"Public Reason" -- as first defined by Immanuel Kant and then more fully developed by John Rawls -- is fundamental to the success of democratic discourse -- and ultimately to our adaptive fitness as a species.. The absence of public reason explains -- to a very large degree (!) -- our collective failures to implement wise policy based on scientific knowledge.
Similar to The Burden of Proof: Nurturing Public Reason in Response to Climate Change [University of New Mexcio, October 13, 2014}oct 13 2014 copy (17)
2. âFolsomâ
âThe Folsom Point was crafted from flint some 10,000 years ago. Discovered in the 1920s
on a joint expedition by this Museum and the Denver Museum of Natural History, this
spear point is among the most important archaeological finds ever made on this
continent. The discovery of the Folsom Point, which was found embedded in a bison that
has been extinct for 10,000 years, provided evidence that humans arrived in North
America much earlier than scientists previously thought.â
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent-exhibitions/human-origins-
and-cultural-halls/hall-of-eastern-woodland-indians/folsom-spear-point
4. The Burden of Proof:
Nurturing âPublic Reasonâ
in Response to Climate Change
Tom Moritz
Adjunct Professor
University of the West
October 13, 2014
5. Letter: Charles Darwin to Alfred Russell Wallace
May 1, 1857
ââŚit is lamentable how each man
draws his own different conclusions
from the very same fact.â
http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/entry-2086
Darwin Correspondence Project
7. âThe idea of public reason specifies at the
deepest level the basic moral and political
values that are to determine a constitutional
democratic government's relation to its
citizens and their relation to one another. In
short, it concerns how the political relation is
to be understood. â
John Rawls âThe Idea of Public Reason Revisited,â
The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3 (Summer, 1997), pp. 765-807
John Rawls: âPublic Reasonâ
8. âPublicâ ???
ââŚsuch reason is public in three ways:
1) as the reason of free and equal citizens, it is the
reason of the public;
2) its subject is the public good concerning questions of
fundamental political justice, which questions are of
two kinds, constitutional essentials and matters of
basic justice;
3) its nature and content are public, being expressed in
public reasoning by a family of reasonable concep-
tions of political justice reasonably thought to satisfy
the criterion of reciprocity.
9. John Rawls: âPublic Reasonâ
âOf course, every society also contains nume-
rous unreasonable doctrines. Yet in this essay I
am concerned with an ideal normative
conception of democratic government, that is,
with the conduct of its reasonable citizens and
the principles they follow, assuming them to
be dominant and controlling. How far unrea-
sonable doctrines are active and tolerated is
to be determined by the principles of justice
and the kinds of actions they permit. â
John Rawls âThe Idea of Public Reason Revisited,â
The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3 (Summer, 1997), pp. 765-807
10. John Rawls: â5 Different Aspects of Public Reasonâ
1) To which political questions does it apply?
2) To whom does it apply (government officials
and candidates for public office)?
3) Are its contents consistent with a family of
reasonable political conceptions of justice?
4) Are coercive norms consistent with
fundamental conceptions of justice -- as
enacted in the form of legitimate law for a
democratic people?
5) Do citizensâ recognize that the principles
derived from their conceptions of justice
satisfy the criterion of reciprocity?
John Rawls âThe Idea of Public Reason Revisited,â
The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3 (Summer, 1997), pp. 765-807
11. âThe zeal to embody the whole truth in politics
is incompatible with an idea of public reason
that belongs with democratic citizenship.â
-- John Rawls
John Rawls âThe Idea of Public Reason Revisited,â
The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3 (Summer, 1997), pp. 765-807
12. A fundamental problem in building and
sustaining any democratic polity
is successful mediation
between necessary adaptation
for the common good and centrifugal
counter-social tendencies of individuals
14. World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO)
âKnowledge Pyramidâ
http://www.wipo.int/global_ip/en/knowledge_gap.html
15. Repatriation of biodiversity information through Clearing House Mechanism of the Convention on Biological Diversity and Global
Biodiversity Information Facility; Views and experiences of Peruvian and
Bolivian non-governmental organizations. Ulla Helimo Masterâs Thesis University of Turku Department of Biology 6.10. 2004
p.11. http://enbi.utu.fi/Documents/Ulla%20Helimo%20PRO%20GRADU.pdf [06-06-05]
âKNOWLEDGE RESOURCESâ:
TechnologyInsight
16. The inter-subjective domain
of public reason
is also the domain
of âthird person ontologyâ
(the definitive construct
for scientific data / evidence)
18. A fundamental problem in building and
sustaining any polity
is successful mediation
between necessary adaptation
for the common good and centrifugal
counter-social tendencies of individuals
19. Physics
Biology
Cognitive StudiesSocial Sciences
Engineering
Problem Domain of
âCONSCIOUSNESSâ
Personal
PERCEPTION
Personal
âVALUATIONâ
(Selection by Memory
)
Personal REASON
Personal
EXPRESSION
âSubjectivityâ: âFirst Person Ontologyâ
Personal
âINTUITIONâ
20. Ostrom: âThe Internal World of Individual Choiceâ
Elinor Ostrom,, Governing the Commons: the Evolution of Institutions for
Collective Action, Cambridge, Cambridge Univ Press, 1990. p.37
21. The Social Enterprise Spectrum
Purely Philanthropic Purely Commercial
Motives
Methods
Goals
Appeal to
Goodwill
Mission
Driven
Social
Value
Mixed Motives
Mission and Market
Driven
Social and Economic
Value
Appeal to Self
Interest
Market Driven
Economic Value
JG Dees, âEnterprising Non-profits" in Harvard Business Review on Non-Profits Harvard, Cambridge, 1999, p.147
22. Poder Politico y Conocimiento
PolĂticos
Administradores
o Gestores
Analistas-
TĂŠcnicos
CientĂficos
Conocimiento (en tĂŠrminos cientĂficos-occidentales)
Bajo
Alto
Alto
(Sutton, 1999)
From: Organizaciones que aprenden, paises que aprenden: lecciones y AP en Costa Rica by Andrea Ballestero
Directora ELAP
???
28. Cholera
âCholera is a disease characterized by rapid onset of explosive diarrhea, massive dehydration, and
death. It is caused by the bacillus Vibrio cholerae and spread through fecal contamination of
drinking water or food. In the 19th Century epidemics began in Asia and then spread to Europe
and the Americas. Medical opinion was that it was spread through the air, in keeping with the
miasma theory of disease. Overcrowding and poor sanitation were thought to lead to air
contamination and the rapid spread of the disease, particularly in low-lying foggy areas near
rivers and other bodies of water. Diseases such as malaria (literally, bad air) were associated
with mists over swampy areas. Drainage of low lying areas lowered the incidence of malaria and
other diseases, an observation considered to be further proof that disease was spread through
the air. Cholera first appeared in England in 1831 and was characterized by a high incidence and
fatality rate in local areas â one village of 550 inhabitants recorded 320 cases and 55 fata- lities
(Vinten-Johansen, 2003). During the initial epidemic and a subsequent reoccurrence in 1848
there were intense scientific debates about its cause (Smith, 2002). The two major theories of
disease at the time were those of the contagionists and those of the anti-contagionists. Cholera
fit neither theory very well. Its rapid onset fit best with anti-contagionism; and its dependence
on human contact fit best with contagionism ( Vinten-Johansen, 2003). But among the medical
and scientific experts involved in these often acrimonious debates there was general
agreement that disease was spread by air.â
âJohn Snow, the Broad Street pump and the precautionary principle,â Bernard D. Goldstein,
Environmental Development 1 (2012) 3â9.
http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow/EnvDev1_3_9_2012.pdf
29. âA representation of the cholera epidemic
of the nineteenth centuryâ
http://history.nih.gov/exhibits/history/index.html
30. âthe general rule that the mortality of cholera is inversely as the
elevation of the people assailed above the sea level.â
â Wm Farr (19th April, 1852)
31. âA representation of the cholera epidemic
of the nineteenth centuryâ
http://history.nih.gov/exhibits/history/index.html
32. Air or Water?
A drop of Thames water, as depicted by Punch in 1850
33. âCholera came to Florence in 1854 during the Asiatic Cholera Pandemic of 1846-63.
[Filippo] Pacini became very interested in the disease. Immediately following the death
of cholera patients, he performed an autopsy and with his microscope, conducted
histological examinations of the intestinal mucosa. During such studies, Pacini first
discovered a comma-shaped bacillus which he described as a Vibrio. He published a
paper in 1854 entitled, "Microscopical observations and pathological deductions on
cholera" in which he described the organism and its relation to the disease. His
microscopic slides of the organism were clearly labeled, identifying the date and nature
of his investigations âŚâ
Filippo Pacini
http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow/firstdiscoveredcholera.html
34. Edwin Chadwick
âHis extensive research on the living conditions of the slums of England led him to publish The Report
on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain in 1842. In a unique bureaucratic
way, this pamphlet highlighted the unreasonable living conditions and the virtually complete lack of sanitary
infrastructure in Great Britain. Chadwickâs writing was concerned with state control, shifting all of the blame of
poorhealth on poor sanitary conditions, whilst ignoring other factors such as diet and labouring conditions.
Despite this administrative slant in Chadwickâs writing, it led to a total revolution in social thought. It established a
link between sanitary conditions and high mortality rates showing that the misery of the poor lay within the
governmentâs control, not in some intrinsic deficiency in the class.
âChadwickâs writings led to the Public Health Act of 1848 in which the government began to acknowledge some
responsibility for upholding the health of the population. Following this public health initiative, the Board of
Health was created and Chadwick was appointed the Commissioner. During the cholera epidemic of 1848-49,
Chadwick ordered the replacement of the traditional brick sewers with his self-flushing, glazed pipes in hopes of
conveying the sewage to farmers for use as manure. This antagonised many engineers who thought that he was
overstepping his bounds. Furthermore in 1848 in a well-meaning attempt to rid poverty stricken areas of their filth
in cesspools, he ordered the sewers of London to be flushed into the Thames. This was a devastating move leading
to extreme contamination of the Thames with over 20,000 cubic meters of sewage dumped into the Thames from
March to May of 1848 and over 50,000 cubic meters from September to February, 1848.
âChadwickâs very strong and opinionated personality combined with his seemingly anti-democratic views alienated
many people and led to his eventual resignation. In 1854 he was attacked publically in the House of Commons by
Benjamin Hall, his eventual successor as Commissioner to the Board of Health. Hall attacked both his personality
and his career, calling him âan unscrupulous and dangerous manâ who had worked in the public service for years
but had not provided any positive impact to the community. In light of this massive loss of Parliamentâs support,
Chadwick was forced to resign in 1854.â
http://www.choleraandthethames.co.uk/cholera-in-london/cholera-
in-soho/edwin-chadwick/
42. From US Center for Disease Control: â
Global Water, Sanitation, & Hygiene (WASH) â
âDisease & Death: An estimated 801,000 children younger than 5 years of
age perish from diarrhea each year, mostly in developing countries. This
amounts to 11% of the 7.6 million deaths of children under the age of five
and means that about 2,200 children are dying every day as a result of
diarrheal diseases 4.
âUnsafe drinking water, inadequate availability of water for hygiene, and lack
of access to sanitation together contribute to about 88% of deaths from
diarrheal diseases 1.
âWorldwide, millions of people are infected with neglected tropical diseases
(NTDs), many of which are water and/or hygiene-related, such as Guinea
Worm Disease, Buruli Ulcer, Trachoma, and Schistosomiasis. These
diseases are most often found in places with unsafe drinking water, poor
sanitation, and insufficient hygiene practices 8, 9.â
http://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/global/wash_statistics.html#four
43. âMicrobiological Analysis of Drinking Water
of Kathmandu Valleyâ
âAbstract: Drinking water quality assessment in Kathmandu valley has always
been crucial with reference to public health importance. A study was
conducted to evaluate the quality of drinking water of the valley. A total of
132 drinking water samples were randomly collected from 49 tube wells,
57 wells, 17 taps and 9 stone spouts in different places of Kathmandu
valley. The samples were analyzed for microbiological parameters. Total
plate and coliform count revealed that 82.6% and 92.4% of drinking
water samples found to cross the WHO guideline value for drinking
water. During the study, 238 isolates of enteric bacteria were identified, of
which 26.4% were Escherichia coli , 25.6% were Enterobacter spp, 23%
were Citrobacter spp, 6.3% were Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 5.4% Were
Klebsiella spp, 4.0% were Shigella spp , 3.0% were Salmonella typhi,
3.0% Were Proteus vulgaris, 3.0% Were Serratia spp and 1.0% were
Vibrio cholerae .â
Scientific World, Vol. 5, No. 5, June 2007
http://www.nepjol.info/index.php/SW/article/viewFile/2667/2361
46. âUnderstanding the Cholera Epidemic, Haitiâ
by Renaud Piarroux et al.
Emerging Infectious Diseases, Volume 17, Number 7âJuly 2011
http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/17/7/11-0059-f1
50. Ebola
An aid worker
removes the body of
a dead woman in
Monrovia, Liberia.
Photograph by
Kieran Kesner / Rex
Features VIA AP
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/27/ebola-wars
51. 1976: âPeter Piot and the
other team members
collected blood samples and
epidemiological data to
establish modes of
transmission of Ebola.â
Institute of Tropical Medicine,
Antwerp
http://www.wsj.com/articles/footage-
from-1976-documents-discovery-of-
ebola-virus-1413470954
52. World Health Organization: âEbola virus diseaseâ
Fact sheet N°103 Updated September 2014
Key facts
⢠Ebola virus disease (EVD), formerly known as Ebola haemorrhagic fever, is a severe, often fatal
illness in humans.
⢠The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals and spreads in the human population through
human-to-human transmission.
⢠The average EVD case fatality rate is around 50%. Case fatality rates have varied from 25% to 90% in
past outbreaks.
⢠The first EVD outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa, near tropical rainforests, but
the most recent outbreak in west Africa has involved major urban as well as rural areas.
⢠Community engagement is key to successfully controlling outbreaks. Good outbreak control relies
on applying a package of interventions, namely case management, surveillance and contact tracing,
a good laboratory service, safe burials and social mobilisation.
⢠Early supportive care with rehydration, symptomatic treatment improves survival. There is as yet no
licensed treatment proven to neutralise the virus but a range of blood, immunological and drug
therapies are under development.
⢠There are currently no licensed Ebola vaccines but 2 potential candidates are undergoing
evaluation.
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs103/en/
53. âBackground:
âThe Ebola virus causes an acute, serious illness which is often fatal if untreated. Ebola virus disease
(EVD) first appeared in 1976 in 2 simultaneous outbreaks, one in Nzara, Sudan, and the other in
Yambuku, Democratic Republic of Congo. The latter occurred in a village near the Ebola River, from
which the disease takes its name.
âThe current outbreak in west Africa, (first cases notified in March 2014), is the largest and most
complex Ebola outbreak since the Ebola virus was first discovered in 1976. There have been more
cases and deaths in this outbreak than all others combined. It has also spread between countries
starting in Guinea then spreading across land borders to Sierra Leone and Liberia, by air (1 traveller
only) to Nigeria, and by land (1 traveller) to Senegal.
âThe most severely affected countries, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia have very weak health systems,
lacking human and infrastructural resources, having only recently emerged from long periods of
conflict and instability. On August 8, the WHO Director-General declared this outbreak a Public
Health Emergency of International Concern.
âA separate, unrelated Ebola outbreak began in Boende, Equateur, an isolated part of the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
âThe virus family Filoviridae includes 3 genera: Cuevavirus, Marburgvirus, and Ebolavirus. There are 5
species that have been identified: Zaire, Bundibugyo, Sudan, Reston and TaĂŻ Forest. The first 3,
Bundibugyo ebolavirus, Zaire ebolavirus, and Sudan ebolavirus have been associated with large
outbreaks in Africa. The virus causing the 2014 west African outbreak belongs to the Zaire species.â
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs103/en/
World Health Organization: âEbola virus diseaseâ
Fact sheet N°103 Updated September 2014
54. Sampling and investigation locations In southeastern Guinea (Sierra Leone, Guinea, and
Liberia are visible); scale bar stands for 50 km.
SaĂŠz A M et al. EMBO Mol Med.
doi:10.15252/emmm.201404792
Š2014 by European Molecular Biology Organization
http://embomolmed.embopress.org/content/early/2014/12/29/emmm.201404792.figures-only
55. Meliandou and the burnt tree that housed a bat colony AThe village of Meliandou.
SaĂŠz A M et al. EMBO Mol Med.
doi:10.15252/emmm.201404792
Š2014 by European Molecular Biology Organization
http://embomolmed.embopress.org/content/early/2014/12/29/emmm.201404792.figures-only
59. âBats as bushmeat: a global review,â
Simon Mickleburgh, Kerry Waylen and Paul Racey
âA questionnaire survey and literature review revealed the extent of hunting of bats
for bushmeat in the Old World tropics. High levels of offtake were reported
throughout Asia, the Pacific islands and some Western Indian Ocean islands,
where fruit bats of the genus Pteropus are eaten extensively. Most hunting in
Africa was reported in western states and the largest fruit bat Eidolon helvum was
preferred. Insectivorous bats are also eaten, particularly Tadarida in Asia. Hunting
is both for local consumption and commercial, sometimes involving cross-border
transactions. The high levels of hunting reported and the low reproductive rate of
bats indicate there are likely to be severe negative effects on bat populations, and
declines of several species are documented. Although there has been only one
reported attempt to manage offtake, this indicates that it is possible and
apparently successful. Furthermore, voluntary controls on hunting have halted
declines in bat numbers. There have been several initiatives to reduce hunting
pressure and conserve threatened bat species, mainly on islands that, when
sustained, have been successful. More education projects and community-based
conservation initiatives should be encouraged together with further attempts at
sustainable harvesting in situations where disease risk has been evaluated.â
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromP
age=online&aid=5487716&fileId=S0030605308000938
Oryx / Volume 43 / Issue 02 / April 2009, pp 217-234
60. âUncovering the fruit bat bushmeat commodity chain and the
true extent of fruit bat hunting in Ghana, West Africaâ
âHarvesting, consumption and trade of bushmeat are important causes of both
biodiversity loss and potential zoonotic disease emergence. In order to identify
possible ways to mitigate these threats, it is essential to improve our
understanding of the mechanisms by which bushmeat gets from the site of
capture to the consumerâs table. In this paper we highlight the previously
unrecognized scale of hunting of the African straw-colored fruit bat, Eidolon
helvum, a species which is important in both ecological and public health contexts,
and describe the commodity chain in southern Ghana for its trade. Based on
interviews with 551 Ghanaians, including bat hunters, vendors and consumers, we
estimate that a minimum of 128,000 E. helvum bats are sold each year through a
commodity chain stretching up to 400 km and involving multiple vendors. Unlike
the general bushmeat trade in Ghana, where animals are sold in both specialized
bushmeat markets and in restaurants, E. helvum is sold primarily in marketplaces;
many bats are also kept by hunters for personal consumption. The offtake
estimated in this paper raises serious conservation concerns, while the commodity
chain identified in this study may offer possible points for management
intervention. The separation of the E. helvum commodity chain from that of other
bushmeat highlights the need for species-specific research in this area, particularly
for bats, whose status as bushmeat is largely unknown.â
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3323830/
Biol Conserv. Dec 2011; 144(12): 3000â3008.
67. The city of New Orleans pictured at dawn, Saturday, Sept. 3, 2005 as fires continue to burn
and water still stands in many areas of the city. New York Times / Vincent Laforet
http://vincentlaforet.wordpress.com/2008/09/01/last-
minute-advice-for-those-covering-gustav/katrina051/
82. âTragedyâ?
âThe essence of dramatic tragedy is not unhappiness.
It resides in
the solemnity of the remorseless working of things.
This inevitableness of destiny can only be illustrated in
terms of human life by incidents which in fact
involve unhappiness. For it is only by them that the
futility of escape can be made evident in the
dramaâŚâ
-- Alfred North Whitehead
Science and the Modern World (1948)
Science 13 December 1968: Vol. 162 no. 3859 pp. 1243-1248
DOI: 10.1126/science.162.3859.124
95. Standard & Poors: âRe/Insurers Have âCoped Well So
Farâ with Climate Changeâ
http://www.insurancejournal.com/magazines/features/2014/06/02/330251.htm
98. NYC and Storm Sandy
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/10/the-sandy-storm-surge-is-
this-what-climate-change-will-look-like/264292/
99. NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg?
http://www.forbes.com/sites/rahimkanani/2014/03/05/mike-bloomberg-on-the-un-
climate-change-and-how-obamas-efforts-are-just-not-enough/
101. D. Nutt et al., âDevelopment of a rational scale to assess the harm of drugs of
potential misuse,â The Lancet, Volume 369, Issue 9566, Pages 1047 - 1053, 24 March
2007 doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)60464-4.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736%2807%2960464-
4/fulltext
Tobacco
104. But what about⌠âNon-ideal Conditionsâ
âThe idea of public reason is often presented as a normative ideal, as the way our
moral or political rules ought, ideally, to be justified, and also as the way
individuals ought, ideally, to engage in deliberation and discussion. Rawls, for
example, stipulates that his account of public reason âbelongs to a conception of a
well-ordered constitutional democratic societyâ (Rawls 1999b, 573), by which he
means a society where: (a) everyone accepts, and knows that others accept, the
same conception of justice (or at least everyone accepts some member from the
family of liberal conceptions); (b) the basic structure of society is publicly known to
satisfy this conception and; (c) citizens have a normally effective sense of justice
(Rawls 1996, 35).
âBut what does public reason entail in non-ideal circumstances, such as our own,
where arguably none of the three conditions listed above are met (Boettcher
2012, 174â175)? Some proponents of public reason encourage us to observe the
moral duty of civility in our political life, but if the duty of civility has been
designed for ideal conditions, it is unclear whether or how it might apply under
less than ideal conditions. For example, many accounts of public reason include a
sincerity principle that directs individuals to only support those principles or rules
they sincerely believe meet the test of public reason (Gaus 1996, 139â140; Rawls
1996, 241â242; Schwartzman 2011). But does this requirement still apply in
conditions where many of those with whom we are debating do not embrace the
idea of public reason, and may behave only strategically or cynically? â
Quong, Jonathan, "Public Reason", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2013 Edition), Edward
N. Zalta (ed.), URL = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2013/entries/public-reason/
105. RR: ââŚgovernment is not the solution to our
problem; government is the problemâ
Ronald Reagan 1st Inaugural Address 01/20/1981
http://www.reaganlibrary.com/reagan/speeches/first.asp
106. âGlobal Public Reasonâ ???
âAnother issue that Rawls lists as a problem of extension is the topic of international
relations. But the topic of international relations may not simply be a problem of
extension, that is, it may not simply be a question of whether some existing
account of public reason can be extended to provide the necessary answers to
questions about international relations or global justice. There is also the further
question as to whether the principles that regulate international or global justice
require an independent or separate conception of global public reason. The case in
favor of a distinct account of global public reason might appeal to at least three
facts:
1) if the fundamental ideas that form the basis of âdomesticâ public reason draw on
the shared public or political culture of a constitutional democracy (Rawls 1999b,
584), global public reason appears to require a different basis, since either there is
no shared political culture spanning the globe, or else that shared culture looks
very different to that of a constitutional democracy.
2) if the relevant agents in the global or international arena are not primarily
individual persons, but are rather states or other collective entities, then global
public reason may require a very different conception of the constituency of public
reason.
3) if we assume that a global society regulated by a conception of global public reason
is comprised of different states, which are each internally regulated by their own
domestic forms of public reason, we face several questions regarding the
relationship between these domestic and global principlesâŚâ
Quong, Jonathan, "Public Reason", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2013 Edition), Edward
N. Zalta (ed.), URL = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2013/entries/public-reason/
107. Nation-States and
Multi-National Corporations
The presumption that states and organizations
can be treated as âpersonsâ is very riskyâŚ
To a reasonable degree the behavior of some of
these entities would be judged psychopathic
if held to the standards by which individuals
are diagnosedâŚ
108. And yetâŚ
Progress does occur at the international level â
treaties and conventions can sometimes be
effective in regulating international conductâŚ
SEE: âMost-ratified international treatiesâ
http://blogs.un.org/blog/2012/09/24/most-
ratified-international-
treaties/#sthash.Uh56CDrG.dpbs
109. It is worth pondering why these
treaties have been âsuccessfulââŚ?
111. The Commons and âtragediesâ?
âWe may well call it âthe tragedy of the commons,â using
the word âtragedyâ as the philosopher Whitehead used
it: âThe essence of dramatic tragedy is not
unhappiness. It resides in the solemnity of the
remorseless working of things." He then goes on to say,
âThis inevitableness of destiny can only be illustrated in
terms of human life by incidents which in fact involve
unhappiness. For it is only by them that the futility of
escape can be made evident in the drama.â "
â Garrett Hardin
âThe Tragedy of the Commonsâ
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/162/3859/1243.full
Science 13 December 1968: Vol. 162 no. 3859 pp. 1243-1248
DOI: 10.1126/science.162.3859.124
112. 1. Clearly defined boundaries
Individuals or households who have rights to
withdraw resource units from the CPR must be
clearly defined, as must the boundaries of the
CPR itself,
2. Congruence between appropriation and
provision rules and local conditions
Appropriation rules restricting time, place,
technology and/or quantity of
resource units are related to local conditions
and to provision rules requiring labor, material,
and/or money.
3. Collective-choice arrangements
Most individuals affected by the operational
rules can participate in modifying the
operational rules.
4. Monitoring
Monitors, who actively audit CPR conditions
and appropriator behavior, are accountable to
the appropriators or are the appropriators.
5. Graduated sanctions
Appropriators who violate operational rules
are likely to be assessed graduated
sanctions (depending on the seriousness and
context of the offense) by other
appropriators, by officials accountable to
these appropriators, or by both.
6. Conflict-resolution mechanisms
Appropriators and their officials have rapid
access to low-cost local arenas to
resolve conflicts among appropriators or
between appropriators and officials.
7. Minimal recognition of rights to organize
The rights of appropriators to devise their
own institutions are not challenged
by external governmental authorities.
For CPRs that are parts of larger systems;
8. Nested enterprises
Appropriations, provision, monitoring,
enforcement, conflict resolution, and
governance activities are organized in
multiple layers of nested enterprises.
OSTROM: âDesign Principles Illustrated by Long-
enduring Common Pool Resources [CPR] Institutionsâ
Elinor Ostrom : âGoverning the Commons: the Evolution of Institutions for Collective Actionâ
Chapter 3: âAnalyzing Long-Enduring CPRsâ p.90
113. Southern California Groundwater Basins
Elinor Ostrom,, Governing the Commons: the Evolution of Institutions for
Collective Action, Cambridge, Cambridge Univ Press, 1990. p.37
114. âWe may insist as much as we like that the human
intellect is weak in comparison with human instincts,
and be right in doing so.
But nevertheless there is something peculiar about this
weakness. The voice of the intellect is a soft one, but
it does not rest until it has gained a hearing.
Ultimately after endless rebuffs, it succeeds. This is one
of the few points in which one may be optimistic
about the future of mankind.â
Sigmund Freud
The Future of an Illusion
115. âDare to know! (Sapere aude.)
Have the courage to use your own
understandingâ!
-- Immanuel Kant
âWhat is Enlightenment?â
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/ets/CCREAD/etscc/kant.html