His latest jag is calling for an early end to isolation policies to contain the coronavirus. In a nutshell, his argument is that the virus responsible for this pandemic exhibits a range of toxicities, and that evolutionary forces will naturally and fairly quickly shift this distribution toward milder strains. He claims that happened earlier with HIV, which is now (in his view) no longer much of a threat. He thinks epidemiologists are essentially charlatans, promulgating an approach to modeling viral transmission and severity that ignores his superior understanding.
He was interviewed by Isaac Chotiner of the New Yorker (hat tip: David Dayen), who gave him a hard time about his self-certainty that he is right and all the health professionals are wrong. But that’s not what I want to talk about.
Here is an excerpt from the transcript as published by the New Yorker:
Epstein: ....I do think that the tendency to weaken is there, and I’m willing to bet a great deal of money on it, in the sense that I think that this is right. And I think that the standard models that are put forward by the epidemiologists that have no built-in behavioral response to it—
Chotiner: And you’re not an epidemiologist, correct?
Epstein: No, I’m trained in all of these things. I’ve done a lot of work in these particular areas. And one of the things that is most annoying about this debate is you see all sorts of people putting up expertise on these subjects, but they won’t let anybody question their particular judgment. One of the things you get as a lawyer is a skill of cross-examination. I spent an enormous amount of time over my career teaching medical people about some of this stuff, and their great strengths are procedures and diagnoses in the cases. Their great weakness is understanding general-equilibrium theory.That last sentence brought back memories.
I was in a small conference with Epstein in Prague back in 1996. We were sitting next to each other on a bus that was taking us from one venue to another. I was interested in how a libertarian like Epstein would react to developments in economics that undermined faith in an invisible hand, so I asked him about two findings in modern general equilibrium theory, the Sonnenschein-Mantel-Debreu analysis of path dependence in out-of-equilibrium adjustment and the complexity-related work on multiple equilibria, basins of attraction, etc. Both essentially say that, even if you accept the efficiency-equals-optimality framework and assume no market failure of any sort, general equilibrium is arbitrary with respect to global efficiency criteria. In other words, the drift of economic theory since the 1970s is: don’t depend on an invisible hand.
So I briefly referenced these developments and asked him how they affected the libertarian argument. His reply was brief: “Who cares about general equilibrium theory any more?”
That’s a direct quote. I didn’t have a recorder handy, but the words were blunt and memorable. Whatever else it communicated, it quickly shut down our conversation.
So now Epstein claims his superior understanding of general equilibrium theory is what elevates him over the public health establishment—as if the public health schools in major universities weren’t packed with economics PhDs. And as if he weren’t willing to dismiss the entire field when confronted with evidence that it doesn’t back him up.
6 comments:
"assume no market failure of any sort". As if there were no negative externalities at play here. Libertarians do not live on the real world.
The point for me is that libertarians are in fact nihilists as I learned from briefly paying attention to the Harvard guy who wound up at George Mason. I learned also then why Tolstoy expressed such a disdain for nihilists, which puzzled me for years (but then I never bothered to read Ayn Rand).
his argument is that the virus responsible for this pandemic exhibits a range of toxicities, and that evolutionary forces will naturally and fairly quickly shift this distribution toward milder strains.
Unlike Epstein, I don't pretend to know much about epidemiology, but based on my limited understanding it sounds like Epstein is confusing a couple of things. As a matter of probabilities, it's true that most mutations are likely to be milder and weaker; however, it's that very property that makes those weaker and milder viruses less likely to survive. Epstein seems to be propagating a theory of evolution in which the weakest are likely to dominate the less frequent but more deadly viruses.
Thank you, Peter, for reporting on this rank hypocrisy by Epstein, unsurprising as it is.
To Anonymous, while many are, not all libertarians are hypocritical nihilists like Epstein appears to be. In fact George Mason is where some of those who are not, people who are reasonably principled. I would note for that list from there: Peter Boettke, Tyler Cowen, and Christopher Coyne.
Unfortunately some of the others at Mason fit the description.
We are not sure that the future will avoid bringing us much deadlier viruses. The idea of survival of the fittest, distribution curves, our information from history, and just simple gambling lets us know that now and then we need to be ready to handle a worse case.
His prediction that the virus will mutate to a less lethal form doesn't seem to be working out so well. He got that from "Rats, Lice, and History". It might be true over 100-year time spans.
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