162 Ethics and politics
social rights of the weaker members of society to be protected – as the history of
workers’ movements around the globe shows. By the way, ‘to be a necessary condi-
tion for’ is not identical with ‘to be instrumental to’: an instrumentalist justification
of liberty would diminish and endanger it.
Some of these issues, such as democracy and the conditions for making liberty
effective, lead us to liberty’s second version: positive liberty, or liberty
to be or
to
become something. In other words, to build a family with a decent standard of liv-
ing, or to become a scientist, or to enter one’s own country’s Olympic team; in
the political field, to build, along with others, a successful party or to make new
legislation pass the parliamentary vote. It is the liberty to successfully develop one’s
own life plan, be it individual or collective in nature. This entails some problematic
aspects, as the history of doctrines on liberty shows.
First, if
promoting positive liberty is regarded as something society or the polity owes
to its members, institutions are charged with the obligation to provide the condi-
tions for life plans to be implemented. This is costly, the more those conditions are
identified with policies enhancing the income of those interested – though there
are other ways to act on the conditions, as we shall see in the equality section when
speaking of equal opportunities. It can be as costly as to require raising heavily the
level of public debt, to the detriment of future generations. Also, setting up a system
of social rights, also known as entitlements, requires expanding the administrative
apparatus and putting under its authority many aspects of the citizens’ private life,
which at the end of the day may lead to intrusion and infringe on their negative
freedom. This is not to say that developing one’s own positive liberty has well to
remain in the hands of the individuals, according to their ability to score better
than others in the social competition – as conservative liberalism would have it.
Yet the public promotion of this liberty must carefully weigh the different interests
at stake and find a balance between its own progressive intention and the perverse
side effects. The first step is to discriminate between what can be acknowledged
as a legitimate goal of self-realisation the state should contribute to (say, to go to
university) and what it cannot (to be taught the art of origami).
Another doubt is linked to some doctrines of positive liberty that sees
self-
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