmart or
hunting wearily, week after week, for a job that probably pays less than our
last one did. One could make the case that the right to not have a boss is
actually the hardest won of modern freedoms: should it really trouble us if
more people in a rich society end up exercising it?
The
answer is yes — but mostly because the decline of work carries social costs as
well as an economic price tag. Even a grinding job tends to be an important
source of social capital, providing everyday structure for people who live
alone, a place to meet friends and kindle romances for people who lack other
forms of community, a path away from crime and prison for young men, an example
to children and a source of self-respect for parents.
It’s an excellent piece of analysis, though I would offer a slight objection. A life on food stamps and welfare payments might well count as
a life of leisure, but it is certainly not desirable or fulfilling. Douthat
would have done better to point out that living from hand to mouth is not
anyone’s idea of a good life and that we still, like it or not, attach a stigma
to idleness and sloth. The pursuit of sloth does not help your flagging
self-esteem and does not make you feel very good. This form of leisure is really a poisoned gift.
All told, however, Douthat has done a very good job. But then, at the end of his
article he trots out a trendy concept that you hear from everyone who
wants to show that he belongs to the cognoscenti. The concept is: human
flourishing.
Douthat writes:
In a
sense, the old utopians were prescient: we’ve gained a world where steady work
is less necessary to human survival than ever before.
But
human flourishing is another matter. And it’s our fulfillment, rather than the
satisfaction of our appetites, that’s threatened by the slow decline of work.
Contemporary philosophers have been telling us that
flourishing is the goal of human life. The concept seems anodyne enough, so no
one questions it. In fact, it’s a trap.
Philosophers believe that the concept of flourishing
encompasses all forms of human excellence. It does not. When you privilege
flourishing, you are also replacing other concepts like: excelling, achieving,
accomplishing and even winning.
When a team wins the Super Bowl or a nation wins an award
you do not normally think that they are flourishing. When you win a contract
for your company you do not go out to celebrate your flourishing. When you work hard
to compete in a math contest you will feel good about your success, but you
will not think that you are flourishing.
Think about it. The term flourishing comes to us from the world of
flowers. To flourish means to bloom or to blossom. It means opening out and
expanding, and incidentally exposing beauty. You need not be a Freudian to understand that the term refers to one
gender and not the other, that it privileges one gender over the other. Surely, you see that the concept is aesthetic more than ethical, that it privileges a natural process over human competition.
In a world that values high self-esteem, especially the kind
that is doled out regardless of accomplishment, flourishing is exactly the
right world. But the concept diminishes the importance of competitive striving.
No one flourishes in the arena. Or better, if you know someone who says that he
is flourishing in a competitive arena, you should bet on his opponent.
3 comments:
"The concept (of human flourishing) seems anodyne enough, so no one questions it. In fact, it’s a trap."
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I'll buy that. I remember when a psychiatrist wrote that patients who don't have a job are worse off after therapy than when they started because there's a sense of lost time. We are what we DO.
Can you put a twitter icon that links to your page on your blog so I don't have to look up the name every time I quote you.
If you don't know how I can advise you.
Regards
Please do advise me. I'd be happy to do it if I knew how.
Feel free to write me via my email: StuartSchneiderman@gmail.com
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