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Are We
Simple Creatures?
Jerome M. Segal
In the philosophical traditions of both the East and the West, one encounters the idea
that human beings may attain the good life by satisfying a small number of basic needs.
Often this belief finds expression in myths of a golden age that we have lost by allowing
our needs and desires to multiply. The Roman author Seneca invokes a simpler past in his
articulation of Stoic philosophy:
Was it not enough for man to provide himself a roof of any chance covering and to
contrive for himself some natural retreat without the help of art and without trouble?
Believe me, that was a happy age, before the days of architects, before the days of
builders!
And further:
For the limit everywhere corresponded to the need; it is we that have made all other
things valuable, we that have made them admired, we that have caused them to be sought for
by extensive and manifold devices. . . . That moderation which nature prescribes, which
limits our desires by resources restricted to our needs, has abandoned the field.
The biblical story of the Garden of Eden is, on one level, a story about the
incompatibility of the simple life and overreaching human desires. God tells Adam and Eve
not to eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, but beguiled by the serpent, first
Eve and then Adam eat the forbidden fruit. Adopting the perspective of modern critics of
consumer culture, we might say that Adam and Eve were seduced by the serpent who is
historys first huckster, suckering them into overconsumption. When they had limited
desires, they were content. Then the serpent intervened and flashed the shiny fruit; he
induced new desires, and with that they got into trouble.
But the story is really more interesting than that. If we read carefully, we see that
after the serpent tells Eve that by eating the fruit "your eyes will be opened,"
and after he assures her that this is really a safe product to consume, Eve comes to her
own conclusion: "When the woman saw that the tree was good for eating and a delight
to the eyes, and that the tree was desirable as a source of wisdom, she took of its fruit
and ate."
Why should Eve have been moved by the trees being a source of wisdom, and why
should she have perceived it thus? The answer is clear. Even in the Garden of Eden, from
the very first, as part of the inherent motivation of humanity, Eve, if not Adam, was a
seeker of wisdom. Moreover, it would seem that Eve desired wisdom for its own sake, and
not for any instrumental purpose, since, in the Garden, everything was taken care of. Thus
we find, within our central myth of our original condition, the image of an interesting
and complex human being.
For todays advocates of a less consumption-oriented way of life, it is a question
of some importance whether we are, in fact, simple creatures or complex ones. Many people
assume that the case for simple living depends on the notion that our needs are
simple. Are they right? When our desires proliferate, is the process a distortion or an
expression of human nature?
Consumption and Self-Esteem
One account of why we consume -- an account indebted to Thorstein Veblens
theory of conspicuous consumption -- postulates a set of core psychological needs to
explain the emergence of our desires for specific commodities. This account calls
attention to three features of our psychological and cultural experience.
First, part of what it is to be a person is to be the object of ones own
perception; over time, we develop a stake in seeing ourselves in particular ways. Second,
how we see ourselves is to a considerable extent typically affected by how others see us.
And third, to varying degrees in human cultures, how others see us is partially determined
by aspects of our involvement in the economy -- how we consume, what we earn, what we do
for a living.
Clearly, the three features are closely related. The satisfaction of the need to see
oneself in a certain way is dependent on how one is seen by others, and the considerations
that determine how others will see any individual are to some extent cultural givens. If
one internalizes these cultural norms, then even the actual perceptions of others may drop
out of the equation, as one perceives oneself through the eyes of the culture or
subculture. And finally, to the extent that these norms include particular consumption
choices, the underlying need for self-esteem will be transformed into desires for specific
marketplace commodities.
| Need |
Psychological/Social Conditions |
Level
1: Adam has an underlying need for self-esteem. |
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Context:
His self-esteem, like that of most people, is highly dependent on how he is seen by
others. |
Level
2: His underlying need for self-esteem thus emerges as a need to be seen by others as
valuable. |
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Context: A specific
group of people emerges for him as the reference group whose judgment really matters
(e.g., parents, colleagues, peers). |
Level
3: His underlying need for self-esteem
now emerges as a need to be seen as valuable by this select group. |
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Context: The reference
group has certain norms with respect to consumption, such that the failure to meet these
norms symbolizes failure, lack of decency, inadequacy. |
Level
4: His need for self-esteem now emerges as a need to satisfy the consumption norms of
the reference group. |
|
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Context: The reference
groups definition of decency and adequacy mandates living in
houses with certain minimal conditions (e.g., a good neighborhood, at least
two baths, a bedroom for each child, and a large kitchen). |
Level
5: His need for self-esteem is now expressed as a desire for a specific kind of house
and style of life. |
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Context: Market
conditions price such houses at $200,000 or more. His ability to attain these financial
resources is dependent on his employment. |
Level
6: His need for self-esteem is now expressed as a desire for employment that yields
income sufficient to have a $200,000 house. |
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The diagram above illustrates this process for a modern-day Adam, portraying the
context in which the need for self-esteem will be transformed. If we retrace the stages of
the process from Adams perspective, we can say that his need for self-esteem first
emerges as a need to have others see him as valuable. Once these "others" become
identified with a select reference group, the need for self-esteem emerges as a need to
satisfy the consumption norms of that group, and then as a desire for a specific kind of
house and style of life. In our example, the process reaches a (temporary) culmination
when Adams need for self-esteem is expressed as a desire for employment that yields
income sufficient to have a $200,000 house.
My description of this process does not at first mention desires; the starting point is
the need or drive for self-esteem. The individual typically is not conscious of such a
need, and its existence is not dependent on his awareness of it. To say that Adam has a
need for self-esteem is to say that, on a very basic level, something will go seriously
wrong in his life if he fails to develop it. How this fundamental, and perhaps universal,
need gets transformed into a desire for certain kinds of jobs, or for a multiplicity of
consumer goods, is a matter of social and economic context.
As the underlying need becomes more concretely related to actions that Adam can
actually take to satisfy it (or that he believes will satisfy it), it emerges more fully
as a conscious desire. And this desire may now be expressed in plans and intentions. For
instance, in order to obtain a particular kind of job, Adam may seek to go to law school,
and in order to get into law school he may seek to do well as an undergraduate. This
desire, in turn, may proliferate into a thousand more concrete desires -- to do well on a
test, to get to class on time, to finish his assignments, and so on.
This account of transformations in the human need for self-esteem leaves many questions
unanswered. Still, it is useful in allowing us to distinguish among the levels at which
different anticonsumerist orientations throughout history have tried to intervene in the
process by which desires for money and commodities shape human life. Thus, the Stoic
tradition, with its emphasis on individual self-sufficiency, might be understood as an
effort to prevent the general need for self-esteem from becoming a need for the approval
of others (level 2). Buddhism might be thought of as intervening on an even more basic
level, whereby the sense of self is so utterly changed that the need for self-esteem is
itself extinguished (level 1). And the creation of utopian communities, including
nineteenth-century experiments such as Brook Farm, might be thought of as an attempt to
substitute a different subculture as the reference group (level 3).
As these examples suggest, the recognition that deep needs may be transformed into
desires for goods and services has a long history. Nonetheless, there are reasons to doubt
that the need for self-esteem is the basis for consumer culture. When people adopt
the consumption patterns of their reference group, they are not always motivated by status
considerations. As Judith Lichtenberg has noted, our peers may simply be sources of
information about new products, and these products may satisfy legitimate needs that are
entirely distinct from our need for self-esteem. In thinking about whether we are complex
or simple creatures, we must now ask what some of these other needs might be.
The Marketeers
I will begin with a book that was written explicitly for what the authors call
"marketeers" -- that is, people who specialize in getting consumers to want to
buy specific products. In Why They Buy: American Consumers Inside and Out, the
authors take a remarkably fine-grained approach to human psychology, identifying some
sixty specific needs. These include: to be visible to others, to accomplish difficult
tasks, to give care, to play, to establish ones sexual identity, to exercise
ones talents, to win over adversaries, to see living things thrive, to learn new
skills, to be amazed. Having presented this list, the authors then identify the kinds of
goods that "serve each kind of need." Their advice is that if you want to
succeed in marketing, it is essential to know your consumer, to understand what his needs
are, and to know what needs your product serves. The marketeers are told that it is
important for them to "instill purchase incentives in the minds of potential
buyers" by "teaching consumers about what they will get" from a product in
terms of need fulfillment.
Although one might want to challenge either the legitimacy or the very existence of
some of the needs on the list, for the most part they do seem real, important, and valid.
Moreover, even this enumeration, which is the most extensive I have seen, is clearly not
exhaustive. For example, the authors do not include a need for insight into oneself, or
the need for meaningful work, nor do they include a need for beauty or adventure, or a
need for a comprehensive vision of life.
Considering a list of this kind, whatever its source, is very instructive. For one
thing, it may prompt us to realize that, independent of market manipulations, we do have
abundant and diverse needs and desires, and that certain of these needs can be met by
goods and services that the marketeers promote.
In saying this, I do not mean to suggest that marketeers are not guilty of
manipulation. Advertisers typically encourage us to satisfy some needs at the expense of
others. They exaggerate their products capacity to meet a legitimate need, and
frequently make use of nonrational processes to induce us to associate their product with
a desired outcome. But for our purposes here, the critical point is that the marketeers
are surely right to assert the existence of a varied, substantial set of legitimate human
needs. Given this fact, how should advocates of simpler living respond?
Arguments for Simple Living
There are a number of persuasive responses, none of which rests on viewing human
beings as simple creatures.
First, when it comes to our most fundamental needs -- for love, meaning, friendship,
self-expression, understanding -- commodities may, in the marketeers terms, be
"of service," but they rarely supply the genuine article. Often enough, they
merely divert us from the fact that the essential need is not being fulfilled, or else
provide a spurious compensation for it. At best, commodities may offer a symbolic or false
taste of the real thing.
To say this, though, is not to deny their importance. Finding genuine satisfaction for
our needs is not easy, and most people are at best only partially successful in this
search. In a world where much depends upon chance, and in which not everyone develops the
human capabilities to attain the genuine article, the second-best fulfillments that money
provides may be of substantial value. On the other hand, once we recognize the second-best
nature of the comforts that the marketplace provides, we can insist that these should not
be the objects of our ultimate aspirations.
Second, even when the purchase of goods and services can satisfy our needs, the
fulfillment may come at an extremely high personal and social cost. Consumption requires
income -- which in turn, for most of us, requires labor. And labor is costly in two ways.
For many people, labor beyond a certain point is unpleasant, painful, unhealthy, or
boring. And even where it is not, labor takes time -- time to prepare for, time to get to,
time to perform, time to return from, and time to recover from. Yet the amount of time we
have is relatively fixed. Time we devote to acquiring the means of consumption is time
that we do not have for other aspects of life. This fact alone makes the case for simple
living enormously compelling. If we have a choice between high-consumption and
low-consumption ways of meeting our legitimate needs, it makes sense for us, individually
and collectively, to pursue the latter course.
This leads to my final point. Once we recognize the variety of human needs, we can
begin to imagine lives that partake of diverse forms of richness: material, intellectual,
spiritual, aesthetic, and social. In other words, we can see that genuine wealth resides
in an extraordinarily broad range of "assets," the possession of which
determines whether our abundant needs will be fulfilled.
· social relationships: our friendships, loves, and
families
· psychological capabilities: our ability to build
relationships, to find meaning, to take aesthetic pleasure
· cognitive capabilities: our ability to read, to
understand, to learn, to reason
· creative capabilities: our ability to make
something beautiful, to contribute something different
· political rights: our ability to be a citizen of
one country rather than another, to build our own lives according to our own lights
· historical and cultural legacy: the riches of
insight and experience that have been preserved from previous human lives and that are
embodied in the great achievements of human culture
· natural and man-made physical environments: the
beauty of great cities, of the wilderness, of the view from ones back porch
Material wealth is not irrelevant, but its role in the good life is largely to
facilitate our access to these other forms of wealth. As the great philosophers have long
told us, excessive concern with consumption often thwarts our efforts to realize the
multiple possibilities of our nature. Advocates of simple living best advance their cause
when they remind us of those possibilities, not when they ask us to believe that human
beings are simple creatures.
--Jerome M. Segal
From Graceful Simplicity: Toward a Philosophy and Politics of Simple Living by
Jerome M. Segal, © 1999 by Jerome M. Segal. Published by permission of Henry Holt and
Company LLC.
Graceful Simplicity:
Toward a Philosophy and Politics
of Simple Living
Jerome
M. Segal
In Graceful
Simplicity, Jerome M. Segal expands and deepens the contemporary discourse on how to
achieve a simpler, less harried way of life. He articulates a powerful conception of
simple living -- one rooted in beauty, peace of mind, appreciativeness, and generosity of
spirit. At the same time, he criticizes much of the "simple living movement" for
believing that we can realize this conception as isolated individuals if only we free
ourselves from overconsumption. Segal argues that, unfortunately, we have created a
society in which human needs can be adequately met only at high levels of income. Instead
of individual renunciation, he calls for a politics of simplicity that would put the
facilitation of simple living at the heart of our approach to social and economic policy.
"Graceful Simplicity is a marvelously textured
analysis of the elusive ideal of simple living. For those eager to find a way to get off
the 'more is better' treadmill, Jerome Segal offers insight and hope. Drawing upon
philosophy, history, economics, sociology, and psychology, he explains why simplicity is
not a simple concept and reveals why it retains its perennial allure. A must read."
- David
Shi, president of Furman University and author of
The Simple Life: Plain Living and High Thinking in
American Culture
"In simple, graceful prose, Jerome
Segal explains why less elaborate modes of living would make us happier."
- Robert
H. Frank, Cornell University, author of Luxury Fever
263 pages
$26.00 (cloth)
Henry Holt
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Available at bookstores or
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