Sunday, December 31, 2017

Academic Publications in 2017




Another end of year list. This one covers all the academic papers and books I've had published in the past 12 months. I provide links to open access versions whenever possible. Clicking on the title will usually take you to such a version.

I'm not sure why I continue to do this list. It seems terribly self-congratulatory, and now more than ever I appreciate that academia is not about the number of publications you have. Still, here it is.


Edited Books

This was a first for me.



Book Chapters

In addition to the three chapters in the Robot Sex book, I also had the following chapter published:


I had some other book chapters accepted for publication but they aren't due out until next year.



Peer-Reviewed Journals

These are all the articles that have actually been accepted and published in 2017. I have some others that have been accepted but not yet published.










The Top Ten Posts of 2017



I'm going to keep the end of year navel gazing to a minimum this year. Here are the 'top' ten substantive blog posts that I wrote this year, according to page views. The first one is actually the second most-viewed post on this blog of all time, largely due to the fact that it briefly made the front page of Reddit.













As a bonus, here are three posts that I liked but didn't seem to excite the interests of as many readers:












Saturday, December 30, 2017

Work as Unjust Private Government: An analysis




The insurance company Aetna pays its workers to sleep eight hours a day. Or, more precisely, it has a bonus scheme that pays workers $25 dollars for every 20 days that they have slept for at least eight hours. It is easy to understand the motivation behind this scheme. Sleep deprivation can severely impact on health and well-being, which in turn impacts on worker productivity. The American Academy of Sleep Science has actually tried to quantify the impact, suggesting that as much as $63.8 billion is lost every year in the US due to sleep deprivation.

How should we think about schemes of this sort? Aetna’s sleep reward programme is just one of a growing number of corporate wellness programmes. These programmes encourage (sometimes compel) workers to submit to increased surveillance of their personal lives. Companies realise that a healthy worker is a productive worker and that the more they can do to improve employee health and well-being, the better their bottom lines. If this means monitoring calorie intake, sleep and physical activity, so be it — all the better if you can sell the programme to employees as being a way in which they can improve their own health and fitness. What’s more, corporate wellness programmes are just the tip of a very large iceberg. For a very long time, employees have to submit to all kinds of corporate interference, from bag searches and drug tests to e-mail and internet monitoring. All just to ensure that the company meets its shareholder’s expectations.

There is something quite odd about this level of corporate interference. As Elizabeth Anderson points out in her book Private Government, if you were to imagine the most unjust form of government, it wouldn’t be far off the kinds of government to which many people are subjected in their working lives. And yet we don’t think of this as a kind of unjust government. Why not? Anderson argues that history is partly to blame. We have inherited an idealistic view of contracts and free markets that ignores some of the distinctive features of employment contracts. Furthermore, we have a tendency to think that the state is the only form of government that is worth criticising and challenging. This has created a massive blindspot when it comes to recognising a major source of injustice in modern life.

Anderson’s argument is certainly provocative. She presents it in a distinctive style, favouring a detailed examination of the history of ideas around the free market and egalitarianism, as well as the consequences of the industrial revolution, over an analytical presentation. While this historical detail is fascinating and well-worth reading, I want to offer a more analytical reconstruction of her argument in this post. I start by identifying the major conditions of injustice that are to be found in employment contracts. This forms of the backbone of Anderson’s argument against modern forms of work. I then look at the objections to this argument.


1. The Argument for the Injustice of Workplace Governance
The idealistic view of contractual negotiation comes down to us from Adam Smith. Contrary to what you might think, Smith was an egalitarian. He lived in a society that was riven with hierarchies. His case for the free market was based, in part, on the belief that it could disrupt these inherited hierarchies (this is one of the major historical claims in Anderson’s book). When people get together to trade on a free market, they meet as equals: one person has something they want to sell; the other wants to buy. Neither has to defer to the other on the grounds of inheritance or birthright. They negotiate on a price that is mutually beneficial, otherwise they don’t make the trade. The contracts are win-win, not win-lose.

There are, of course, a number of objections and exceptions to this idealistic view. Anderson argues that employment contracts are a major exception. The tendency, since the time of Smith, is to use contracts for the sale and supply of commodities (food, cars etc) or short-term services (entertainment, medical examinations) as the norm to which all others are subsumed. Parties to these contracts negotiate, exchange and separate in short order. It thus appears that they engage with one another on largely equal terms. Furthermore, even if there is some inequality of bargaining power (and, in reality, there often is) its effects are localised in time and space. The parties will soon exit the contract and return to their prior position. Subsuming employment contracts to this norm, people tend to believe that if employment contracts have reasonable entry and exit conditions, they are just. This leads them to ignore the main feature of the employment contract: the actual period of employment during which the employee is subordinate to the employer. As Anderson puts it, most economists and politicians seem to ignore what goes on inside the ‘black box’ of employment (see image below).



And what goes on inside that black box is, according to Anderson, remarkably unjust. Employers effectively “purchase command over people” (2017, 57) and are then given much leeway in how they exercise their powers of command (though this varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction), doing things that governments would never be allowed to do. This is justified on the grounds that it is a matter for the ‘market’ or ‘private’ individuals to determine, and that employees are adequately compensated for the intrusions visited upon them by their employers.

This is far from the truth for many workers. In practice, employment contracts are major sites of unjust treatment. Anderson’s argument, as best I can tell, runs something like this:


  • (1) A system of government is unjust if it: (i) treats its subjects harshly and with a lack of dignity/respect; and/or (ii) undermines their freedom, particularly by subjecting them to arbitrary authority/domination.

  • (2) The workplace, particularly for certain kinds of workers, is a system of government that (i) treats its subjects harshly and with a lack of dignity/respect; and/or (ii) undermines their freedom by subjecting them to arbitrary authority/domination.

  • (3) Therefore, workplace government is unjust.



Premise (1) of this argument should be relatively uncontroversial but I should say something about it. In terms of the first condition (i), concepts like ‘dignity’ and ‘respect’, though widely used in political and moral discourse, are pretty vague and can be critiqued for this. Nevertheless there are some reasonably clearcut instances of undignified treatment, usually associated with treating people as ‘things’ or like non-human animals, and as we’ll see in a moment it is instances of this sort that animate Anderson’s argument. In terms of the second condition, ‘arbitrary authority/domination’ has a reasonably well-understood meaning in the debate about political freedom. There are two leading conceptions of political freedom in the modern era: freedom as non-interference and freedom as non-domination. The former is all about actual interferences by an authority into your life choices either through force or coercion; the latter is all about potential interferences due to living at another person’s mercy or goodwill. There has been a major revival of interest in freedom as non-domination as a condition of justice since the 1970s.

Premise (2) is the key to the argument. Anderson doesn’t provide an exhaustive defence of it in her book, but she does appeal to some choice examples. Consider the following quote with which she starts her book (footnotes excluded):

Walmart prohibits employees from exchanging casual remarks while on duty, calling this ‘time theft’. Apple inspects the personal belongings of all their retail workers, who lose up to a half-hour of unpaid time every day as they wait in line to be searched. Tyson prevents its poultry workers from using the bathroom. Some have been forced to urinate on themselves, while their supervisors mock them. About half of US employees have been subject to suspicionless drug screening by their employers. Millions are pressured by their employers to support particular political causes or candidates. 
(Anderson 2017, xix)

Clearly there are instances of undignified treatment here (e.g. being forced to urinate on yourself); and clearly there are interferences with autonomy and exercises of arbitrary authority (e.g. suspicionless searches and policing of speech). More generally, we can be confident that many employees are subject to harsh and undignified treatment in their workplaces. They are viewed as cogs in a corporate machine, given limited breaks, subject to debilitating shift work, given near-impossible targets, forced to work in unsafe and unhealthy conditions, and generally not treated as full human beings but as thing-like inputs into a corporate process. Add to this the increased surveillance and control to which we are subjected, particularly in the modern era of precarious and ‘gig’ employment, where there are no traditional employers to be held to account, and we have a recipe for considerable exercise of arbitrary authority. In this environment, we constantly need to ‘prove’ our employability to others, and so ‘voluntarily’ subject ourselves to ever-more intrusive forms of control (see my earlier post on quantified work and the unraveling problem for a discussion of this).

This gives some prima facie weight to Anderson’s initial argument. What are the potential objections to it?


2. Objections to the Argument
Anderson deals with several objections in the book. Indeed, one of the nice features of the book is that it contains a series of responses to her main case, penned by different academics, some of whom are deeply sceptical of the thesis. The most sceptical stance is probably taken by the economist Tyler Cowen, to whom Anderson responds with vigour. I’ll look at five major objections in what follows, including two from Cowen.

First, a simple definitional objection: you cannot have a ‘private’ government. The term is an oxymoron: government is, by necessity, public. This isn’t a very powerful objection. Even if it were true, by definitional fiat, that government is necessarily public, it wouldn’t mean that Anderson’s concerns about the unjust conditions of employment are unwarranted. But, as it happens, Anderson doesn’t think it is very persuasive as a definitional point anyway. She contends, reasonably in my view, that government exists wherever there is a relationship of authority, and this clearly exists in the private context. She also argues that the ‘public’ nature of the state is, in any case, a historically recent phenomenon. Historically, most forms of government were ‘private’ (think: feudal lords, husbands, and paterfamilias) and the state was not particularly ‘public’ (being something open to relatively few to participate in and criticise). One of the subsidiary goals of Anderson’s book is to recapture the historical view of government and challenge the public/private distinction that has arisen more recently. This is not to deny differences between public and private forms of government — employers do not (yet) have a monopoly on the use of force, for example — but these differences do not negate the reality of the governmental powers that they exercise.

Second, there is an objection from the heart of mainstream economic theory. Anderson thinks that economists should be disturbed by both the scale and scope of private government within corporations. Why are they allowed to get away with what they do? Why does the ‘market’ permit this? But economists think they have an answer: the theory of the firm. This was a theory developed in the early part of the 20th century, largely through the work of Ronald Coase. It explained why corporations exist. From the perspective of classical economics, the existence of large corporate enterprises with complex internal governance structures (i.e. ‘firms’) is something of a puzzle. Why couldn’t we just have individuals offering goods and services to one another through a system of contracts? The answer is partly to do with economies of scale (there are economic advantages to bigness when it comes to producing more for less) and partly to do with ‘transaction costs’ (it can be excessively costly to get private individuals together to negotiate the contracts needed to supply all the relevant goods and services). Firms are more economically efficient ways of doing business on a large scale and the authority they obtain is justified by the advantages of this efficiency. Anderson, as you might imagine, is sceptical. For one thing she doesn’t think that efficiency should be afforded that much normative weight. For another, she thinks that while the theory of the firm might explain a certain amount of authority, it does not explain as much authority as we currently see. What economic efficiencies are served by companies controlling bathroom breaks and getting employees to advocate on behalf of certain political parties? The theory of the firm doesn’t seem to answer these questions and yet it provides an ideological shield for not asking them.

Third, there is the claim that the injustice of the employment contract is irrelevant because there are good ‘exit’ options from employment contracts. That is to say, people can easily escape from the unjust conditions of employment by quitting their jobs and finding other forms of employment. Anderson is unpersuaded by this. The mere fact that you can exit a system of government does not entail that the system is just. If this were the case, we would think that the possibility of emigration/exile negated the injustice of public government. Furthermore, the exit options from employment are not always that good. People are often desperate for work, and may not have other jobs to which they can easily migrate. Employers can often restrict their ability to find new forms of work by adding ‘restraint of trade’ or ‘non-compete’ clauses to their employment contracts, or by refusing to provide good references to future employers. The possibility of such future interference with employment deepens the domination to which workers are subjected: they are forever trying to stay on their employer’s good side.

Fourth, there is one of the arguments made by Tyler Cowen in his contribution to the book. He doubts that the situation of workers is as bad as Anderson makes it out to be. Anderson really takes Cowen to task for this in the book, arguing that it is an easy thing for a well-paid college professor like him to say. Anderson is possibly a little bit unfair in this regard since, as I read it, Cowen’s claim that things aren’t that bad is a relatively minor part of his argument (his major objection is the one discussed below). Nevertheless, taking Cowen to task for this claim does give Anderson the opportunity to bolster her case. She provides many more examples of how bad things are for many workers. I can’t go through all the examples here, but a quick sample includes (Anderson 2016, pp 135-137):

The high levels (90%) of sexual harassment and assault experienced by restaurant workers.
The continuing struggle for the right to use the bathroom at work in the US.
The high numbers of injuries and deaths in the workplace reported each year, coupled with the fact that these figures are likely to understate the problem due to the fact that people conceal illness and injury for fear of losing their jobs or being subject to disciplinary action.
The fact that 41% of all workers in the US are subject to unpredictable work schedules, including short notice on-call work and disruptive split-shift work.
The routine abuse and mistreatment of immigrant workers, who are often completely beholden to their employers due to fears of deportation.


Examples like this could proliferate, but one source, that Anderson recommends, is Barbara Ehrenreich’s 1990s expose of working conditions in various low-paid industries in the US. Similarly one could recommend Studs Terkel's classic book Working. Both are somewhat dated though, so if anyone has more recent recommendations I would be happy to hear about them.

Fifth, and finally, there is Cowen’s main objection to Anderson’s argument, namely: that we should let the market sort out the problems that she identifies. The idea behind this objection is that even if Anderson is right to think that employment conditions are not ideal we should not assume that the state (or some other entity) is best placed to sort out these problems. He thinks there are good reasons to believe that ‘the market’ is the best tool for keeping employers honest. This is because (i) the competition for talent and reputation will make employers treat employees with respect and dignity; (ii) if there are intrusions into privacy, employers will be forced by the market to compensate workers adequately for these intrusions through higher pay and perks; and (iii) the cost of exit (again) remains low enough to redress any imbalance (although Cowen thinks it could be lower).

There is some theoretical plausibility to what Cowen says. Under certain conditions we could expect the market to sort out these problems, but those conditions aren’t met in practice. Although some labour markets are highly competitive and give potential employees a lot of bargaining power (e.g. markets for ‘superstar’ traders or academics) they are far from the norm. For many kinds of work, particularly low-paid manual work, there is a significant labour glut, partly induced by a rise in automation. There are lots of willing and able workers. This means that there is no market incentive for employers to treat employees with respect and dignity. Employers can easily find alternatives if someone starts kicking up a fuss. This labour glut creates problems when it comes to employees trying to improve their compensation and finding alternative employment. Employers hold all the good cards: they get to dictate the conditions of employment. This is reflected in the terrible working conditions in many sectors of low-paid work. It’s somewhat surprising that Cowen overlooks this dynamic, given that it is central to the argument in his 2013 book Average is Over.


3. Concluding Thoughts
That’s Anderson’s argument in a nutshell. I have to say I find it intriguing. I think much of what she says is correct. Employment conditions are often terrible for many people, and it is interesting that we don’t view them as a form of unjust private government. There is, consequently, real value in the critical-historical perspective that Anderson provides, particularly in her attempt recapture the idea of ‘private government’. Nevertheless, I have two concerns.

The first is relatively minor. It is simply that I think Anderson’s argument tends to assume a mid-20th century model of employment in much of her critique. That is to say, she seems to assume that most people are employed by large, well-integrated firms with a lot of bargaining power. But the era of such large-scale firms is past. The workplace is now increasingly ‘fissured’, with an increasing number of people working as short-term contractors or temps, within stripped-down corporate enterprises. This new reality of work doesn’t have to undermine her argument; if anything it could strengthen it. As David Weil points out in his book The Fissured Workplace, employment conditions under this new reality are often much worse than they were in the mid-20th century. I hinted at this point above when I referred to the experience of ‘gig’ workers in the new economy. That said, this new reality does put pressure on the claim that workers are subject to unjust ‘government’ by specific employers. If anything they are subject to unjust government by a more abstract and dispersed market forces. This is a much more insidious reality because there is no obvious person or organisation to blame or hold to account for the injustices visited upon workers.

The second criticism could be a little more substantive. It is that Anderson’s argument is a little bit US-centric (a point she readily concedes). Her claims about the injustice of employment contracts are likely to be much stronger in the US where at-will employment is common, and the number of legal protections for workers is relatively scant. In countries with more robust employee rights, things are a bit better. For example, Ireland has a fairly decent ‘unfair dismissal’ and ‘discriminatory dimissal’ laws that force employers to adopt fairly stringent procedural safeguards when dismissing an employee. That said, even jurisdictions with more robust employment laws are subject to the broader economic trends toward automation and gig work. In these jurisdictions, there is often a gap between what the law and what employers are actually do. The downward pressure on employment, and the labour glut, creates an environment in which employers are willing to flout the rules and in which many workers are no longer able to avail of robust protections because they are not legally classified as ‘employees’.




Sunday, December 24, 2017

The Structural Injustice of Private Debt


The Money Changer and His Wife, by Marinus van Reymerswaele


Debt-financing is increasingly common. It used to be the case that people would occasionally need loans during the course of their lives, perhaps to buy a car or a house. These were exceptional cases, outside the normal conditions of life. In most instances, people would rely on savings to cover their consumer costs, or go without. This has now all changed. There is more complexity in the markets for private debt. People use loans to cover holidays, education, healthcare and other unforeseen costs. They have high interest credit cards and payday loans to help them get to the end of the month.

Is this a good thing? Debt-financing has a long and chequered past. For large swathes of European history, the lending of money for profit (usury) was illegal and morally condemned. There was, of course, a degree of hypocrisy about this, with usury often being tolerated in the shadows. More recently, debt has been viewed as a necessary and useful tool for a consumerist society. Economists often see debt contracts in a win-win light. They transfer money from people who don’t need it to people who do, allowing both to gain something valuable in the process. They enable people to ‘smooth out’ their consumption of goods and services over the course of their lifetimes by bringing forward in time some expenditure. They grease the wheels of economy and prevent it from slowing down too much during times of perceived crisis.

But there is undoubtedly something disquieting about the explosion of debt-financing, particularly the forms of debt financing that target the poor and less well off. The financial crisis of 2008 was precipitated by a crisis in the sub-prime mortgage market, i.e. in the market for home loans to those who were perceived as being at high risk of default. Banks profited off the backs of the poor through labyrinthine securitisation and repackaging of debt agreements. While some banks suffered in the aftermath, many grew larger and fatter as governments poured debt of their own into their rescues. It is the poor and less well off that seem to have suffered the most with increased income and wealth inequality, and rocketing property prices.

In her article ‘What could be wrong with a mortgage?’, Lisa Herzog tries to explain exactly why we should be disturbed by the market for private debt. Although she acknowledges the economist’s argument in favour of debt contracts — and thus thinks there is nothing intrinsically wrong with debt — she argues that there are specific features of the current market for private debt that make it ‘structurally unjust’. In short, she argues that debt has become more necessary and more difficult to handle for those from poor and less advantaged backgrounds. This exacerbates their already precarious and difficult position. This is not due to any conspiracy or fraud that is perpetrated against the poor (though that may be a feature in particular cases) but rather due to a confluence of factors beyond any one individual’s control.

Herzog’s argument breaks down into three sub-arguments which compound into the case for structural injustice. The overarching structure of the argument is illustrated below. I want to examine each element of it over the remainder of this post.




1. The Argument from the Lack of Informed Consent
One condition on the justice of debt contract (and, indeed, any contract) is that the borrower enters into it following a fully informed consent to its terms. This is a challenge because there is significant inequality of bargaining power in most debt contracts. Unless you are wealthy, banks and other financial institutions will be able to control the terms and conditions of your debt agreement with little interference. This means that when you are signing up to the contract you are signing up to their preferred model of the agreement.

This is already an inauspicious starting point, but if it is to be in anyway legitimate you must know what it is you are signing up to. In other words, you must understand what your future liabilities under the debt contract are going to be: how much are you obligated to repay and over what time period? What are the consequences for you if you do not meet your repayments? If you lack this information, or are unable to understand it if you receive it, then there is the potential for injustice. Herzog’s claim is that this is more likely to be true in the case of poor debtors than in the case of wealthier debtors. This places the poor debtors at a disadvantage.

She doesn’t set out the argument in formal terms, but if she did I imagine it might look something like this:


  • (1) In order to be just, a debt contract must be entered into on the basis of informed consent, i.e. the borrower must know and understand the terms and conditions of the agreement.
  • (2) Poor debtors are less likely to know and understand the terms and conditions of a debt agreement.
  • (3) Therefore, debt contracts are more likely to be unjust in the case of poor debtors.


What this argument is highlighting is the need for financial literacy among debtors. The support for premise (2) comes from a set of studies suggesting that the demands of financial literacy are much harder for poor debtors to satisfy than those from well-off backgrounds. Herzog summarises the results of those studies in her article (if you click on each instance of the word ‘studies’ in the following quote you will be linked directly to the ones she cites):

Studies confirm, for example, that subprime borrowers were far less knowledgeable about types of mortgages and interest rates than prime borrowers… Studies LINK indicate that financial literacy is distributed according to clear socio-economic patterns: it is higher for men than for women, and positively correlated to education scores. As Lusardi and Mitchell emphasize, summarizing the empirical evidence: “Financial savvy varies by income and employment type, with lower-paid individuals doing less well and employees and the self-employed doing better than the unemployed”. 
(Herzog 2016, 9)

This lack of financial literacy means that poor debtors tend to enter into debt contracts with less favourable terms and conditions and higher costs. Think, for example, of the 2-28 mortgages that many sub-prime borrowers agreed to in the lead-up to the 2008 crisis. These mortgages charged very low, teaser interest rates for the first two years before a much higher interest rate kicked in. This often meant that unless the borrower could sell their house at a higher price within two years, the mortgages would be untenable. It’s clear that some people entered into these agreements without fully appreciating their ramifications.


2. The Argument from Lack of Access to Regular forms of Credit
There are debt contracts and then there are debt contracts. If you are from a middle-class or upper-class background, you probably have a particular conception of what a debt contract is and how you go about securing one. It usually means going to a bank or building society and seeking a loan to pay for a house or a car (or some other large expenditure item). In other words, it entails going to a (hopefully) well-managed and well-regulated financial institution that will offer you reasonably favourable terms of credit (relatively low interest rates, with repayments to take place over a reasonable timeframe). The financial institution will not treat you with suspicion or derision; they will try to meet your needs on the best terms. If you run your own business or are involved in commercial financing, you may be familiar with other forms of credit, but again they will typically be sought from mainstream financial institutions on reasonably favourable terms.

If you are poor, you may be shut out from this world of debt. Banks may not even entertain the possibility of giving you a loan because you fail to meet their criteria (or some legally imposed criteria) for a preferred borrower. If you lack a regular place of residence, for example, you are automatically excluded from many types of credit. If you lack a bank account, the situation is even worse. This means you lack easy access to regular forms of credit and may have to seek it from less favourable and less-friendly sources, e.g. loan sharks and payday loan companies. We can express this argument in more formal terms, as follows:


  • (4) In order to be just, the market for credit should be equally accessible to all, i.e. everyone should, in principle, have access to the same types of credit.
  • (5) Those from poor backgrounds are likely to be shut out or denied access to certain forms of credit.
  • (6) Therefore, the market for credit is not just.


Expressing the argument in these terms highlights a problem. Surely banks and other financial institutions are justified in denying some people access to credit? Wasn’t the financial crisis of 2008 caused by the over-extension of credit to people who were unable to meet the repayment conditions? Wouldn’t it make things much worse, for everyone, if everyone had equal access to credit?

Two points can be made in response to this. First, we need to specify what ‘equal access’ actually means in this context. It may not mean that people should be entitled to the same credit terms — some individualisation of the terms and conditions of agreement would be appropriate. A poor person could have equal access to different forms of credit without necessarily having the same terms and conditions of repayment. Second, a distinction should be drawn between a poor person who is insolvent, and therefore would not be capable of repaying a loan, and a poor person who is merely illiquid, and therefore faces some difficulties in meeting certain repayment schedules. The former would be a major credit risk but the latter need not be. The concern about equal access could then be recast as a concern that the kinds of exclusion criteria used by banks (e.g. information about address and personal background) do not adequately distinguish between the different forms of poverty. Herzog makes this point specifically in relation to the scoring technologies that banks use to deny people loans:

For example, scoring technologies often draw on data such as postcodes, which means that applicants from poorer areas are automatically rated as “riskier” than others. Individuals are thus evaluated not on the basis of what they have done or want to do, but rather on the basis of where they come from, without any attention to their specific situation. 
(Herzog 2016, 11)

Scoring algorithms can thus be seen to erect invisible barriers to credit that unfairly target certain populations.


3. The Argument from Higher Costs
The lack of access to regular forms of credit has a knock-on effect for the poor: it means that when they do obtain credit they must obtain it from alternative sources, and usually at much higher cost. The classic example is the payday loan: a short-term loan, usually given in order to meet immediate financial needs, with a high interest rate. The name originates in the practice of giving people an advance on their paycheck, but now applies outside of that context. The person seeking the loan agrees to repay the amount on their next payday. Payday loans are typically unsecured and have highly unfavourable terms. Annual percentage rates (APRs) of more than a 1,000% are not unheard of. If you are in particularly dire straits, you may ‘rollover’ your payday loan, i.e. use a new loan to meet the repayment of an old one. This can lead to some exceptionally high costs of borrowing:

Extreme examples sometimes make headlines, such as the case of a man who allegedly paid $50,000 of interest on $2,500 of payday loans that he had to take out in order to cover medical bills for his wife and the subsequent loans he took out to pay back the first ones.  
(Herzog 2016, 13)

If you suffer from occasional periods of illiquidity, you are more likely to require such a loan. Poor people are, for obvious reasons, more likely to suffer from such occasional periods of illiquidity. As Herzog notes, there is a double injustice in this. The standard economic argument for debt is that it enables people to smooth out their consumption over the course of their lifetime, i.e. borrow from their future incomes in order to pay for current consumption. But, of course, this comes at a cost of some sort: you have to pay slightly more in the long-term in order to benefit from the immediate use of the money. This places you at a disadvantage relative to someone who has the funds available to cover their expenditure needs. The problem is that poorer people are likely to require more of this ‘consumption smoothing’ due to their general lack of funds. Indeed, many times they will have to borrow to meet unforeseen expenses. So they are more regularly placed in a position of disadvantage relative to social peers. This is then made worse by the fact that they are charged an additional premium for their credit they do obtain.

You might argue the high cost of credit is justifiable — that it accurately reflects the additional risk involved in making loans to poorer people. But Herzog doubts this. She argues that some additional cost may be justified but that the exceptionally high cost of credit that we observe in ‘fringe banking’ (e.g. payday loans) is likely to represent some exploitation of the financial illiteracy of the people seeking those loans. As she puts it, the high interest rates charged are probably not ‘an undistorted market equilibrium [but] rather an expression of market power and one-sided dependence’ (Herzog 2016, 12).


4. Conclusion
The upshot of the three arguments is that poorer people are significantly disadvantaged by the current structure of our debt markets. The three arguments outlined above combine to make their position particularly bad: (i) they have less financial literacy, and so are less likely to understand what they are getting themselves into and more likely to be exploited by lenders; (ii) they are automatically shut out from the market for regular forms of credit; and (iii) because of (ii) they have to seek credit from less favourable, less salubrious corners of the market. This may well open them up to other mechanisms of injustice, such as social exclusion and stigma due to their debt problems.

Herzog closes her article by considering some potential legal and regulatory responses to the structural injustice of the debt market. I’m not going to discuss these solutions in any great depth. In general, she suggests that we should reconsider how we distribute financial risk in society. At the moment, debt contracts tend to place all the responsibility on the individual borrower if things go wrong, but we should consider redesigning them so as to redistribute some of the risk onto lenders and the broader society. Individual bankruptcy rules already do this to some extent, but more could be done. Contingent debt contracts are one solution she mentions: these would include automatic rescheduling of repayments or recalculations of interest rates if certain conditions obtain (e.g. automatic rescheduling of mortgage repayments if house prices fall). This happens, already, through individual renegotiation of debt contracts, but including it as a default rule could ease the burden on poorer debtors who face a significant inequality of bargaining power relative to the financial institutions with whom they are trying to renegotiate.

I’m certainly a fan of the idea of rethinking how we distribute financial risk, particularly given that we live in a world in which banks are often bailed out for their own reckless borrowing and lending. But I tend to think there is deeper issue here: our inflationary, debt-based, monetary system, given its current structure, is fuelling our need for for more and more debt. Governments pour money into banks; banks lend this money in a way that drives asset price booms (particularly in property), which in turn create a greater pressure for debt-financing by ordinary citizens. Until we do something to address those pressures, tinkering with the default rules in debt contracts is unlikely to be that helpful.




Saturday, December 23, 2017

New Paper: Mind uploading and the Social Construction of Identity


I recently published a paper on mind-uploading with Sim Bamford. The paper has an interesting genesis. Sim works in neuromorphic engineering and has written about mind-uploading in the past. He reached out to me about a possible collaboration after he saw an earlier blogpost I wrote about his work. I'm happy to say that the collaboration has been a productive one. Our article has been published in the Journal of Consciousness Studies.

The JCS are a little bit protective of their articles so I can't share a pre-publication version of it just yet. But if you drop me an email (and my work email address is easily locatable online), I will send you a copy.


Title: Transfer of personality to a synthetic human ("mind-uploading") and the social construction of identity.
Journal: The Journal of Consciousness Studies
Links: Official
Abstract:  Humans have long wondered whether they can survive the death of their physical bodies. Some people now look to technology as a means by which this might occur, using terms such ‘whole brain emulation’, ‘mind uploading’, and ‘substrate independent minds’ to describe a set of hypothetical procedures for transferring or emulating the functioning of a human mind on a synthetic substrate. There has been much debate about the philosophical implications of such procedures for personal survival. Most participants to that debate assume that the continuation of identity is an objective fact that can be revealed by scientific enquiry or rational debate. We bring into this debate a perspective that has so far been neglected: that personal identities are in large part social constructs. Consequently, to enable a particular identity to survive the transference process, it is not sufficient to settle age-old philosophical questions about the nature of identity. It is also necessary to maintain certain networks of interaction between the synthetic person and its social environment, and sustain a collective belief in the persistence of identity. We defend this position by using the example of the Dalai Lama in Tibetan Buddhist tradition and identify technological procedures that could increase the credibility of personal continuity between biological and artificial substrates.






Thursday, December 21, 2017

Basic Income Experiments and the Case for the UBI: What can we learn?




I like the idea of a universal basic income (UBI). I have written about it numerous times over the years and I think a strong political and moral case can be made in its favour. I also think a particularly strong case can be made for it at the present moment, given the ongoing structural and technological changes to the nature of work.

At the same time, I think there are obvious practical and political hurdles that lie in its way. These hurdles include fears about how a UBI might incentivise boredom and apathy, disincentivise work, and be economically unsustainable due to the fact that a smaller and smaller cohort of economically active people will have subsidise those who are not.

On the face of it, UBI experiments seem to provide an antidote to these fears. Around the world, several small and largescale experiments have been conducted that involve many of the features of a UBI: people are given a guaranteed minimum income without needing to prove that they are seeking work or disabled. These experiments almost invariably have positive results. Those who are paid this guaranteed income see their lives improving along several metrics of well-being, and the work-disincentive is minimal.

These results have led some people to be enthusiastic cheerleaders for the idea of a UBI. Rutger Bregman, for instance, in his book Utopia for Realists expounds on these empirical results for several chapters, using them to build what seems to be a strong case for a UBI. While I share many of Bregman’s political and economic goals, I worry that the empirical case for the UBI can be overstated.

My scepticism largely stems from what I understand the case for the UBI to be, and from my reading of two reviews of the empirical literature, in particular those from Karl Widerquist and Philippe Van Parijs and Yannick Vanderborght. I want to outline the case for cautious scepticism in the remainder of this post.


1. What are we arguing for?
The case for cautious scepticism is easily stated. If you are going to use the basic income experiments to argue for a UBI, then there must be some ecological validity to those experiments. In other words, the findings from the ‘world(s)’ created by the experiment must be extrapolatable to the world of the UBI. Unfortunately, I think this is where UBI experiments tend to fall down. There are some significant disanalogies between the experimental-world(s) and the UBI-world, which make the former much less useful for understanding the latter than is commonly assumed. In formal terms, the argument is this:


  • (1) If the findings from basic income experiments are to provide good evidence as to what would happen when we implement a UBI, then those experiments must have some ecological validity (i.e. the experimental world must be sufficiently similar to the UBI-world).

  • (2) The basic income experiments tend to lack ecological validity (i.e. the experimental worlds are too dissimilar to the UBI world).

  • (3) Therefore, the basic income experiments do not provide good evidence as to what would happen if we implemented a UBI.


I’m going to take it that the first premise of this argument is relatively uncontroversial. The second premise is the one that requires support. This support can be provided in two phases. First, by explaining what the world would look like under a UBI and second, by explaining the main features of the experimental worlds set up under the basic income experiments.

Let’s focus on the UBI-world first. I appreciate that people might have different things in mind when they discuss the UBI, and that there are a number of distinct policy proposals that could be clustered under that label. I have a particular conception of what the UBI would entail that I believe conforms with the most widely-discussed variants of the UBI. That conception states that a UBI is:

(a) An income paid to all people (or, at least, all adult people) within a given state/jurisdiction, irrespective of their ability and willingness to work (i.e. a universal and unconditional income);

(b) Significant/generous in monetary size, i.e. provides enough income for someone to live on. The precise amount required might be disputable, but I would estimate something in the region of 30-50% of per capita GDP within a given state/jurisdiction. For reference this would be just under $18,000 per annum in the US and just over $20,000 in Ireland (where I currently live) on 2016 figures. The exact figure would have to take into consideration the cost of living in the particular jurisdiction.

(c) Funded by taxation revenues within the state/jurisdiction in question. In other words, the money for the UBI is not provided from outside resources but from a tax on wealth and/or income (probably both) within the state. This means some people will be net beneficiaries of the scheme and some will be net contributors.

(d) Offered in an economy in which work is becoming both less feasible for the majority (due to automation and inequality) and less desirable (i.e. less relevant or important for self-worth).

You could challenge each of these assumptions about the UBI-world. For example you could argue that the UBI should be funded by some international system of wealth transfers (so not necessarily funded from within the state) or that the figure should be lower/higher or that it could be offered in a world in which work remains as relevant as ever. But I suspect most people would not drop all of these assumptions, and even if they did, they would have to replace them with their own. Either way, those assumptions would need to be borne in mind when critically reflecting on the ecological validity of the experiments.


2. Findings from the Basic Income Experiments

So much for UBI-world. To complete the assessment of premise (2) we need to consider the features of the experimental world. Obviously, there is no single ‘world’ here. There are, rather, multiple different worlds established under the auspices of multiple different experiments. Each of these worlds varies in terms of the size of the income paid to the experimental subjects, the social/cultural environment in which it was paid, the source of the payment, the conditionality of the payment, and more. I’m not going to be able to review every single basic income experiment in detail, but I will give an overview of some of the major ones for which we have data and findings (there are some other ones that are intended or in progress that I exclude from consideration).

These experiments include the famous North American ‘negative income tax’ (NIT) experiments from the late 1960s and 1970s, as well as some more recent experiments in developing nations and Western Europe. The best data comes from the NIT experiments, which are said to have been “the first large-scale social experiment[s] to use the scientific method of randomly assigning human subjects into treatment and control groups’ (Widerquist 2005). Their results have been analysed and reanalysed several times over years. There is no simple consensus on what the causal consequences of these experiments was, but there are some general patterns. The other experiments have generated less literature, though this could change in the future. What follows is a brief overview of the main experiments. I’ll describe some of their key findings afterwards:

The Manitoban Mincome Experiment: This was an experiment conducted by the Canadian government in Winnipeg and Dauphin from 1975-1978. It covered 1300 families living in urban (Winnipeg) and rural (Dauphin) regions, separated into different treatment groups. The families had to earn less than C$13,000 per annum to qualify and they were paid a sum between $3,800 and $5,800, depending on their treatment group, for the years of the experiment (approximately 25% of the per capita GDP at the time). This was combined with a ‘take-back’ or ‘clawback’ rate of between 35-75% which was charged if they earned additional income through work (this clawback rate is a common feature of negative income tax and basic income proposals: the idea is that the guaranteed income is reduced (proportionally) if you earn some additional money yourself).

The New Jersey-Pennsylvania NIT experiment: This was an experiment that ran from 1968-1972 in urban parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. It initially covered 1,216 two-parent families ‘with a male head’ from Black, white and Latino communities. Single parent families were not included. This number dwindled to 983 after drop outs. The families had to earn less than 150% of the official poverty line to be selected for the payment, and were paid between 50% and 125% of the poverty line, depending on treatment group. For guidance, the payment in the 100% version of NJ experiment in 1968 was $1,000 per annum (approximately 21% of per capita GDP). The clawback rate was between 30% and 70%. The payments were received for three years.

The Iowa-North Carolina NIT experiment: This was an experiment that ran from 1970-1972 in rural parts of Iowa and North Carolina. It was intended as a rural supplement to the New-Jersey/Pennsylvania experiment. It covered 809 two-parent and female headed families. This number dwindled to 729 after drop outs. They had to earn less than 150% of the poverty rate to qualify and were paid between 50% and 100% of the poverty rate, subject to a 30-70% clawback rate.

The Seattle-Denver NIT Experiment: This was an experiment that ran from 1970-1980 in parts of Seattle and Denver. It covered 4,800 Black, white and Latino families with annual incomes below $11,000 (if single-parent) or $13,000 (if two-parent). This was the most complex and longest-running of the NIT experiments. The families were paid between 75% and 148% of the official poverty rate and subject to a clawback rate of 50%-70% (though two other non-linear clawback rates were tested at 70% minus 0.025 times income and 80% minus 0.025 times income). The incomes were paid for six years initially, but experimenters got approval to continue for an additional fourteen years for some of the families. However, the experiment was cancelled in 1980 so the families only received the income for nine years.

The Gary, Indiana NIT Experiment: This was an experiment that ran from 1971-1974 in Gary, Indiana. It covered 1,799 families, mostly single-parent Black families. The total number dropped to 967 by the end of the experiment. This was the highest drop out rate in any of the experiments. The families had to earn below 240% of the poverty rate to be selected and were paid either 75% or 100% of the poverty rate for three years. This was subject to a 40% or 60% clawback rate.

Namibian (Otjivero) Pilot Study: This was an experiment that ran from 2008-2009 in the village of Otijvero in Namibia. Every resident in the village (approximately 1,000 people) under the age of sixty received a monthly payment of 100 Namibian dollars (approximately $8 US dollars). Those over sixty received a state pension of over 500 Namibian dollars. The payment to those under sixty represented approximately 2% of per capita GDP in Namibia at the time. The project was funded mainly by a variety of international donors, many based out of Germany.

Madhya Pradesh Study: This was an experiment that was conducted in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh from 2011 - 2012. Every adult in eight randomly selected villages was granted an unconditional income of 200-300 rupees per month (about $4-6 US dollars). This represented 6.5% of per capita GDP in that region of India at that time. Children were also entitled to half the payment received by adults. The results in the eight villages were compared with twelve other villages in which no payment was made. The project was funded by UNICEF.

Give Directly Cash Transfer Evidence: Give Directly is a charity that specialises in giving large direct cash transfers to people in developing countries. Between 2011 and 2013 they ran a program in rural Kenya that was analysed by the economists Johannes Haushofer and Jeremy Shapiro. The program sent unconditional cash payments of between $404 US dollars and $1,525 US dollars to families that met a means test criterion (did they live under a thatched roof as opposed to a metal one?). The payments were given on different schedules (monthly or single lump sum) and were targeted at different members of the household, in order to study differences in response. The payments represented a considerable sum of money, over 30% of per capita GDP for the minimum payment, rising to over 130% for the maximum payment. Give Directly calculated that the payments represented more than double the average consumption expenditures of villagers in the relevant regions. The Haushofer and Shapiro study looks at 503 households who were given the payments.

Miscellaneous Others: A number of other smaller scale studies have been conducted over the years and are often discussed in relation to the UBI. A popular one is the Win For Life program in Belgium. This was a program for lottery winners that allowed them to receive monthly payments for life as opposed to one single payment. There is also the Berlin MeinGrundeinkommen experiment that has funded basic incomes of $1,000 per month for over 40 people, and an experiment on 13 homeless men in London in 2009 that gave them each a personalised budget of £3,000. There are other examples too, but this suffices for present purposes.

So what are the findings from all of the studies? As you might imagine, they are quite nuanced and differentiated. But, in general, the outcomes are positive. The guaranteed income payments are found to have a positive impact on individual health and well-being, and do not disincentivise work to the extent that some would predict. In fact, in some cases they increase work.

Take the various North American NIT experiments (including the Manitoban mincome experiment) as an example. As described, there were several different treatment conditions across these experiments, but in most cases the payment of the income was found to correlate with positive outcomes. For example, households receiving the income typically saw an increase in educational performance and an improvement in birthweights for children born to those families (Levine et al 2004). Recipients did reduce the number of hours they worked per year. Across the five studies, the reduction ranged from 20-130 hours per year for men, and 0-166 hours per year for women. According to Widerquist (2005), most of this reduction is accounted for by workers ‘remaining nonemployed for longer if and when they became nonemployed’ and not because they reduced the number of hours they worked per week. The reduction was also highest among younger people and those with young children, suggesting that it represents an investment of time in education or child-rearing as opposed to any tendency towards apathy. The experiments also calculated how much additional tax would need to be collected as a result of the reduction in work, estimating that it would add 5-10% to the total cost.

Similarly positive results are recorded from the experiments in developing countries. But in those cases all the reports suggest that the increased income correlates with an increase in economic activity, not a decrease. The Give Directly study by Haushofer and Shapiro found that the payments significantly increased (self-reported) psychological well-being and that people receiving the payments invested significantly in assets that could help them in their businesses (mainly agricultural). This led to an increase in revenue from those businesses, but not necessarily an increase in profit. The study did not find any significant increase in consumption of alcohol or drugs. The Namibian pilot project reported a number of positive outcomes, including large increases in economic activity and GDP within the village, large reductions in crime, and improvements in nutrition and well-being. This was combined with an increase in inward migration (which is something that tends to worry people contemplating basic income proposals) Some of these findings are disputed and alleged to be exaggerated but they have been defended by those involved in the program and are broadly consistent with other findings. The Madhya Pradesh studies also reported positive outcomes, with improvements in sanitation, nutrition, education and increases in labour and work.

The miscellaneous other studies that I mentioned highlight similar positive outcomes. All of which suggests that the case for the UBI has some robust empirical support.


3. The Mismatched Worlds of Experiments and UBI
But this is where we have to return to the ecological validity question. Taking the studies at face value, and assuming that all their results are accurate, is it true to say that the ‘worlds’ established by the experiments are sufficiently similar to the world envisaged by supporters of the UBI? Not really. There are important differences between the world of the UBI and the various experiments that makes it difficult to extrapolate from one to the other.

One of the main problems with the experiments — and this will always be a problem until we actually trial a UBI — is that they are not truly universal. All the NIT experiments were targeted at specific population groups in specific regions, making it difficult to draw firm conclusions about what would happen if the scheme was rolled out more generally. They had a variety eligibility conditions attached to them, were paid to households as opposed to individuals, and were of limited duration. The recipients of the income knew the payments were only going to happen for a limited time and this could have altered their behaviour, making them more inclined to invest the income in education or other activities. The one exception to this might be the Seattle-Denver experiment which was supposed to last for 20 years for some recipients. Interestingly, that experiment is the one that saw the largest reduction in hours worked, with experimenters noting that it took 2.4 years for people to adjust their behaviour to the program (Widerquist 2005).

In addition to this, the NIT experiments were not compulsory. People self-selected to receive the income, which could be problematic since the sample of people receiving the income might be those who were most likely to make good use of it, and we should remember that there were high drop out rates in some of the experiments. Furthermore, as Van Parijs and Vanderborght point out, all the NIT experiments excluded households that would belong to an income category that would make them a net funder of the scheme; only net beneficiaries were included. This means we have no evidence for ascertaining the behavioural effects on the net funders if we introduced a UBI.

The experiments conducted in developing countries also have significant problems. It is true that in India and Namibia the incomes were given to everybody within selected villages. But the sums paid in those cases were extremely modest (less than 10% of GDP per capita) and were for a limited duration. The Give Directly cash transfers were much more generous, but they were also limited, one-time payments, given to specific sub-groups within selected regions. I believe Give Directly is changing this now and trying to provide payments to everyone within a particular locale, but I have not read any data on those schemes. Furthermore, in all of these cases the funding came from outside the jurisdictions in which the payment was received.

The miscellaneous small scale experiments also suffer from a number of weaknesses that make it difficult to extrapolate from them to the world of the UBI. They tend to be unique, one-off experiments, of minimal or uncertain duration, affecting very specific or narrowly defined sub-populations.

Future experiments may correct for these issues, but more important than all of them is the fact that no UBI experiment can examine the effects of UBI in a world in which work is less important, and less available. At the moment, anyone receiving a basic income is doing so in a world in which they are otherwise massively incentivised to work. It makes sense, in this social environment, for at least some of them to invest the additional income in building capacities for future employment. But what happens if, as many futurists claim, part of the motivation for the UBI is that work is less of an option for the vast majority of people? Furthermore, what happens if one of the policy goals behind a UBI is that it makes work less of an economic necessity for people? To me, this is one of the most important features of the UBI: that it frees people from the economic compulsion of work. UBI experiments cannot explore this possibility. Van Parijs and Vanderborght sum up the problem pretty well:

Even the best-designed experiments cannot capture the effects on the labour market which are at the core of the case for basic income versus conditional minimum-income schemes…the universality of basic income opens the possibility of saying yes to some jobs that are currently not viable and its freedom from obligation [conditions] opens the possibility of saying no to other jobs, which will therefore need to pay better or improve if they are to have incumbents. Such effects…have no chance of showing up in the experiments, partly because of their limited duration but above all because they affect only a few hundreds or thousands of individuals in labor markets of several millions. 
(2017, 143)

That said, the experiments discussed above do provide good evidence for something. They all suggest that guaranteed income poverty reduction schemes, that are not premised on the willingness or ability to work, and that are targeted at particular populations, can have very positive outcomes. We certainly should not stop experimenting with these schemes. But we should be cautious about using them to build a case for the UBI. There is a real sense in which implementing the UBI itself would be the first major experiment.




Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Why is understanding more valuable than knowledge?




Newton’s Second Law states that:

F = ma

Where ‘F’ stands for the force of an object, ‘m’ for its mass, and ‘a’ for its acceleration. So, in essence, the law is telling us that the force of an object is equal to its mass times its acceleration.

I know Newton’s Second Law. If you asked me to recite it, I could. But do I understand it? Probably not. People have explained it to me before, and I’ve read various books that outline how Newton arrived at it, but if you asked me why it is true that F=ma, I wouldn’t be able to answer.

This a common feature of my life. I know (in layman’s terms) what Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity state, but I don’t really understand them. I know that there are transfinite numbers, that Gregor Cantor proved this in the 1800s, but I don’t think I understand his proof. I also know more mundane things, like that Ireland’s GDP was $291 billion US dollars in 2016, and that this was an increase from $283 billion in 2015, but I don’t understand exactly how those figures are derived and why exactly they went up from one year to the next.

So I have lots of knowledge, but little understanding. Is this a bad thing? Would it be better, all things considered, if in addition to knowing each of the propositions or theories described above I could actually understand them? Many philosophers think it would be. They believe that understanding is of greater value than knowledge. But what accounts for this? What is the value of understanding?

Stephen Grimm’s article ‘The Value of Understanding’ outlines three major answers to that question. They divide into two camps: (i) subjectivist theories, which see the value of understanding in terms of the subjective experience of the one who understands and (ii) objectivist theories, which see the value of understanding in terms of how it connects subjective understanding to objective reality. I want to describe each of these theories in what follows.



1. The Subjective Transparency/Satisfaction Theory
Before we get mired in the details of the particular theories it is worth briefly explaining what understanding is and what differentiates it from knowledge. Knowledge comes in different forms. You can have practical knowledge (‘know-how’) or propositional knowledge (‘know-that’). When comparing knowledge to understanding, we usually focus on propositional knowledge. This allows us to contrast knowledge and understanding in terms of their objects (i.e. what they are about). Propositional knowledge has as its object specific propositions, e.g. ‘Rome is the capital of Italy’, ‘Newton’s second law states that “F=ma”’ and so on. Understanding is different. Understanding has as its objects ‘structures’, ‘dependency-relations’ or theoretical models about how the world works. It is about seeing how propositions relate to one another and how they come to be true. It is deeper and more complex than simple propositional knowledge.

You might think this provides some clue as to why understanding is more valuable than knowledge, but depth and complexity alone aren’t enough for that. One explanation of the comparative value of understanding comes from Linda Zagzebski. She provides a subjectivist account of the value of understanding that is cashed out in terms of its increased ‘conscious transparency’.

The idea here is that understanding has a kind of reflexive transparency that knowledge lacks. As she puts it “it may be possible to know without knowing but it is impossible to understand without understanding that one understands” (2001, 46). Understanding thus consists of a kind of subjective ‘grasping’ or ‘seeing’ that is lacking with simple propositional knowledge. Zagzebski suggests that this puts understanding on a firmer footing than knowledge: once you understand something you are less vulnerable to sceptical doubts.

Grimm points out that Zagzebski’s theory has been criticised over the years, partly on the grounds that some theoretical models that we would like to understand are not that reflexively transparent, and partly because we can often grasp things that turn out to be false. Nevertheless, Grimm thinks there is something to it, namely: there is something subjectively more satisfying about understanding vis-a-vis knowledge. It is surely more satisfying to understand why ‘F= ma’ than to simply know the proposition. Understanding helps to quench our curiosity in a way that mere knowledge cannot.
It is important to realise that this subjective satisfaction need not be connected to truth. You can understand something, and derive satisfaction from that understanding, without necessarily believing that the object of your understanding is true. For example, you might understand the arguments of biblical creationists, and derive some satisfaction from that understanding, without accepting the truth of the theory.

This disconnection between subjective satisfaction and truth highlights a potential flaw in the idea that subjective satisfaction accounts for the value of understanding. After all, why should your subjective satisfaction be the arbiter of value? Surely we want some connection between understanding and truth?


2. The Objective Mirroring Theory
That’s what the second theory tries to provide. It argues that the value of understanding lies in the connection it establishes between your mind and the world around it. Propositional knowledge establishes some connection between the contents of your mind and the objective world. If the propositions you believe are true, there is some content in your head that accurately reflects what is going on outside your head. But the connection is relatively superficial.

Understanding provides a deeper connection between what’s going on inside your mind and what happens in the real world. When you understanding something that is true, you develop a mental model inside your head that reflects the external structure of the world: this allows you to appreciate how the various parts of reality are related to one another, how they can be altered and changed. It gives you insight into the ‘modal structure’ of the world around you. This goes far beyond simply grasping and assenting to a proposition. As Grimm puts it:

[When you understand something] the mind will mirror the world more profoundly than before because the mind will now “take on” the nomological structure of the world, in the sense that the grasped structure will inform the mind in a way that it failed to do before, when one merely assented to the proposition.

The claim here is that this ‘deep mirroring’ is intrinsically valuable, i.e. valuable irrespective of any consequences it has for your life. That said, having an accurate mental model of the world will also, presumably, bring many practical, instrumental advantages. It will enable superior prediction and control of the world around you, which may often facilitate greater desire satisfaction and goal achievement.

But the content of the understanding matters greatly to this. You could have deep understanding of relatively trivial phenomena. I might understand why my sister stole my action figure on the 8th of May 1994 (in the sense that I understand what her motivations were, what she did and what led her to do it), but this understanding is not that important in the grand scheme of things. It might be far more valuable to know something about Newton’s laws of motion than to understand the motivations of my siblings many years ago. So, really, the superior value of understanding relative to knowledge can only be confidently claimed when we are comparing like with like. Understanding some particular phenomenon is more valuable than having propositional knowledge of the same phenomenon, but when the phenomena are different, this may not be the case.


3. The Cognitive Achievement Theory
There’s one final theory of the value of understanding discussed in Grimm’s article. It is the theory defended by Duncan Pritchard. According to this theory, understanding is valuable because it is a type of cognitive achievement. This is appealing since it is already widely accepted that achievements are valuable.

Earlier this year, I looked at Gwen Bradford’s work on the value of achievements. She argues that achievements are intrinsically valuable (and, of course, often instrumentally valuable). They involve process-product relations: you achieve something if you follow a particular process and thereby produce an outcome. The process you follow must have two characteristics in order for it to count as an achievement: (i) it must involve some degree of difficulty; and (ii) it must competently cause the outcome. For example, it is an achievement to run a marathon because it is very difficult to do so, and you cannot fluke it or fake it. Contrariwise, it is not an achievement to win the lottery, even though it may be difficult to do so (in the sense that winning is highly improbable), because it does not require any competence: winning is a sheer matter of luck.

Pritchard’s theory is that to understand something — to truly ‘grasp’ or ‘see’ the structural relations in a given phenomenon — requires overcoming some cognitive impediment and demonstrating cognitive competency. As such, understanding is a species of achievement.

Pritchard puts a lot of weight on the fact that you ‘own’ your understanding, i.e. that your success in overcoming the cognitive impediment is directly attributable to your cognitive skill and ability. Grimm criticises this. He argues that sometimes your successful grasping of some phenomenon is attributable to someone else’s hard work. For example, I understand Pythagoras’s theorem: I understand why it is true that the square on the hypotenuse of a right angled triangle is equal to the sum of the square on the other two sides. But this does not seem to be attributable to my own cognitive ability. It is attributable to the fact that other clever people have come up with easy-to-follow proofs of the theorem. They did the hard work, not me.

Grimm thinks it is possible to modify Pritchard’s theory to take this into account. So, while it may be true that someone else deserves the primary credit for coming up with the proof or explanation that enables you to understand, it is still true to say that the subjective grasping of that explanation — the ability to see why it works — is all yours. Nobody else can own that subjective process. The worry, however, is that this modification might diminish the sense of achievement involved in understanding something, and make that achievement far too trivial and ubiquitous.

Okay, that’s it for this post. To briefly recap, Grimm’s article looks at three theories of the value of understanding. Two of those theories cash out the value in subjective terms: the subjective satisfaction theory and the cognitive achievement theory. The other theory cashes it out in objective terms: the objective mirroring theory. None of the theories suggests that understanding is always and everywhere more valuable than propositional knowledge (since the phenomenon being understood might be relatively trivial), but they do suggest that understanding a given phenomenon is more valuable than simply having propositional knowledge of that same phenomenon.