Thursday, 4 June 2026

John Dewey did not view knowledge primarily as a commodity possessed by isolated individuals. He tended to see inquiry as a cooperative activity emerging from communities confronting shared problems. In that sense, knowledge behaves very differently from material goods.

If I give you an apple, I no longer have the apple.

If I share an idea, a method, or a discovery, I still possess it.

In fact, the knowledge may become more valuable as more people participate in testing, criticizing, refining, and extending it.

That's one reason philosophers, educators, and commons theorists often distinguish between:

  • Rival goods (food, land, physical objects)
  • Non-rival goods (knowledge, language, mathematics, scientific discoveries)

Knowledge is unusual because its use by one person does not necessarily diminish its use by another.

Your observation about people is related.

Many economic models begin from isolated individuals making choices. Dewey begins from association. Human beings become intelligent not merely by possessing information but by participating in social inquiry.

A community of inquiry is not simply:

Many individuals with knowledge.

It is:

Many individuals creating knowledge together.

That changes the entire framing.

The central question becomes less:

How do we allocate scarce knowledge?

and more:

How do we organize institutions that allow inquiry, learning, and communication to flourish?

Dewey was deeply interested in education, democracy, journalism, and public deliberation. He believed intelligence was distributed across society rather than concentrated in a few experts or leaders.

The production of knowledge often accelerates when it is shared openly.

The internet, open-source software, scientific collaboration, and public libraries all illustrate this dynamic. The more participants you have, the larger the potential community of inquiry becomes.

In that sense, a community of inquiry is almost the opposite of the image of society implied by a strict rational-choice framework. Instead of autonomous utility maximizers exchanging scarce goods, you have people jointly investigating problems, revising beliefs, and creating new possibilities that did not previously exist.

The scarcity framework asks:

How should we divide what we already have?

The Deweyan framework often asks:

How can collective inquiry create something new?

Economists sometimes move too quickly from:

"People choose X"

to

"People therefore wanted X."

Those are not equivalent statements.

Someone may choose the least harmful option among terrible alternatives.


  1. Institutions create constraints.
  2. People adapt rationally to those constraints.
  3. The adaptation is cited as evidence that the constraints are acceptable.

That third step does not logically follow from the first two.


The individual is addressed as sovereign and autonomous when responsibility is assigned:

Choose.

Invest in yourself.

Be entrepreneurial.

But collective claims are often met with institutional language:

The budget is constrained.

Markets require flexibility.

There is no alternative.

Whether one agrees with the diagnosis, the tension is real:

  • Agency is individualized.
  • Constraints are collectivized.
  • Responsibility is personalized.
  • Power is depersonalized.

The debate is usually not whether scarcity exists, but:

  • Which scarcities are natural?
  • Which are socially produced?
  • Which are politically maintained?
  • How should scarce resources be allocated?

That distinction matters because if all scarcity is treated as political, material limits can disappear from analysis. But if all scarcity is treated as natural, power relations disappear from analysis.

The most productive critiques tend to examine the interaction between both.

Rational Choice Theory analyzes how individuals navigate constraints. Neoliberal political discourse often treats those constrained choices as evidence of freedom. When the constraints themselves are politically constructed, this can transform structural problems into stories of individual responsibility, making deprivation appear as the outcome of personal decisions rather than institutional arrangements.

"Even our most basic rules and beliefs depend on whoever has the power to issue instructions".

Sir William Beveridge, the architect of the British welfare state, was a prominent eugenicist who believed in the pseudo-science of improving the genetic quality of the human population. His approach to social reform was deeply intertwined with early 20th-century eugenic theories.

Early Stances

Long before drafting the famous Beveridge Report, he argued in 1909 that state-supported workers deemed "unemployable" or defective should face a "complete and permanent loss of all citizen rights – including not only the franchise but civil freedom and fatherhood".

Work at the LSE

During his time as Director of the London School of Economics (LSE) from 1919 to 1937, he was a member of the Eugenics Society and actively worked to create a Department of Social Biology to study genetics, population, and eugenics. He secured significant funding from the Rockefeller Foundation to support these studies. 

The Welfare State & "Reform Eugenics"

By the time Beveridge drafted his landmark 1942 blueprint for the modern welfare state (the Beveridge Report), his views shifted from mainline class-based eugenics toward "reform eugenics". He utilized the language of eugenics to advocate for children's allowances and comprehensive welfare, arguing that alleviating poverty and squalor would naturally improve the genetic and physical health of the next generation. In 1943, he delivered the Galton Lecture to the Eugenics Society, assuring his fellow eugenicists that his sweeping social proposals would achieve their goals of improving the population stock.

"If the earth must lose that great portion of its pleasantness which it owes to things that the unlimited increase of wealth and population would extirpate from it, for the mere purpose of enabling it to support a larger, but not happier or a better population, I sincerely hope, for the sake of posterity, that they will be content to be stationary, long before necessity compels them to it."

John Stuart Mill


Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Our Forests and great Commons (make the Poor that are upon them too much like the Indians) being a hindrance to Industry, and are Nurseries of Idleness and Insolence.

John Bellers


Everyone but an idiot knows that the lower classes must be kept poor, or they will never be industrious.

Arthur Young


The possession of a cow or two, with a hog, and a few geese, naturally exalts the peasant. . . . In sauntering after his cattle, he acquires a habit of indolence. Quarter, half, and occasionally whole days, are imperceptibly lost. Day labour becomes disgusting; the aversion increases by indulgence. And at length the sale of a half-fed calf, or hog, furnishes the means of adding intemperance to idleness.

pamphlet


Poverty is that state and condition in society where the individual has no surplus labour in store, or, in other words, no property or means of subsistence but what is derived from the constant exercise of industry in the various occupations of life. Poverty is therefore a most necessary and indispensable ingredient in society, without which nations and communities could not exist in a state of civilization. It is the lot of man. It is the source of wealth, since without poverty, there could be no labour; there could be no riches, no refinement, no comfort, and no benefit to those who may be possessed of wealth.

Patrick Colquhoun



[Direct] legal constraint [to labor] . . . is attended with too much trouble, violence, and noise, . . . whereas hunger is not only a peaceable, silent, unremitted pressure, but as the most natural motive to industry, it calls forth the most powerful exertions. . . . Hunger will tame the fiercest animals, it will teach decency and civility, obedience and subjugation to the most brutish, the most obstinate, and the most perverse.

Reverend Joseph Townsend




These quotes capture a raw, unfiltered ideological strain in late 17th–late 18th century British elite thought regarding labor, poverty, property, and social order. They come from the era of the Enclosure Movement, agricultural "improvement," early industrialization, and the transition from feudal/common rights to full private property and wage labor.

Core Argument They Share

  • Common lands and modest independent means (a cow, geese, access to forest) make ordinary people too independent. This independence breeds "idleness," "insolence," and reduced willingness to submit to wage labor on someone else's terms.
  • Poverty (specifically, lack of property forcing constant wage work) is not a bug but a necessary feature of civilized society. Without it, there is no disciplined labor force, no surplus for the rich, no "refinement."
  • Hunger is the ideal, silent disciplinarian—better than overt violence because it's self-regulating and produces maximum exertion.

This is the logic of primitive accumulation: separating people from direct means of subsistence to turn them into a reliable proletariat.

Historical Context

These views were common among improving landlords, political arithmeticians, and moralists during the Enclosure Acts (especially 1750–1830, though earlier waves too). John Bellers (a Quaker) was actually somewhat heterodox and interested in reformatories/education, but the quote fits the broader critique of commons. Arthur Young, a famous agricultural writer, shifted somewhat later but long advocated enclosure. Patrick Colquhoun was a police magistrate and statistician obsessed with the "dangerous classes." Rev. Joseph Townsend was an Malthusian before Malthus, arguing against Poor Relief.

The pamphlet quote is classic "anti-cottager" literature—echoed in Board of Agriculture reports. The goal was clear: destroy the semi-independent peasant (who had use-rights, smallholdings, commons) to create a landless laborer who had to work when and where employers wanted, at the wages offered.

This mirrors Karl Marx's analysis in Capital (Vol. 1, Part 8) on "Bloody Legislation" and primitive accumulation—though one need not be a Marxist to recognize the historical pattern. Similar attitudes appear in colonial contexts (e.g., toward indigenous peoples with land access) and in later workhouses, the 1834 New Poor Law, and anti-vagrancy measures.

Evaluation

Empirically, there is some truth in the incentive problem: people with viable alternatives to grueling low-wage labor often choose them. Studies of basic income pilots, lottery winners, or welfare traps sometimes show reduced labor supply (though often modest, and confounded by bad program design). Subsistence peasants historically worked hard but on their own schedule—seasonal, self-directed, with more leisure than factory discipline allowed. "Indolence" is often a loaded term for "autonomy."

Morally and economically, the quotes are brutally instrumental. They treat humans as inputs to wealth production for others. They assume:

  • The rich's "refinement" and "comfort" justify structural deprivation.
  • Labor is naturally repulsive, so only destitution will compel it.
  • Property for the many is incompatible with "civilization."

This zero-sum view of wealth was contested even then (Adam Smith was more nuanced: he supported high wages as beneficial to society and productivity; he criticized some enclosures). Later classical liberals and economists (e.g., Nassau Senior, Malthus) often echoed the disciplinary tone, while others saw rising wages and capital accumulation as expanding the pie.

Modern evidence challenges the necessity of extreme poverty:

  • High-productivity economies (post-WWII West, East Asia) achieved growth with rising real wages, welfare states, and broad property ownership (homeownership, pensions, education).
  • Human capital, technology, and institutions matter far more than bare hunger for sustained growth.
  • Extreme precarity can produce short-term effort but also health breakdown, low skills, resentment, and lower long-run productivity.
  • "Idleness" among the poor was often exaggerated; pre-industrial work patterns included intense seasonal labor followed by relative leisure.

These texts reveal the class psychology of the time: fear of the "mob," desire for social control, and a Protestant-work-ethic-inflected worldview that equated virtue with submission to market discipline. Similar rhetoric recurs today in debates over minimum wage, welfare, immigration, automation, and UBI—not always cynically, but often with the same underlying anxiety about maintaining labor supply and order.

The quotes are useful because they strip away later sentimentalism. They show how openly the creation of a dependent working class was discussed. Understanding this history helps clarify ongoing tensions between autonomy, dependency, productivity, and dignity.



These quotations are all part of a long-running 18th- and early 19th-century elite discourse that treats poverty as a tool of labor discipline rather than a social problem to be solved. They reflect a view, common among landlords, improvers, and political economists, that the poor should be kept dependent so they remain motivated to work.

What they express

John Bellers and Arthur Young argue that commons, small holdings, and subsistence resources reduce labor discipline because they give the poor some independence. The pamphlet quote about cows, hogs, and geese makes the same claim more bluntly: that even modest self-provisioning encourages “idleness” because it reduces reliance on wage labor.

Patrick Colquhoun goes further by presenting poverty itself as a necessary social condition, saying it is indispensable because it creates labor and, therefore, wealth. Joseph Townsend’s hunger argument is even harsher: he claims deprivation is a better and more efficient force than legal coercion because hunger supposedly compels obedience and work.

Historical meaning

Taken together, these passages show how poverty was often framed as an economic instrument in Britain’s transition to industrial capitalism. The logic was that workers needed to lack alternatives so they would accept wages, long hours, and low pay. This thinking is closely associated with enclosure, poor law debates, and the push to reorganize rural life around market labor.

Why they matter

These quotations are frequently cited because they expose the moral language behind early capitalist labor policy: “industry,” “improvement,” and “civilization” were often used to justify coercion and deprivation. In modern terms, they are evidence that some elites explicitly saw insecurity as productive, not accidental.

If you want, I can also identify the exact source text for each quote and give you a clean citation list.



It is very much an extant problem. What you have mapped out isn’t a hypothetical dystopia; it is the active, operational architecture of contemporary healthcare across both private and public systems. The fusion of austerity/artificial scarcity with individual consumer "choice" is the dominant mechanism used to manage, ration, and deny care today.

The real-world execution of this logic manifests prominently through two distinct structural frameworks:

1. The Corporate/Insurance Model: "Algorithmic Deniability"

In privatized or insurance-heavy systems (like the United States), this loop has been fully automated through Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) and insurance-side AI.

[Insurance Provider AI] -> Scans claims and issues instantaneous, bulk denials
         ↓
  [The Patient] --------- -> Told they have the "choice" to appeal the decision
         ↓
[The Rational Trap] ----- -> The administrative friction is made so high that 
                             dropping the claim becomes the "rational choice."
  • The Artificial Scarcity: Claim denial rates from payers have spiked dramatically, reaching an industry-wide average of nearly 12%. Insurance algorithms are trained to find minor coding discrepancies or invoke narrow "medical necessity" definitions to reject coverage instantly.

  • The Rational Choice Intersect: The system does not explicitly say "you cannot have this treatment." Instead, it says, "We have denied this coverage, but as an autonomous consumer, you have the right to file a multi-stage, bureaucratic appeal."

  • The Outcome: The system relies on the fact that a sick, exhausted, or cognitively drained patient will make the "rational calculation" that chasing an appeal for months is an impossibly high expenditure of energy for an uncertain reward. The structural denial of care is successfully reframed as the patient's individual decision to give up.

2. The Public Model: "Managed Care and Lifestyle Gating"

In public, taxpayer-funded systems facing severe fiscal constraints, the loop operates under the banner of "Demand Management" and "Prevention-First Economics."

Under intense pressure to find billions in efficiencies, regional health boards and Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) increasingly resort to service redesigns and structural rationing.

  • The Artificial Scarcity: Rather than funding services to meet total population demand, care is rationed through waitlists, narrowed eligibility criteria, or the closure of localized clinics.

  • The Rational Choice Intersect: To justify these restrictions, the language of public health is systematically shifted toward "personal responsibility" and "lifestyle choices." If a patient requires an orthopedic intervention (like a knee replacement) or certain specialized medications, access may be gated behind strict biophysical or behavioral benchmarks.

  • The Outcome: If the patient cannot meet these thresholds within an environment of manufactured stress and resource scarcity, the system's failure to provide timely care is laundered. The narrative becomes: “We offered you the path to treatment, but you chose not to lose the weight / quit smoking / optimize your health metrics, so the delay is the consequence of your choice.”

The Ultimate Convergence: The "Consumer" Patient

Across both systems, medical documentation and policy guidance have aggressively swapped out the word "patient" for "consumer" or "service user."

The Semantics of Subversion: A patient is someone who is suffering, vulnerable, and owed a duty of care. A consumer is an autonomous agent making transactional decisions in a marketplace.

By forcing the sick to view themselves as consumers navigating a landscape of scarcity, the system achieves an extraordinary ideological victory. When a patient cannot get a diagnostic scan, cannot afford a life-saving drug, or deteriorates on a multi-year waiting list, they are left with the crushing internal narrative that they simply failed to master the system—that they didn't push hard enough, choose the right insurance tier, advocate for themselves correctly, or live a sufficiently optimized life.

John Dewey did not view knowledge primarily as a commodity possessed by isolated individuals. He tended to see inquiry as a cooperative act...