Go ahead and let him try: A plea for egonomic laissez‐faire
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Inquiry
- Vol. 35 (1) , 3-20
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00201749208602277
Abstract
Thomas Schelling has described how each of us is made up of conflicting impulses. The art of managing these impulses Schelling dubs ‘egonomics’. The idea of egonomic calamity underlies paternalism (or, breaking convention, what I call ‘parentalism'). The paper argues for laissez‐faire in matters egonomic. The rationalizations I give for this libertarian sentiment are old ones, such as accentuating the dignity of the individual and letting the individual learn from example and from his own experience. Also I note, as H. L. Mencken did, that parentalist measures often have unhappy unintended consequences, sometimes are counter‐productive, and rarely are borne of sincere good‐will.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- ADDICTION AS EXTREME‐SEEKINGEconomic Inquiry, 1988
- ADDICTION, COMPULSION, AND THE TECHNOLOGY OF CONSUMPTIONEconomic Inquiry, 1988
- [Justifying Public Provision of Social Security]: CommentJournal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1987
- An Economic Theory of Self-ControlJournal of Political Economy, 1981
- Addiction and backslidingJournal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 1980
- Pygmalion in the classroomThe Urban Review, 1968