
Opinion Editorial |
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Life As A Positive-Sum GameJohn C. Goodman is president of the National Center for Policy Analysis, a public policy research institute with offices in Dallas and Washington |
Most historians, and virtually everyone on the political left, views most human interactions as zero-sum (to borrow a term from game theory). One person's gain is another person's loss.
In fact, the potential for positive-sum interactions (where both people gain) exists always and everywhere there are human beings. Granted, there are impediments - oppressive governments, war, plaques, etc. But people will naturally and inevitably exploit opportunities for mutually beneficial exchange. They will also create markets, languages, the rule of law and other institutions that promote non-zero-sum outcomes.
Just as there is a natural and inevitable tendency for biological evolution to lead to increasingly more complex life forms, so there is a natural and inevitable tendency for human cultures to evolve to greater levels of economic and technical complexity. What determines the speed of this evolution? Two factors: (1) how fast new ideas arise and (2) how quickly they spread. The latter, in turn, is limited only by barriers to transportation and communication.
These insights help explain why large empires, such as the Roman Empire, had salutary effects on the people it governed:
These insights also encourage us to rethink the benefits of the fall of Rome, most accounts of which were written by Romans themselves - who saw the Goths, Huns and Vandals, as "uncivilized". Granted, the "barbarians" didn't read Greek poetry or eat their salad with a salad fork. But their rule wasn't all bad.
Non-Zero-sum thinking also casts a new light on the "dark ages" - which as it turns out, weren't so dark. Unencumbered by oppressive political rule and taking advantage of a reasonable amount of peace provided by the feudal system, people developed markets, invented new products (including the printing press) and exploited opportunities for positive-sum interactions.
Developments on the other side of the world during this time are also instructive.
Source: John C. Goodman (president, National Center for Policy Analysis), review of Robert Wright, Nonzero: The Logic 0f Human Destiny (New York: Pantheon, 2000).
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