A good place
to begin is with the discussion of the basic goods of “the good life”, by
Robert and Edward Skidelsky in their book How Much is Enough (2012). The relevant discussion is in Chapter 6, entitled
‘Elements of the Good Life’. I published a somewhat critical review of the book
on this blog some years ago, but I saw some merit in the authors discussion of
human flourishing.
The authors
adopt the following criteria to identify basic goods:
Universality: not specific to eras or cultures;
Finality: not just serving as a means to a
more basic good;
Sui
generis: not
incorporated in some other good;
Indispensability: lack of the good leads to loss or
harm.
I accept
those criteria.
The authors
identify the following seven basic goods:
- Health: ‘‘the full functioning of the
body, the perfection of our animal natures”.
- Security: ‘‘an individual’s justified
expectation that his life will continue more or less in its accustomed course,
undisturbed by war, crime, revolution or major social and
economic upheavals”.
- Respect: an individual’s feeling that others
‘‘regard his views and interests as worthy of consideration, as things not to
be ignored or trampled on”.
- Personality: ‘‘the
ability to frame and execute a plan of life reflective of one’s tastes,
temperament and conception of the good”.
- Harmony
with Nature: ‘‘a
sense of kinship with animals, plants, and landscapes”.
- Friendship:
‘‘all robust,
affectionate relationships”, including work relationships etc. as well as family
relationships.
- Leisure: “that which
we do for its own sake”, not just time off work.
That list
summarises 17 pages of discussion, so it may not do justice to the authors’
deliberations. Nevertheless, it provides a basis to consider whether items have
been identified appropriately, and whether anything important has been left
out.
Health is
obviously an essential characteristic of a flourishing human. The authors want
to discourage “an obsession with longevity”, but it is reasonable to assert
that flourishing involves living healthily for the term of one’s natural life.
Security is
important, but it serves as a means to other goods, including a long and
healthy life and psychological well-being (an important omission from the
authors’ list of basic goods).
Having
others respect of one’s views and interests feels good, but it isn’t indispensable
to individual flourishing. Respect for one’s natural rights (life, liberty and
property) is certainly indispensable, but serves as a means to other goods,
including the ability to live a long and healthy life,
interact with others for mutual benefit, and to the acquire human and physical
capital that contributes to flourishing.
“Personality”
does not seem to capture adequately the ability to frame and execute a plan of
life reflective of one’s tastes, temperament and conception of the good. The
authors use the term personality, rather than autonomy or practical reason,
because it implies “spontaneity, individuality and spirit”. Those aspects of
personality could be more appropriately incorporated under psychological
well-being. The basic good corresponding to framing and executing a plan of
life seems to me to be best described as accepting responsibility for self-direction.
Living in
harmony with nature is important to human flourishing, and not just because of environmental
impacts on human health and well-being. As I see it, the motivation for living
in harmony with nature stems from deep-seated intuitions about our kinship with
other living things.
Friendship
doesn’t seem the most appropriate word to capture the wide variety of
relationships that the authors put under this heading. The relevant basic good
seems to me to be positive relationships.
Leisure is
usually thought of as time off work, rather than engagement in doing things for
their own sake. Martin Seligman uses the term ‘engagement’ to refer to the
relevant basic good in his book Flourish (2011).
The other
four elements of well-being identified in Seligman’s PERMA acronym (discussed here) are positive emotion, relationships, meaning and achievement. Of these, Skidelsky
and Skidelsky only directly acknowledge relationships as an element of the good
life. It seems to me that positive emotion and a sense of achievement are
essential characteristics of a flourishing human.
Meaning
requires a little more discussion. Seligman defines ‘meaning’ as belonging to
and serving something that you believe is bigger than the self. This makes
sense if serving the self means pursuit of personal pleasure. Those who see
their lives as meaningful could be expected to value more things in life than
their own pleasure.
So, here are
the basic goods that I would expect a flourishing human to have:
- The prospect of a long and healthy life.
- Wise and well-informed self-direction.
- Positive relationships with family, friends, colleagues, acquaintances and trading partners.
- Psychological well-being: emotional stability, positive emotion, satisfaction with material living standards, engagement in doing things for their own sake and learning new things, perception of life as meaningful, a sense of accomplishment, optimism, resilience, vitality, integrity, and self-respect.
- Living in harmony with nature.
What do I
plan to do with this list? My interest is in the factors that lead to
differences in opportunities for human flourishing in different countries. For
example, which are the countries where some person chosen at random is likely
to have the best prospects of a long and healthy life? How can we explain why the
prospects for that individual are better in those countries?
Such
questions will be explored in later posts.