Thursday, January 7, 2010

Natural Philosophy, Reason, and the Connecticut Budget

In the earliest documentation of western civilization we had the Greeks describing what we now call "natural philosophy". Early writings describe nature as the basis for all acts and a civil society rooted in the so called nature of mankind.
As we passed through the emergence of Christianity, the Enlightenment, and the Age of Reason to our more modern thinking and philosophy we accomplished a number of major breakthroughs:
1. Moral Codes- Aristotle, Ten Commandments, Chivalry, Golden Rule, self evident rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
2.Higher mathematics as the language of the universe, God, truth, and foundation for reason
3. Extensive scientific discoveries based upon the scientific method
4. Documented and proven laws of nature that are universal and epistemic to our moral society
5.Breakdown of philosophy into disctinct disciplines like political philosophy, ethics, morality, free will
With many examples we can witness the interpretations and outcomes in our contemporary society in the form of secularism, diversity, and moral relativism. We see many times how our society increasingly pursues a social justice goal at the expense of individual rights and undermines the freedoms that we recognize from our definition of a civil society as articulated in the Declaration of Independance, and supported by our Constitution and Bill of Rights. The debates over Eminent Domain , for example, are about just such conflicts over what constitutes the "common good".
The so called culture wars debate the relativism of many topics, but often overlook the foundations of our country and its grounding in moral codes, individualism, and capitalism.This baseline allows us a civil discourse, but balance among these influences is dependant upon their relationship to each other. Capitalism is greed, but socialism does't work and never achieves the economic growth that raises the standard of living for all. The "reason" and rationale that we can apply today comes from advancements made largely because of capitalism combined with a benificent social responsibility of motivated individuals.We should know by now how to be inclusive and respectful of all citizens.
As the entitlements grow to a larger base you have to wonder when the scale tips and more people are receiving from those that are giving. With a majority vote the receiving population outweighs the productive population who works to support everyone else, Utopia? Capitalism collapses and our society is at odds with overall security in jeopardy. As Hobbes described in his "Leviathan" we then need a superman, a messiah to promise protection when we agree to relinqush all authority to him. This is the tyranny that haunts the planet and plagues the populations.
As Connecticut considers its budget dilemma the political elite seem to be in denial of the situation and rely upon the special interests and other fantasies to make the decisions. With a lame duck governor and candidates who are likely to remain silent of solutions until the last moments of preelection, if they say anything at all, we are stuck with the Democratic controlled legislature.
Reflecting upon what hasa been stated so far in this blog it would seem reasonable to to:
1. Categorize state general funded programs in the context of Regulation and Protection,Public Safety, Social Services, Public Health, Education
2. Individualize the programs to understand what is defined and what is included. A "safety net" is social justice at work and can include many enlightened factors, but a basic package for basic needs, as justification is warrentred, may be all that can be accomplised, now.
3. When the "what" of the program is defined by mathematics and a scientific method, the "how" the program is executed becomes the next interest.The appropriate mix of providers, contracts, direct state employee involvement, and performance metrics becomes the focal point. Measurements are key to an optimal portfolio for delivery that is cost effective.
4. Government administration assessment provides an opportunity to review the strengths, weaknesses and conflicts of interest tha create fiefdoms, accountability issues, and self serving governance.The "how" a program is executed review should also include this assessment which can address:
* Union contracts and their real contributions to desired program outcomes
* Consolidations to minimize overhead, but more importantly, maximize collaboration and delivery coordination at minimal cost
* Sharing of infrastructure or utility like approaches to address common needs

Why do we have so much government and so many private non profits serving overlapped needs and clients with overlapped budgets, staff, and programs?
As a concerned Connecticut citizen, I hope this helps and perhaps inspires a more thoughtful approach to our fiscal crisis.

5 comments:

manowar956 said...

hey man, great blog, cant tell ya how you bested my comeons. my girl cant wait to have me back in your state. she dont no my secret wepon. i tell her naturl pilosofe and she says how smart i am. thanks a million.

Mark, UConn said...

You must have some classical training. I have not heard reference to the "masters" since my undergrad days at University of Chicago (despite being a college faculty member). Continue on, I know I need to be reminded of the wisdom of the ages and how relevant it is to today's turmoils.

marion, ghicej said...

why are people attacking connecticuts safety net of social justice? what would we be without it??? in the sole control of grimy fairfield county hedge funders? they are the culprits. tax them more. give the victims of this greed filled place more and more and more of their greed begotten money!!!!!

Andrew said...

You would be surprised (or maybe not) how few bloggers mention Hobbes. Ann Rynd's the buzz. But Thomas Hobbes is the one we should be talking bout.

You are right, my friend, next step is the Leviathan, then what do we do?

keno524 said...

For once and for all, enough with the safety net!!!! Yes Aristotle, Enlightenment, Age of Reason thinkers had the truth and did not tell us about a safety net. Even Christianity said to give to ceasar what is ceasar's and to God what is God's. I don't call that a safety net. Enough, time for freedom, let people take care of themselves and each other -- no more government.