Feedback Form

Virtue Ethics & Broken Windows: Why I am not a Libertarian

By Joe Carter

Charles Murray almost had me. When I first read Murray’s What It Means To Be A Libertarian nearly ten years ago I was compelled by the thrust of his argument. “Freedom is first of all our birthright,” Murray claimed. “An adult making an honest living and minding his own business deserves to be left alone to live his life. He deserves to be free.”

Libertarianism appeared to be an attractive political philosophy, yet something was missing. It reminded me of my high school days when after reading The Fountainhead I wanted to become an Objectivist. Becoming an objectivist would have required me to deny a concept that I had known was undeniably true: original sin. Likewise, the problem with libertarianism, like objectivism and liberalism, was that it required accepting a romanticized view of human nature.

Like other “ism’s”, libertarianism is difficult to define. Essentially, libertarians believe that each person “owns” his own life and property, and has the right to make his own decisions about how he shall live, providing he respects the rights of others to do the same. Cato Institute vice-president David Boaz adds that the basic political issue of libertarianism is the relationship of the individual to the state. (Since Boaz is one of the intellectual leaders of this philosophy I will use his “Key Concepts of Libertarianism” throughout this critique.)

The primary flaw in libertarianism is that it is rooted in an ethic of utilitarianism rather than virtue ethics. Without a person developing the corresponding moral character necessary for self-restraint, his liberty is bound to result in the harm of others. In fact, freedom without virtue is corrosive and will destroy everything within its range. The Founding Fathers understood this connection between liberty and a virtuous citizenry when they founded our republic. “‘Tis substantially true,” George Washington wrote in his farewell address, “that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government.”

Libertarians, however, are not hedonists. They do believe that the rule of law is essential to government, though instead of rooting it in natural law theory they rely on “spontaneously developed legal rules.” (I find it rather surprising that a theory that relies on such concepts “natural rights” and “natural harmony” has so little use for “natural law.”) Boaz’s assertion reminds me of the old Calvin and Hobbes game of “Calvinball” where the rules on how to play are made up as you go along.

Boaz also contends that individuals should not be subject to the state’s “arbitrary commands.” (The fact that he doesn’t explain the difference between rules that are spontaneously developed and those that are arbitrary is one of the numerous problems with his viewpoint.) By placing an overemphasis on individual liberty without an equal accent on individual virtue, the libertarian unwittingly erodes the foundation of order on which his political theory stands.

Order is a necessary precondition of liberty and must be maintained from the first level of government (the individual conscience) to the last (the state). The individual conscience is the most basic level of government and it is regulated by virtues. Liberty, in this view, is not an end unto itself but a means by which eudaimonia (happiness or human flourishing) can most effectively be pursued. Liberty is a necessary component of virtue ethics, but it cannot be a substitute. Since it is based on the utilitarian principle that puts liberty, rather than eudaimonia as the chief end of man, libertarianism undermines order and becomes a self-defeating philosophy.

Contrary to what libertarians might believe, order does not arise spontaneously. It is either cultivated from within, through self-disciple, or is forced upon an individual from forces outside themselves (i.e., by the laws or mores of the community) if they lack the requisite character. Once established, this order has to be maintained to be effective. In the absence of order there is no peace, no justice, and certainly no “natural harmony.” Therefore,n before we can address the relationship between ‘the individual and the state’ we must first establish the relationship between individual liberty and order maintenance.

Take, for example, the “victimless crimes” of prostitution, vagrancy, or public drunkenness. Theoretically, libertarians should support the “decriminalization” of all these acts since they do not necessarily harm other people or their property. But how long could a community last if such liberty is granted free reign? As the reknowned criminologist James Wilson notes:

This wish to “decriminalize” disreputable behavior that “harms no one”— and thus remove the ultimate sanction the police can employ to maintain neighborhood order—is, we think, a mistake. Arresting a single drunk or a single vagrant who has harmed no identifiable person seems unjust, and in a sense it is. But failing to do anything about a score of drunks or a hundred vagrants may destroy an entire community. A particular rule that seems to make sense in the individual case makes no sense when it is made a universal rule and applied to all cases. It makes no sense because it fails to take into account the connection between one broken window left untended and a thousand broken windows.

This is the heart of Wilson’s “Broken Window theory” of crime:

At the community level, disorder and crime are usually inextricably linked, in a kind of developmental sequence. Social psychologists and police officers tend to agree that if a window in a building is broken and is left unrepaired, all the rest of the windows will soon be broken. This is as true in nice neighborhoods as in rundown ones. Window-breaking does not necessarily occur on a large scale because some areas are inhabited by determined window-breakers whereas others are populated by window-lovers; rather, one unrepaired broken window is a signal that no one cares, and so breaking more windows costs nothing.

In a similar fashion, the breakdown of community standards does not break down all at once. Rather each “broken window” of virtuous behavior (recreational use of drugs, for example) leads to more “window-breaking” until the community lacks the “virtue” necessary to govern itself and requires a higher level (the state) to step in.

Libertarians, of course, are primarily from the middle to upper classes of society. They are very often shielded from such behavior precisely because the police maintain a level of order and discipline within their communities. If, however, they had to live with such activity on a day-to-day basis, they would likely revise their definitions of what is considered “arbitrary” and what is considered “spontaneous.”

8 Responses to “Virtue Ethics & Broken Windows: Why I am not a Libertarian”

  1. David Doely Says:

    Nicely put.
    It brings to mind the argument of Michael Polyani that science and similar bodies of human “knowing,” often displayed as individual and explicit achievement, necessarily rely on both a community of practice and thought as well as “implicit” (impossible to verbalize) norms or foundations. Libertarians, for all their wisdom about explicit forms of individual and corporate choice and value, similarly ignore implicit foundations of community formation and function without which no “individual” choices or explicit liberties would last much less flourish. Megan McArdle recently put it this way in a list of political assumptions: “I think almost no one adequately appreciates how much heavy lifting hidden cultural norms do in our political and economic systems.” Right. And that from my favorite libertarian.

  2. Libertarianism, Wrongly Understood « Upturned Earth || John Schwenkler Says:

    […] I’m not really sure whether or not I’m a libertarian, but Joe Carter’s post on libertarianism and virtue (via Rod) isn’t enough to convince me that I shouldn’t be. Here’s what I take to […]

  3. jennifer lahl Says:

    Well written Joe. I’m sending this to all my libertarian friends in the shielded upper middle class of the Silicon Valley!

  4. C J Says:

    A thoughtful essay, but I have to disagree about some things. Here are a few comments:

    1. Charles Murray is a huge Aristotelean, i.e. he is very much in favor of virtue ethics, so it is a little ironic that you chose him as a paradigmatic libertarian who needs a heaping dose of virtue ethics.

    2. You claim that being a libertarian requires one to posses a “romanticized view of human nature.” Generally speaking, libertarians believe that people will act in their own self-interest, or at least will act in a way that they perceive to be in their best interest (for the most part, this is not an absolutist doctrine). This does not seem like a romantic view of human nature to me; romantic views of human nature posit that humans are motivated to behave in ways that are not in their self-interest, a view which sounds nice but is demonstrably false.

    Similarly, believing that you can force someone to be virtuous is romantic thinking. Take your example of recreational drug use. Assuming that such drug use is wicked (non-virtuous), you seem to be in favor of prohibiting such drug use by law. The real-world consequences of such prohibitions are not to turn wicked men into virtuous ones; prohibition does not stop many people from using or doing whatever is prohibited. It seems like your political philosophy might lead to something like “throw all the non-virtuous people in jail, and by the way, I get to decide what is virtuous and what is not.” I take your point about virtue being important for civil society, but lets be realistic–there is great room for corruption under such a rule.

    3. There are generally two types of libertarians: utilitarian vs. Lockean. Utilitarian libertarians seek a limited government and robust liberties because they think we are better off under such a system compared to any other. Another way to say this, is that utilitarian libertarians think that the conditions necessary for eudaimonia are best cultivated under a libertarian state. This is in contrast to Lockean libertarians, who believe that human beings are born with some set of natural rights, including the rights to ownership over one’s self and his labor, and that government infringement of these rights is immoral and unjust. Utilitarian libertarians would presumably switch political philosophies if they thought some other ’system’ would make us better off; Lockean libertarians would not switch, because their political philosophy is based upon axiomatic moral values.

    4. Libertarians are very concerned about order and rule of law, but most would probably disagree with conservatives about what are the biggest threats to order. Recreational drug use, and prostitution, for example, do not seem to cause much social unrest on their own; only once they are legally prohibited does a black market for those activities spring up that true social corruption arises. Libertarians are concerned about the concentration of power into the hands of government officials. Libertarians wish their elected representatives to be virtuous just as much as conservatives do, the difference is that they don’t romantically believe that they will in fact act in virtuous, society-enhancing ways (most of the time at least).

    Social mores and culture are important, but top-down legal solutions do not solve many problems. “I hereby proclaim that it is illegal to birth children out of wedlock” will not prevent such occurrences, nor will it change the underlying culture that sadly enables such activity to be common amongst the lower classes in the U.S. We need more than legal proclamations to solve problems of non-virtuousness–and I don’t claim to know what those solutions are. However, I do know that giving elected representatives the power to take away freedoms in the name of virtue is unwise. Madison’s angels did not exist in his time, and they surely do not hold office in our time either.

  5. Libertarianism, reconsidered « Dispatches Says:

    […] Jump to Comments Joe Carter posts a lengthy critique of libertarianism. Do read the whole thing, but I think this quote sums up his argument: The […]

  6. Original Sin and “Freedom” | Theopolitical Says:

    […] Carter posts on why he is not a libertarian (“Virtue Ethics & Broken Windows”). Excellent piece. Equally excellent is Alan Jacobs’ response and minor critique of one of […]

  7. Postmodern Conservative » Blog Archive » I Found It Out in a Book (And She was Such a Pretty Dictionary) Says:

    […] rule of law has a far greater scope." I disagree both with Jacobs and with Joe Carter, whose post "Virtue Ethics and Broken Windows: Why I am not a Libertarian" prompted the thread, but I […]

  8. E!!-lizabeth Crum Says:

    Joe & CJ, great stuff.

    Let me take just a moment to say that well-written, thoughtful posts and discussion threads like the ones at Kuo & Joe, Postmodern Conservative, LadyBlog, and Confabulum, are rare and wonderful things - and it is even more rare to run across four great blogs on ONE site.

    I think the entire Culture 11 editorial/management team deserves some appreciation and praise. Thanks guys!

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.