Sunday, July 1, 2012

Our sustainable future depends on us differentiating between idleness and leisure


An artist's impression of
the late Betrand Russell.
Most are unable to understand how, can or why we need to work fewer hours, just as most are equally unable to differentiate between idleness and leisure.

Idleness is just that; the human psyche is sleeping, it is in neutral going neither forward or backwards, just maintaining the status quo, which when examined critically is about deterioration.

Leisure, coloured by many connotations, is contrastingly active both physically and, critically, intellectually.

Working fewer hours is not about ensuring easy access to idleness rather, it allows people more time to engage in leisure, enhancing their well-being.

It was in the 1930s the economist John Maynard Keynes came to the conclusion that the work of the capitalist system would largely be done when human wants and needs (terms he wrongly interchanged) were satiated.

Keynes thought that by now those of us in developed nations would have enough to satisfy all our needs without having to work more than three hours a day.

He was both right and wrong: we have more than satisfied our needs, at least in the wealthy developed nations, but he underestimated the skill and talent of the capitalistic demigods that have unlocked humans’ wants, submerging the leisure and pleasure that arises from working fewer hours.

British philosopher, the late Betrand Russell, said, just a few years after Keynes observations about working fewer hours that while leisure is undoubtedly pleasant, “men would not know how to fill out their days if they had only four hours of work out of the twenty-four”.

“In so far as this is true in the modern world, it is a condemnation of our civilization; it would not have been true in any earlier period,” he said.

Russell said there had once been a capacity among people for light-heartedness and play, which had been extinguished by the cult of efficiency.

“The pleasures of urban populations,” he said “have become mainly passive: seeing cinemas, watching football matches, listening to the radio, and so on.

“This results from the fact that their active energies are fully taken up with work; if they had more leisure, they would again enjoy pleasures in which they took an active part,” he said.

Writing in the 19th Century, philosopher, political economist and civil servant John Stuart Mill, said he was not “charmed with the ideal of life held out by those who think that the normal state of human beings is that of struggling to get on; that the trampling, crushing, elbowing, and treading on each other’s heels, which form the existing type of social life, are the most desirable lot of human life, or anything but the disagreeable symptoms of one of the phases  of industrial progress”.

That was then, this is now and everything, but nothing has changed.