Capabilities: From Spinoza to Sen and Beyond* Part II: A Spinoza-Sen Economics Research Program
Jorge Buzaglo (formerly University of
Gothenburg, presently in search of funding and
affiliation)
© Copyright 2003
Jorge Buzaglo
“Part I:
Spinoza’s Theory of Capabilities” appeared in the last
issue
The Ethics and present-day
science
The
psychophysical identity theory in Spinoza’s The Ethics is particularly well
adapted for the analysis of the body/mind problem in the framework of
present day natural sciences. In particular, evolutionary theory finds its
natural foundation in the notion of immanent causation inherent to
Substance (God or Nature) ─ that which has itself as its own cause and is
not produced by anything external. Particular entities are modifications
or modes of the Substance,
produced by one another in an infinite chain of causation. According to
Henry Atlan (1998, p. 215), “[w]ith such a notion of immanent causality, Evolution can
be seen as the unfolding of a dynamic system, or a process of complexification and self-organization of matter,
produced as the necessary outcome of the laws of physics and chemistry. In
this process, new species come into existence one after the other as
effects of mutations and stabilizing conditions working as their efficient
causes, whereas their particular organizations are particular instances of
the whole process.” The omniform complexity of the texture of matter/extension
corresponds to the omniform complexity of the
thought dimension of the Substance. To the chain of causes in the material
domain corresponds an equivalent chain of causes under the attribute of
thought.1 It is important to remark the absence in this
conception of interaction between matter and thought; both have their own,
equivalent causal structures, as they are two (different) faces of the
(same) coin. In his Ethics
Spinoza writes:
[A] mental decision and a bodily appetite,
or determined state, are simultaneous, or rather are one and the same
thing, which we call decision, when it is regarded under and explained
through the attribute of thought, and a conditioned state, when it is
regarded under the attribute of extension, and deduced from the laws of
motion and rest (3.2, Note).
Or, as
emphatically stated in 3.2: Body
cannot determine mind to think, neither can mind determine body to motion
or rest or any state different from these, if such there
be.
However, the
idea that the decisions of the mind determine the actions of the body is
deeply rooted in our intuitive (unreflective) view of our actions. This is
due, thinks Spinoza, to the fact that, in general, we are aware of our
desires and intentions, but unaware of the causes that motivate these
desires and intentions (2.35, Note; 3.2, Note).2 The belief is
so entrenched that it is merely at the bidding of the mind that the body
performs its actions, says Spinoza (3.2, Note), that only experimental
proof may eventually induce us to change our minds.
Now, it
seems that neuroscience can today supply the conditions for an
experimental proof of immanent causation, and convincingly reject the
hypothesis of mental causation of bodily action. As reported by Atlan (1998), Libet (1985)
consistently found that a conscious decision to act corresponds to an
electrical brain event which occurs 200 to 300 milliseconds after the beginning of action.
This experimentally reproducible fact, consistent with the above “monist”
model, falsifies the conventional idea of mind-determined bodily action.
The action of the body is triggered by some neuronal unconscious stimuli.
That is, a physical impulse determines a bodily movement. Accompanying
that action there is a conscious observation with an understanding of the
action. The conscious observation accompanies the action, but it is not
its cause. The psychic decision and the neural impulse are identically
equivalent, each within their own domain of
existence/description.3 This fact has of course important
consequences for our understanding of homo oeconomicus, and for what can be accepted as
meaningful explanation in economic theory.
Economic theory after The
Ethics
The effects of the above insights on
conventional economic theorising are, I think, devastating. The utility
maximizing individuals of conventional theory are isolated minds
commanding bodily actions. Homo
oeconomicus is a mind with a particular
preference system and a perceived resource constraint commanding a body to
perform specific actions (purchases and sales) in a marketplace. This mind
is conscious of its own actions, and ignorant of the causes by which it is
conditioned. This idea of “rational choice” simply reflects ignorance of
any cause for the agent’s actions.
That is, the
homo oeconomicus model of conventional microeconomics
does not specify how the preferences of the mind have been themselves
determined, and even less how the mind determines the body to perform its
“optimal” decisions in the market. Microeconomics is totally silent on how
and where this interaction could take place. The model of man propounded
by microeconomics simply eludes the problem of interaction. The man of
microeconomics should more accurately be named homunculus oeconomicus.
In cognitive science, the homunculus is an implausible
little man inhabiting the brain and embodying an uncaused will making
choices and commanding the body to execute
them.4
The
canonical model of body/mind dualism is still that of Descartes in Traité des Passions de l’Ame (1.50). In Descartes, the will, located in
the pineal gland, receives signals and sends impulses ─ by means of the
bodily humours (esprits animaux) ─
to other parts of the body.5 But, as Spinoza argues (Part
5, Preface) it is not possible to have non-physical entities acting on
material objects (deus ex machina) as an acceptable form of rational
explanation. Should an interactive mechanism ever get specified, it would
absorb the non-physical antecedent into the physical
consequent.6
In The Ethics, individual entities
are, as described in the previous section, causally interconnected in an
unlimited web of modifications (modes) of the uncaused Substance
(causa sui).
The ideas of the mind are causally connected to other ideas, as bodies in
space are causally interrelated. Yet this does not exclude autonomy and
responsibility. On the contrary, individual entities endeavor to exist according to their own individual
nature (3.6):
Everything, in so far as it is in
itself, endeavors to persist in its own
being.
For Spinoza
(3.7), the actual essence of a thing is nothing else but this endeavor to persist in its own being (conatus). The mind endeavors to persist in its being, and is conscious of
it (3.9).An implication of
conatus, as formulated in the Theologico-Political Treatise, is
that
[…] no man’s mind can possibly lie wholly
at the disposition of another, for no one can willingly transfer his
natural right of free reason and judgment, or be compelled to do so…
All these questions fall within a
man’s natural right, which he cannot abdicate even with consent.
(Spinoza 1951, p. 257, quoted from Ellerman
1992, pp.144-5)
______________________________
SUGGESTED CITATION: Jorge Buzaglo, “Capabilities:
From Spinoza to Sen; and Beyond; Part II: A
Spinoza-Sen Economics Research
Program”,
post-autistic economics review, issue no. 21, 13
September 2003, article 2, http://www.paecon.net/PAEReview/issue21/Buzaglo21.htm
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