Rationality, Markets and Morals

Studies at the Intersection of Philosophy and Economics

Rationality, Markets, and Morals: RMM Band 0 (2009), 11 – 23

Can a Humean Be a Contractarian?

Abstract

In this paper I argue, con­tra­ry to Hart­mut Kli­emt, that it is pos­si­ble to be both a Hume­an and, in James Buchanan’s sen­se, a con­trac­ta­ri­an. Hume sees prin­ci­ples of jus­ti­ce and poli­ti­cal alle­gi­ance not as actu­al or hypo­the­ti­cal pro­ducts of expli­cit agree­ment, but as con­ven­ti­ons that have emer­ged spon­ta­neous­ly. Howe­ver, it is fun­da­men­tal to Hume’s ana­ly­sis that con­ven­ti­ons are mutual­ly advan­ta­ge­ous, and hence cogna­te with agree­ments. The core idea in Buchanan’s con­trac­ta­ria­nism is that the pro­per role of govern­ment is to imple­ment vol­un­t­a­ry exch­an­ges bet­ween indi­vi­du­als, not to defi­ne and maxi­mi­se a uni­fied con­cep­ti­on of social wel­fa­re. Alt­hough real poli­tics can­not be based enti­re­ly on unani­mous agree­ment, the vol­un­t­a­ry exch­an­ge approach pro­vi­des a valuable struc­tu­re for nor­ma­ti­ve economics.

Journal Information

RMM is an interdisciplinary publication focusing on issues of rationality, market mechanisms, and the experimental method of reasoning into moral subjects. It provides a forum for dialogue between philosophy, economics, and related disciplines, encouraging critical reflection on the foundations and implications of economic processes.