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Paternalism is action that limits a person's or group's liberty or autonomy against their will and is intended to promote their own good. It has been defended in a variety of contexts as a means of protecting individuals from significant harm, supporting long-term autonomy, or promoting moral or psychological well-being. Such justifications are commonly found in public health policy, legal theory, medical ethics, and behavioral economics, where limited intervention is viewed as compatible with or even supportive of personal agency.<ref name="Stanford" />
Some, such as John Stuart Mill, think paternalism can be appropriate towards children, saying:
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Paternalism towards adults is sometimes characterized as treating them as if they were children.<ref>Feinberg, Joel. 1986. Harm to Self. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 4 Template:ISBN</ref>
Some critics argue that such interventions can infringe upon autonomy and reflect insufficient respect for an individual’s capacity for self-determination.<ref>Shiffrin, Seana. 2000. "Paternalism, Unconscionability Doctrine, and Accommodation". Philosophy and Public Affairs 29(3): 205–250.</ref> The terms 'paternalism,' 'paternalistic,' and 'paternalist' are sometimes used pejoratively, particularly in political or social discourse.<ref name="Stanford" />
EtymologyEdit
The word paternalism derives from the adjective paternal, which entered the English language in the fifteenth century from Old French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (cf. Old Occitan {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, as in Catalan, Spanish and Portuguese), itself from Medieval Latin {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The classical Latin equivalent was {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss, from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
TypesEdit
Soft and hardEdit
Soft paternalism is the view that paternalism is justified only if an action to be committed is involuntary. John Stuart Mill gives the example of a person about to walk across a damaged bridge. Because the person does not know the bridge is damaged and there is no time to warn him, seizing him and turning him back is not an infringement on his liberty. According to soft paternalism, one would be justified in forcing him to not cross the bridge so one could find out whether he knows about the damage. If he knows and wants to jump off the bridge and commit suicide, then one should allow him to. Soft paternalism is the intervention due to a person not having the rationality or ability to make decisions. If a patient in an emergency room is intoxicated or unconscious, they do not possess the rationality or ability to make decisions for themselves and any decisions made on their behalf would be soft paternalism. <ref name="Stanford" />
Hard paternalists say that at least sometimes one is entitled to prevent him from crossing the bridge and committing suicide.<ref name="Stanford">Template:Cite book</ref> Hard paternalism does not rely on the absence of rationality or ability. In the emergency room example, the patient is sober or conscious and possesses the rationality and ability to make decisions about their care. Any decision that is made on their behalf would be hard paternalism.<ref name="Stanford" />
There is also the question of if the length of incompetence plays a hand in the permissibility of paternalism. It seems obvious that if a person is permanently incompetent to make their own decisions paternalism is permissible, but if the incompetence is only temporary, the answer is not as clear.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Pure and impure formsEdit
Pure paternalism is paternalism where the people having their liberty or autonomy taken away are those being protected. Impure paternalism occurs when the class of people whose liberty or autonomy is violated by some measure is wider than the group of persons thereby protected.<ref name=Stanford/>
Moral and welfareEdit
Moral paternalism is where paternalism is justified to promote the moral well-being of a person(s) even if their welfare would not improve. For example, it could be argued that someone should be prevented from prostitution even if they make a decent living off it and their health is protected. A moral paternalist would argue that it is ethical, considering they believe prostitution to be morally corrupting.<ref name=Stanford/>
Criteria for effective paternalismEdit
Thomas Pogge argues that there are a number of criteria for paternalism.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- The concept should work within human flourishing. Generally accepted items such as nutrition, clothing, shelter, certain basic freedoms may be acceptable by a range of religious and social backgrounds.
- The criteria should be minimally intrusive.
- The requirements of the criteria should not be understood as exhaustive, leaving societies the ability to modify the criteria based on their own needs.
- The supplementary considerations introduced by such more ambitious criteria of justice must not be allowed to outweigh the modest considerations.Template:Elucidate
OpponentsEdit
Template:See also In his Two Treatises of Government, John Locke argues (against Robert Filmer) that political and paternal power are not the same.
John Stuart Mill opposes state paternalism on the grounds that individuals know their own good better than the state does, that the moral equality of persons demands respect for others' liberty, and that paternalism disrupts the development of an independent character. In On Liberty, he writes:
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Mill, however, disregards his own analysis when it comes to colonial subjects. In On Liberty, he writes:
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Those who are still in a state to require being taken care of by others, must be protected against their own actions as well as against external injury. For the same reason, we may leave out of consideration those backward states of society in which the race itself may be considered as in its nonage. The early difficulties in the way of spontaneous progress are so great, that there is seldom any choice of means for overcoming them; and a ruler full of the spirit of improvement is warranted in the use of any expedients that will attain an end, perhaps otherwise unattainable. Despotism is a legitimate mode of government in dealing with barbarians, provided the end be their improvement, and the means justified by actually effecting that end.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Mill above declares barbarians to be in need of paternalism. But he narrowly defines barbarism historically, geographically, and economically insofar as to declare it fit to describe the people he intends to describe as such.
Contemporary opponents of paternalism often appeal to the ideal of personal autonomy.Template:Citation needed
In societyEdit
- Mandatory seatbelt laws override individual choice to not wear a seatbelt in order to protect individuals from serious injury or death. Such laws are supported on the grounds that individuals often irrationally discount future harm, and state intervention can serve to preserve both welfare and long-term autonomy.<ref name="Stanford" />
- In the Southern United States before the Civil War, paternalism was a concept used to justify the legitimacy of slavery. Women would present themselves as mothers for the slaves, or protectors that provided benefits the slaves would not get on their own. Plantation mistresses would attempt to civilize their workers by providing food, shelter, and affection. These women would justify that the conditions for freed blacks were poorer than those who were under the mistresses' protection. Paternalism was used as an argument against the emancipation of slavery due to these mistresses providing better living conditions than the enslaved's counterpart in the factory-based north.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> As a result of this conclusion, the whites would often manage basic rights of the enslaved, such as child-rearing and property.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Medical paternalism is perhaps the most common type of paternalism in society. Parents make decisions for their children because they do not possess the rationality or ability to make their own medical decisions. If a person is unconscious, their power of attorney would make their medical decisions for them. Both are examples of soft paternalism, but an example of hard paternalism in medicine is therapeutic privilege, especially when the patient has been previously deemed competent.
- Anti-suicide interventions override an individual’s decision to end their life in order to prevent irreversible harm. These interventions are defended on the basis that individuals experiencing suicidal ideation may be acting under impaired judgment or temporary mental distress, and that intervention can preserve life and enable the restoration of rational autonomy.<ref name="Stanford" />
- Bans on swimming at public beaches without lifeguards restrict individuals from engaging in risky behavior even when they are aware of the dangers and willing to accept them. Such policies are justified on the grounds of preventing serious harm.<ref name="Stanford" />
Paternalism and slaveryEdit
Template:Cn span Walter Johnson introduces a concept of paternalism in Soul by Soul: Life Inside the Antebellum Slave Market that mentions "Slave-market paternalism thus replayed the plots of proslavery propaganda and fiction: the good hearted slave at the side of the dying master; the slave who could be trusted to master himself; the slaveholder's saving interventions in the life of the unfortunate slave".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Even though slaves could benefit from the concept of paternalism by receiving abundant food and medical care, the concept can never justify the institution of slavery. Some libertariansTemplate:Who consider paternalism, especially when imposed by the state, to be a form of modern slavery.Template:Cn
See alsoEdit
- Adultism
- Authoritarianism
- Caciquism
- Cryptofascism
- Libertarian paternalism
- Noble lie
- Nudge theory
- Obscurantism
- Paternalistic conservatism
- Rule according to higher law
- Social conservatism
ReferencesEdit
Further readingEdit
- Mill and Paternalism, by Gregory Claeys. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9781139028011
- Counting the Dragon's Teeth and Claws: The Definition of Hard Paternalism by Thaddeus Mason Pope. From 20 Georgia State University Law Review 659–722 (2004)
- Monstrous Impersonation: A Critique of Consent-Based Justifications for Hard Paternalism by Thaddeus Mason Pope. From 73 UMKC Law Review 681–713 (2005)
- Is Public Health Paternalism Really Never Justified? A Response to Joel Feinberg by Thaddeus Mason Pope. From 30 Oklahoma City University Law Review 121–207 (2005)
- Paternalism, by Peter Suber. From Philosophy of Law: An Encyclopedia, edited by Christopher Berry Gray, Garland Pub. Co., 1999, vol. II, pp. 632–635
- Template:Cite encyclopedia