Unintended radioactivity

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| All this sudden radioactivity is the result of what is called, a little erroneously perhaps, the "law" of unintended (or unforeseen) consequences. The sociologist Robert Merton "" who famously said "no blanket statement categorically affirming or denying the practical feasibility of all social planning is warranted" "" first enunciated it in his 1936 book, The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Action. Purposive, Singh has certainly been; and the consequences have been as unanticipated as Professor Merton predicted. What happens in such situations is not hard to understand because it is rooted in the fundamental complexity of the world and the even more inexplicably complex behaviour of people. Merton said there could be four major reasons for unforeseen outcomes "" ignorance, error, short-termism, and self-defeating prophecies. |
| What about the international scene? Are those four factors in play there as well? Pakistan has already sought China's help in constructing new nuclear power plants, and Beijing is likely to oblige. Also China, sensing a potential Indo-US gang-up, may stiffen its attitude to all Sino-Indian issues, most notably the border negotiations. What about Russia, which has so far had India as a virtually captive customer for its armaments, and which now sees the clear prospect of the US and Israel replacing it? Reports say that it is asking for more money under existing contracts, being difficult about supplying spares for equipment already bought, driving a hard bargain on Sakhalin oil, and so on. In short, alignments in the region might get etched a little more sharply. |
| Economists tend to refer to such consequences as "externalities", which can be "positive" or "negative". As the classification suggests, a positive externality is when something nice but unforeseen happens; a negative externality is when something unforeseen but nasty happens. Usually, though, the term is used to refer to the latter because people only take notice when bad things happen. Good things are taken for granted. Thus, economic growth and climate change, to cite just one example. Historians, too, have noted the phenomenon because in their case the unintended consequences tend to be very large as well. For example, while everyone smugly thought that all those alliances and cross-alliances between the European powers in the two decades before the First World War would lead to peace, they actually led to the most ghastly war of all times. That was the mother of all unintended consequences. In short, it happens all the time. |
| The essence of this has been captured in an aphorism widely used in Madhya Pradesh. "Chaubey niklay Chabbay ban-nay, ban kar lautay Dube", translated as, Mr Chaubey (one who knows all four Vedas) set out to show the world he knew six, and as a result returned diminished as Mr Dubey (one who has mastered only two). |
First Published: Aug 19 2007 | 12:00 AM IST