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  • 'Total work' was a term coined by Josef Pieper, a lesser known German philosopher from the

  • 20th century, and he was concerned that after World War II there would be a time of total

  • work.

  • By that I take him to mean that work comes to be the center around which the world turns.

  • Human beings start to see themselves chiefly as workers, and the entirety of life becomes

  • more and more work, or work like.

  • To see this we can begin to examine a number of what I might call tightening conditions.

  • So the first condition would be the centrality of work.

  • We've come to think that work is actually the center and everything else begins to turn

  • around it.

  • To see this more clearly we can think about the fact that we woke up to go to work today

  • or that we are going home from work today.

  • That we are preparing for work.

  • That we are preparing to leave work.

  • And this is happening all the way around the world.

  • Meanwhile we're adjusting our schedules, the rest of our lives, so that they are turning

  • about it.

  • So that would be the first condition.

  • The second condition is subordination.

  • That everything else in life comes to seem as if it's subordinate to, and to be put

  • in the service of, work.

  • We can think of sleeping: the idea is that we wish to sleep well today in order to be

  • focused and prepared for work.

  • And that when we're at work we wish to be as productive as possible.

  • So sleep becomes that which is an instrument in the service of productivity.

  • And we can play that game with all sorts of different instances.

  • The third condition is the resemblance claim.

  • It seems as if everything else in life comes to resemble work, more and more.

  • So you can think of, on a day off you are wanting to be as productive as possible, thinking

  • about how much you got done.

  • You can begin to think about all the ways in which you plan and schedule time with children.

  • The terms that begin to mark out our lives even when we're not actually working sound

  • more and more work like.

  • And the last condition I think is the most intense and that's what I might call cultural

  • forgetfulness.

  • We've come to almost forget that there was a time in which work was not the center of

  • the world, that there are other ways of life that proceed the modern world, in which work

  • was a part of life but was not the focus of life.

  • We forget that that's still true today with other cultures, some other cultures.

  • And we forget that there could actually be a time when work would not be that around

  • which the rest of the world turns.

  • So what I'm not claiming is that we have actually achieved total work.

  • What I'm claiming rather is that we are on the verge of doing so.

  • And then indeed we should be grateful that we have yet to arrive at a time, a dystopian

  • time, where work is total.

  • Well suppose there were to come to pass Universal Basic Income.

  • And suppose, for the sake of argument, that that were sufficient to meet our material

  • needsthat is, those concerned with having enough food, proper shelter, sufficient warmth,

  • sufficient coldness, and the like, so that it was enough.

  • As one philosopher, Harry Frankfurt, calls it we have doctrine of sufficiency.

  • So suppose basic income allowed us all to have enough.

  • Then once again I think we would need to think about what we would do with ourselves.

  • Aristotle in 'Politics' says, really quite famously, that we non-leisure in order to

  • have leisure.

  • And that was the way that it would be translated: we non-leisure in order to have leisure.

  • The question is how are we going to dwell on our leisure?And I think we've been educated

  • to a point at which we really don't know how to answer that question.

  • People, I think, are struck by a very difficult condition, which is a medieval condition,

  • called acedia.

  • Acedia is hard to translate but it means that there's a restlessness of spirit, an inability

  • to be still or quiet in being.

  • Instead when you watch people you see, time and time again, that they're actually quite

  • restless.

  • They can't dwell with what they're doing.

  • They can't so easily pay attention.

  • I don't think that's the result of technology but I think technology has exacerbated that

  • condition.

  • So the trouble with a lot of policy statements associated with Universal Basic Income is

  • not the particulars, not the particular policy statements themselves, it's rather the philosophical

  • question: how are we going to actually occupy ourselves?

  • How are we going to live individually and in community if we don't have work as that

  • which is governing each of our days, let alone the totality of our lives.

  • There are three common objections that are made to the argument that we have entered

  • a time that is on the verge of total work.

  • The first objection is to say that well, certainly we have to meet our basic needs and it is

  • through work that we do so.

  • And I would grant that claim.

  • That is, I'm not actually arguing against the idea that work would play some role in

  • our lives, some role during our waking hours, some role during the unfolding of our life.

  • What I'm objecting to is the idea that it becomes everything, the be all and end all.

  • So once we go past the point of meeting our own material needs, our own ability to survive,

  • then we've gotten into trouble, I'm arguing.

  • The second misconception is that people commonly think that what I'm arguing for is work-life

  • balance, and I'm not actually arguing for that.

  • That is, I think the idea of work-life balance is actually something that total work takes

  • up and enjoys operating with, meaning if you actually put work on one side and the rest

  • of life on the other and claim that work is as important as love and joy and religious

  • worship and philosophical investigations and an investigation of the cosmos.

  • If you really think that everything in life is as valuable as work then I think that's

  • also a matter to reconsider.

  • It's rather these other matters are actually more important than the value we accord to

  • work.

  • And the third misconception is that I'm just arguing against overwork, and I don't

  • think that's really what I'm up to.

  • I think that overwork actually is a local manifestation of total work.

  • Instead I think it's the case that surely we wouldn't probably work as much if we

  • care less about work.

  • That is certainly true.

  • But I think that overwork is simply a red herring, a way of trying to deflect attention

  • from the ways in which, in our ordinary everyday lives, work has come to matter to us so deeply.

  • We think that there are simply a few people out there who are working far too much, and

  • we pathologize them, saying that they are just workaholics; they care too much.

  • But we have yet to actually investigate the ways in which that's true for us as well.

'Total work' was a term coined by Josef Pieper, a lesser known German philosopher from the

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