17 September 2024

Why Socialism Is Illogical And Unnatural

WHY SOCIALISM IS ILLOGICAL AND UNNATURAL
(The Logical Mistakes Behind The Conception Of Socialism)

Around 1800, the Industrial Revolution started in Britain. It consisted of two major changes:
1. The 3 factors of production are land, labour and capital. During the Agricultural Age, the most important factor of production was land. With the Industrial Revolution, capital (ie, machines/factories) replaced land as the most important factor of production.
2. During the Agricultural Age, capital consisted of small/simple tools like the plough. And these tools were owned by the workers. Example: Farmers owned their ploughs. With the Industrial Revolution, big/expensive machines/factories became the new capital. And these were owned not by workers but by rich merchants - ie, a separate group of people: the 'capitalists'.
Thus the new economic system was dominated by both capital and capitalists. Hence it was called 'capitalism'.

During the Industrial Revolution, the condition of the factory workers was bad. Wages were low, the work was hard/long and working/living conditions were bad. So some social thinkers of 1800s Europe (mainly France and Britain) said that these problems were due to the private ownership of capital. Hence the solution was the opposite of this - ie, the social ownership of capital. That is - they proposed an alternate economic system: 'socialism'.

The socialists made two mistakes. First mistake: These social thinkers were all city people. So they saw only the problems of the factory workers - who were also in the cities. But who were these factory workers? They were farm workers in villages who had moved to the cities and become factory workers. The condition of the factory workers was bad. But the condition of farm workers was even worse. That is why they had left their farms/villages and moved to the cities/factories. But since the socialists were city people, they did not see the poverty of the farm workers in the villages. This was a cognitive bias - ie, the selection bias.

Second mistake: The socialists jumped to the conclusion that the bad effect of capitalism (ie, the bad condition of factory workers) was due to the most visible/glaring feature of capitalism: the ownership of capital by capitalists, or the 'private' ownership of capital. They did this without any logical (let alone scientific) cause-effect analysis. [The truth was that the bad condition of factory workers was just the first stage of capitalism. Over time, capitalism would reform itself and the condition of factory workers would improve. And this is exactly what happened in Europe in the 1800s. Thus capitalism is a self-correcting economic system] So here the socialists committed a logical fallacy - ie, the causal fallacy.

Thus socialism was the product of a cognitive bias (selection bias) and a logical fallacy (causal fallacy). And Karl Marx took this one step further - he turned 'social ownership of capital' into 'government ownership of capital' . . .

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