Milton Friedman - Should the government decide on what is moral?
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Milton Friedman answers the question whether imposing moral values is a proper role for governmentin a free society.
Source: Simply explained YouTube channel.
Transcript:
Student question:
I'd like to ask a question on behalf of the lawyers in the audience. You talked tonight a lot about freedom, and it seemed to me that one of the types of freedom that was implicit in your talk was the freedom for an individual not to act, as well as the freedom for an individual to act. And this, in light of your discussion of externalities and market failures, reminded me of a problem in law that's called the nonfeasance misfeasance distinction. And the typical example is the Good Samaritan paradox. That simply is: if I'm walking alone on a beach and I look out in the water and there's somebody drowning, does society have the right to impose upon me the duty to rescue that person in the water? In other words, am I no longer free not to act? So the question I'd like to ask you Mr. Friedman is: under what circumstances may government in a free society impose upon an individual a duty to act?
Milton Friedman:
Note the shift you've made. You started with society and ended up with government. Are those synonymous?
Student:
That's a rhetorical question that has an implied answer.
Milton Friedman:
It sure does. Let's go back. Because what you're really asking is a very fundamental question. And we leave aside the legal aspects of it, but the real question is what's the case for believing in freedom. In particular, is a man free to sin? Because this is what you're really saying. If I see you about to sin, am I free to let your sin? If I know that you're sinning, the answer is no. The justification for freedom is that we don't know. Then who are we to judge for our fellow man? Humility - the belief that after all I can try to persuade you but I can't force you must ultimately rest on a recognition of the limitations of our knowledge. We don't say that there isn't such a thing as sin. All we say is we can't be sure we're right when we think it. Now you see this man walking on the beach: how can anybody force him to go out and rescue that fellow? And is it right to force him? You know, that's a problem that it's not easy to face. What we want to do, we want freedom, in my opinion, first, because we cannot know, we can never be sure we're right. And therefore, we have no right to force our views on other people. And second, because the thing that's really important is the individual's own values and his own beliefs. If you're not free to sin, then neither are you free to be virtuous. Virtue is a meaningless concept unless an individual has a free will to choose between one act and another. You and I might think very very well of that individual if he jumped in and tried to rescue the man sinking. And we will impose that value on him through the social process, whereby we construct values and transmit them to one another. A good society will certainly be one in which people in that position will be strongly inclined to move out and try to rescue the man there. But that's a very different question from saying that if the society is bad we can make it good by using force to drive them out there to bring the other man in. I'm not sure that's an answer to your legal questions, but it's an answer I think to the moral question.
Student:
Thank you.
Milton Friedman:
Thank you.