The Economics of Social Punishment and the three kinds of morality
According to a poster on Quora there are 3 different kinds of morality.
- De facto morality
- De jure morality
- Theoretic morality
De facto (/deɪ ˈfæktoʊ/), Latin for "in fact", describes practices that exist in reality, even if not legally authorized.[1][2][3] It is commonly used to refer to what happens in practice, in contrast with de jure ("in law"), which refers to things that happen according to law. Unofficial customs that are widely accepted are sometimes called the de facto standard.
De facto morality is the morality dictated by public opinion, authority, and the defacto mores of the older generation. To adhere to de factor morality means to adhere to public sentiment using devices like opinion polls (what is currently thought to be right is morally right).
In law and government, de jure (/deɪ ˈdʒʊrɪ/; Latin: de iure, "in law") describes practices that are legally recognized by official laws.[1] In contrast, de facto ("in fact" or "in practice") describes situations that are generally known to exist in reality, even if not legally authorized.[2] The terms are often used to contrast different scenarios, for example, "I know that, de jure, this is supposed to be a parking lot, but now that the flood has left four feet of water here, it’s a de facto swimming pool".[3]
De jure on the other hand are the written laws, as interpreted by the courts, which in my opinion may or may not reflect de facto morality. In general, de facto morality is the basis behind voter sentiment as well.
To simplify, de facto represents the unwritten laws of society. De jure represents the written laws of society. What must be understood is that:
- Extrajudicial punishments do exist in society
- Not all laws are knowable in advance
According to law enforcement: "Ignorance is no excuse". Yet it doesn't change the fact that almost everyone is ignorant of the law.
The rationale of the doctrine is that if ignorance were an excuse, a person charged with criminal offenses or a subject of a civil lawsuit would merely claim that one was unaware of the law in question to avoid liability, even if that person really does know what the law in question is. Thus, the law imputes knowledge of all laws to all persons within the jurisdiction no matter how transiently. Even though it would be impossible, even for someone with substantial legal training, to be aware of every law in operation in every aspect of a state's activities, this is the price paid to ensure that willful blindness cannot become the basis of exculpation.
In the case of ethics it's even worse because most people don't know public sentiment and if they discover it then it's only after having enough life experience. Even people who know it do not have the ability necessarily to track every change in real time.
If we look at examples from history we can see that racism for example produced written and unwritten laws in the US south which were enforced both judicially and extrajudicially (by terrorist groups like the KKK). What this shows is that ultimately public sentiment has the greatest sway even over the written laws as all who are elected must in effect win a sort of popularity contest.
The economics of social punishment
Social shunning, rejection, are forms of regulatory behaviors which enforce social norms. Reputation ultimately is what people wish to maintain and certain behaviors come at a cost to that reputation. A paper which may show itself to be critical to the future development of many cryptocurrencies is titled: "The economics of social punishment" and this paper explains a few concepts listed below:
- The paper studies the problem "tragedy of the commons"
- Analyzes the effect of network structure on the agents (participants)
- Compliers are participants who comply with the social norm
- Defectors are participants who do not comply with the social norm
- The goal is to manage a renewable natural resource controlled by the social network
- A sufficiently high share of compliers is required for the efficient management of the resource but this isn't sufficient in itself
- The range of critical mass is high, between 0.4 and 0.96, which shows the share of compliers alone isn't a precise indicator for evaluating cooperativeness
- Social pressure is an intangible good which can be given a monetary valuation
Eventually from the look of the paper we might develop a metric for determining the cooperativeness of a social network. That in itself will be a significant breakthrough.
References
Marco, Jorge and Goetz, Renan-Ulrich, Tragedy of the Commons and Evolutionary Games in Social Networks: The Economics of Social Punishment (July 7, 2017). FEEM Working Paper No. 35.2017. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2998546
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Amazing @dana-edwards
Thanks for sharing!
nice post upvoted your vote is important for me @deshwal
Very informative. thanks for the knowledge.
Very helpful bro
So helpful . thanks
nice post upvoted your vote is important for me @deshwal
man-made laws are all bunk in the long run because they will follow moral relativism. The global debt is worth 5 times the world GDP... how criminal is that to have it let go that far? Jail all the world lawmakers, simple! Meanwhile the people get everything seized or must file for bankruptcy when then do not pay their debts... man-made laws at their finest. The only Laws that are immutable (always correct/true) are Cosmic Laws
"Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws." - Plato
Moral relativism man made laws are the biggest scourge of Humanity