Saturday, November 18, 2017

George Soros Polysocio-economics philosophy

George Soros/Political, social, and economic philosophy

George Soros.jpg
George Soros is a wealthy, progressive political activist who seeks to attain his ideal of open society through donating to and founding political and social organizations that enact and encourage national and global change.
This page concerns the philosophy behind Soros' political and philanthropic activity. Soros is guided by Karl Popper's notion of an open society and by his own economic theory of reflexivity.
To read more about Soros' career, political activity, and other work, click here.

Open society

Soros' political and philanthropic activity has been influenced by his belief in an idea of open society, a concept put forth by Karl Popper. Soros himself says, "In my definition an open society is an imperfect society that holds itself open to improvement."[1] Soros studied Popper’s theory of open society while attending the London School of Economics. He wrote the following about Popper's philosophy on open societies:[2]
George Soros speaks about the concept of Open Society
Popper argued that the empirical truth cannot be known with absolute certainty. Even scientific laws can’t be verified beyond a shadow of a doubt: they can only be falsified by testing. One failed test is enough to falsify, but no amount of conforming instances is sufficient to verify. Scientific laws are hypothetical in character and their truth remains subject to testing. Ideologies which claim to be in possession of the ultimate truth are making a false claim; therefore, they can be imposed on society only by force. This applies to Communism, Fascism and National Socialism alike. All these ideologies lead to repression. Popper proposed a more attractive form of social organization: an open society in which people are free to hold divergent opinions and the rule of law allows people with different views and interests to live together in peace.[3] Having lived through both Nazi and Communist occupation here in Hungary I found the idea of an open society immensely attractive.[4]
Although Soros adopted Popper's notion of an open society, he later published an essay in 2011 criticizing aspects of Popper's concept:[5]
The war on terror forced me to reconsider the concept of open society. My experiences in the former Soviet Union had already taught me that the collapse of a closed society does not automatically lead to an open one; the collapse may be seemingly bottomless, to be followed by the emergence of a new regime that has a greater resemblance to the regime that collapsed than to an open society. Now I had to probe deeper into the concept of open society that I had adopted from Karl Popper in my student days, and I discovered a flaw in it.
Popper had argued that free speech and critical thinking would lead to better laws and a better understanding of reality than any dogma. I came to realize that there was an unspoken assumption embedded in his argument, namely that the purpose of democratic discourse is to gain a better understanding of reality. It dawned on me that my own concept of reflexivity brings Popper’s hidden assumption into question. If thinking has a manipulative function as well as a cognitive one, then it may not be necessary to gain a better understanding of reality in order to obtain the laws one wants. There is a shortcut: 'spinning' arguments and manipulating public opinion to get the desired results. Today our political discourse is primarily concerned with getting elected and staying in power. Popper’s hidden assumption that freedom of speech and thought will produce a better understanding of reality is valid only for the study of natural phenomena. Extending it to human affairs is part of what I have called the 'Enlightenment fallacy.'[4]
Despite his criticism of Popper's ideology, Soros' continued belief in and dedication to the idea of open societies continues to spur him to support various social and political causes, especially his Open Society Foundations, in order to sustain open societies and help closed societies become open.

Economic reflexivity theory

George Soros speaks about his General Theory of Reflexivity
Soros developed an economic theory of reflexivity that he has said allowed him to anticipate the ebb and flow of financial markets. While he does not claim to have discovered the idea of reflexivity itself, he does claim to apply it to economics in a new way.[2]
Soros has stated the main idea of his theory as follows:[2]
I can state the core idea in two relatively simple propositions. One is that in situations that have thinking participants, the participants’ view of the world is always partial and distorted. That is the principle of fallibility. The other is that these distorted views can influence the situation to which they relate because false views lead to inappropriate actions. That is the principle of reflexivity. For instance, treating drug addicts as criminals creates criminal behavior. It misconstrues the problem and interferes with the proper treatment of addicts. As another example, declaring that government is bad tends to make for bad government.[4]
David J. Lynch wrote in a 2008 USA Today article, "In his latest work, The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means, Soros traces a straight line between today's financial turmoil and what he says are fatally flawed conventional assumptions about how markets behave. If banks, investors and regulators had embraced reflexivity years ago, there never would have been a financial crisis, Soros insists."[6]
In the same 2008 article, Lynch went on to summarize Soros' application of reflexivity to economics as follows:[6]
To Soros, the conventional approach is rubbish. Instead of a world of near-identical actors, coolly assessing their economic interests and acting with clear-eyed precision, he sees a world (and markets) governed by passion, bias and self-reinforcing errors. Because fallible human beings are both involved in, and trying to make sense of, this world, they inevitably make mistakes. Those mistakes then feed on themselves in 'reflexive' ways that, when taken to extremes, result in situations such as the now-deflating U.S. housing bubble. Standard economic theory is flawed, Soros says, because it treats markets populated by thinking human beings as if they operated according to the natural laws that govern atoms and molecules. Economists say Soros badly exaggerates the limitations of standard theory and ignores subsequent refinements. But if conventional economics teaches that markets are always (eventually) right, Soros insists they are always wrong.[4
  

  1. Footnotes



  2. GoergeSoros.com, "Interview with Harvey Blume," August 20, 2006

  3. Financial Times, "Soros: General Theory of Reflexivity," October 26, 2009

  4. Bolded emphasis added by Ballotpedia to highlight the meaning of the term open society.

  5. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributed to the original source.

  6. GeorgeSoros.com, "My Philanthropy," accessed May 25, 2016

  7. USA Today, "Soros sees 'reflexivity' theory of economics as life's work," May 13, 2008

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