|
Humane Modes of Competition
By Andrew Gebert
Competition is the pervasive reality of the world in which we live. In
every field of endeavor, people strive all out, conscious of who runs
ahead and who might be closing in from behind. Between societies and
different parts of the globe, competition--much of it grotesquely
unfair--pits individuals and populations against each other. And on the
macro-level of great shaping ideas, peace competes with war, equity with
exploitation, sustainability with unbridled consumption.
Similar realities were clearly in the sights of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi,
founding president of the Soka Gakkai, as he wrote his first major work,
The Geography of Human Life, published in Japanese in 1903. In
the final chapters of this book he offers a social history of
competition.
The earliest and most primitive mode of competition, according to
Makiguchi, is military. As social organization grew more sophisticated,
this was supplanted by political competition, which he saw as based on
the effective deployment of mental as opposed to physical prowess. In
his day he saw political competition giving way to economic competition
marked by the struggle for access to raw materials and markets.
Although Makiguchi described these different modes of competition, as a
kind of evolution, he clearly did not consider this to be a
straight-line upwards progression. He was, in fact, conscious that in
many ways economic competition--being pervasive, open-ended and largely
unconscious--can be more devastating in its impact than military
conflict. Nor did he expect that a shift in the dominant mode of
competition meant that other forms had been abandoned. He understood,
for example, that the outbreak of military competition remained a
distinct possibility, an insight borne out a decade later with the start
of World War I.
But Makiguchi does not stop there. He offers a vision of what he terms
humane or humanitarian competition (jindoteki kyoso), predicting
that this will become the dominant form of competition in the future.
The Power of Character
Makiguchi describes humanitarian competition as the achievement of goals
through the mobilization of "intangible moral influence." This is the
power of character, which we can see clearly at work in our daily social
interactions.
Extrapolating from this, Makiguchi declares that there is no reason that
this cannot come into play even in international relations. Makiguchi
asserts that it is possible for all forms of competition to be conducted
in a humane manner.
Even so, the very idea of humanitarian competition may strike many as an
odd pairing of concepts. In what sense can competition be humane?
Makiguchi saw competition as a source of energy and dynamism. People
will typically run faster in actual competition than in even all-out
training. The presence of an opponent, the sense of competition, enables
us to access deeper levels of performance. Everyday life is filled with
the small and large benefits that arise from people striving to be the
best in their respective fields.
But what are the conditions that ensure competition will function in
this manner, producing exhilaration rather than simple anxiety, mutual
elevation rather than a stark and permanent winnowing out of life's
"losers"?
Makiguchi recognized competition and cooperation as twinned or
complementary ideas.
Competition that is humane is embedded in an underlying fabric of
cooperation. Agreements on systems of rules and structures keep
competitors "in the same ring," so that interaction, mutual stimulation
and learning can occur over time.
Finally, when Makiguchi speaks of a competition to exert "intangible
moral influence," he is clearly pointing to inner-oriented modes of
competition that is, ultimately, against ourselves. Our full excellence
can never be unleashed while we wish for the other runner to stumble.
Today, NGOs compete to run successful development projects. Governments
compete in emergency relief efforts, often using the great
organizational and logistical skills of their militaries. Increasingly,
too, businesses recognize that genuine commitment to social and
environmental issues is one key to success.
Clearly, competition is not a cure-all that fixes all social ills. Nor
is it inherently destructive or evil. It is a powerful force deeply
rooted in the human psyche that we can, through our wise choices,
harness to the cause of human happiness.
| Andrew
Gebert is a doctoral candidate at Waseda University and a
translator and researcher at the Institute of Oriental
Philosophy in Tokyo. |
|