ever chains are chosen. It does not entail that a rational plan includes any
particular aims, nor does it imply any special form of society.
Again, we may suppose, although it is probably not essential, that
every activity belongs to some chain. The reason for this is that human
ingenuity can and normally will discover for each activity a continuing
chain that elicits a growing inventory of skills and discriminations. We
stop moving up a chain, however, when going higher will use up re-
sources required for raising or for maintaining the level of a preferred
chain. And resources here is to be taken broadly, so that among the most
important ones are time and energy. This is the reason why, for example,
we are content to lace our shoes or to tie our tie in a straightforward way,
and do not ordinarily make complex rituals of these daily actions. There
are only so many hours in a day, and this prevents our ascending to the
upper limits of our capacity all the chains that are open to us. But then a
prisoner in a cell might take time with daily routines and invent ways of
doing them that he would not otherwise bother with. The formal criterion
is that a rational individual selects a preferred pattern of activities (com-
patible with the principle of justice) and proceeds along each of its chains
up to the point where no further improvement results from any feasible
change in the schedule. This overall standard does not, of course, tell us
how to decide; rather it emphasizes the limited resources of time and
energy, and explains why some activities are slighted in favor of others
even though, in the form in which we engage in them, they allow for
further elaboration.
Now it may be objected that there is no reason to suppose that the
Aristotelian Principle is true. Like the idealist notion of self-realization,
to which it bears a certain resemblance, it may have the ring of a philoso-
pher’s principle with little to support it. But it seems to be borne out by
many facts of everyday life, and by the behavior of children and some of
the higher animals. Moreover, it appears to be susceptible to an evolution-
ary explanation. Natural selection must have favored creatures of whom
this principle is true. Aristotle says that men desire to know. Presumably
we have acquired this desire by a natural development, and indeed, if the
principle is sound, a desire to engage in more complex and demanding
activities of any kind as long as they are within our reach.
21
Human
beings enjoy the greater variety of experience, they take pleasure in the
21. See B. G. Campbell,
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