Amartya Sen
(An eminent Indian economist, Professor, philosopher and Nobel Laureate.
He has been called "the Conscience and the Mother Teresa of Economics" for
his work on famine, human development theory, welfare economics, the
underlying mechanisms of poverty, gender inequality, and political
liberalism. )
(An eminent Indian economist, Professor, philosopher and Nobel Laureate.
He has been called "the Conscience and the Mother Teresa of Economics" for
his work on famine, human development theory, welfare economics, the
underlying mechanisms of poverty, gender inequality, and political
liberalism. )
It is not so
much about delivering justice to a particular person. That’s a legal matter.
That language would be legal language. But how do you ensure that we enhance
justice rather than reduce it in context of dealing with terrorism. you know,
obviously in so far as terrorism gives some reasonable grounds for restrictions
on free speech that would be very serious conflict one has to look at. In so
far as according to some, it gives reason to torture and other ways for
extraction of information, those are some other kinds of issues. The position
that I have argued for is that there is no case for torture in any
circumstances, even in those of terrorism. That is partly because it is a very
bad way of pursuing information; secondly you also do not get much information
that way. It is ineffective. Studies of torture across the world over the
centuries have shown that people under torture would give any answer that they
thought would be pleasing to the interrogator. So you do not get very much information.
I know that there have been things like of water-boarding and other issues that
have come up in public discussions. The ideologues are few in number but they
rely on a huge infrastructure of a number of other people. The chap who goes
and shoots is one guy but the chap who gives shelter to the one person and says
okay, I won’t mention to anyone, but you go past here, I can understand your
calls etc. For every X number of terrorists there is a probably a 100 X number
of people who provide some kind of quiet acceptance of it. The very dedicated
naxalite and the very dedicated terrorists, you might not be able to have any
impact on them through discussion. Dedicated terrorists survive on the basis of
very large number of people who are compliant in some sense. The person is going
around waving a gun in his pocket; it may be a risk to your security. But I
have not met any naxalite in my life and therefore to say that they will not
listen to any amount of reasoning is not right either. If you take a broad kind
of them, they have been through terrible torture in the past. The question to
ask what Gandhiji and Mandela had asked. Is if this is the right way of dealing
with it, the most effective way? After you have decapitated a couple of landlords
would it would that provide the extra income, extra jobs that these people
would need, and the dignity and the lack of humiliation? That is what politics
is all about. By using reasonableness you are making it a very saintly affair.
Politics is a very gutsy affair. Public reasoning is a gutsy affair too. In the
Gujarat thing, the main issue is that secularism is a dialogue that can help
deal with communalism in a way. I loved that breadth, and also the fact that in
interpreting Indian civilization itself, its cultural diversity was much
emphasized. By pointing to the extensive heterogeneity in India's cultural
background and richly diverse history, Tagore argued that the "idea of India"
itself militated against a culturally separatist view, "against the
intense consciousness of the separateness of one's own people from
others." My own interests gradually shifted from the pure theory of social
choice to more "practical" problems. But I could not have taken them
on without having some confidence that the practical exercises to be undertaken
were also foundationally secure (rather than implicitly harbouring
incongruities and impossibilities that could be exposed on deeper analytical
probing). The progress of the pure theory of social choice with an expanded
informational base was, in this sense, quite crucial for my applied work as
well.