Fifth and finally, for the present, we postulate that man tends
to be a creature of habit and powerfully influence by the social counterpart
of habit, namely, custom. William James once called habit "the enormous
flywheel of society" and this still seems a fair characterization since
habit, like the flywheel, brings the powerful factor of inertia into play
in human affairs. The same is true of custom. From the standpoint
of the distributive process both habit and custom are tremendously important
since they tend to stabilize existing systems of distribution by causing
men to accept and take for granted even those distributive arrangements
which work to their disadvantage and are not essential. Thus such
arrangements prove far more durable and stable than one would expect and
persist far longer than a careful analysis of the pattern itself would
otherwise indicate (1966, p.32).