There's no inconsistency. And they are called not-for-profit organizations. As I said before, there's a differnce between .com and .org, just to give one example. Commercial activity usually intends to make profits.But that leads us back to the fact that not-for-profit companies exist and are not bankrupt. — Isaac
Hint: the other forms are not businesses. They doin't have a business model. Associations don't have business models, they have some agenda or some idea, issue or thing that they promote. It's not called a business. You know, the difference like .com and .org?This doesn't seem to make sense. In the first part you say that a business which doesn't make profits is in trouble. In the second you say there are other business models available if you want to avoid profit. — Isaac
Science has a racism problem. And it is not limited to scientific discoveries and their attendant usage. The scientific establishment, scientific education, and the metrics used to define scientific success have a racism problem as well.
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You haven't actually explained why a corporation must make a profit. — Banno
Der Speigel journo — NOS4A2
And those incentives to choose to form a company, a corporation, are things like the limited liability of a corporation, the tax incentives, the ease to coordinate and operate the business. Let's the remember that the other option is simply to buy services without using the contract called a corporation.Why would one think that there was one common incentive for all of them? They are many and various. — Banno
Yet isn't then the issue really about the people, the owners and managers of the corporation, and how they act in the society and what is their role in the society?No; indeed, that is the point that the counterargument in the article cited above makes. A corporation is free to take on whatever incentives the owners choose; including those that do not lead directly to profit. — Banno
It’s not merely the application of new technology or a set of fixes or adjustments to hierarchical bureaucracy. It involves basic change in the way people think, talk and act in the workplace. It involves deep changes in attitudes, values, habits and beliefs.
The new management paradigm is capable of achieving both continuous innovation and transformation, along with disciplined execution, while also delighting those for whom the work is done and inspiring those doing the work. Organizations implementing it are moving the production frontier of what is possible.
Hi Tiff!I'm mystified at the suggestion that as Americans, we would somehow "obey" better than self regulate, calculate our own risks and act accordingly. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
And again here you see the difference.I've suggested plexy glass enclosed podium squares to allow the older professors to safely teach in person. And have also asked the admission for the risk ratio they are using. Is it a certain % of infected students that could shut things down? Tragically the death of a student or a Professor? Other parents and students want to know and they better have a plan. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Umm... let's be honest: any Republican President will whup up hostile press. Yet just what this criticism is really makes the difference.He can whip up the hostile press while running the most powerful nation the world has ever seen. — NOS4A2
Completely incompetent at leadership. Talking to his supporters he is good, but that simply isn't leadership.Question: do you imagine Trump rows his own boat? I take it that no one person could be as consistently awful in matters great and small he has been. Call it my version of a belief in "intelligent" design. Somewhere, somehow, some way, there's an account of it all that makes sense of most of it. Trump's personal contribution being the parts that simple don't make sense at all.
Not that he isn't that awful, only that he's not that competently incompetent. — tim wood

Yeah, he could also tweet out that he's thinking about a pre-emptive nuclear attack on North Korea.Trump can rile up the media and his critics with a single tweet, in this case raising the question about delaying the election. Meanwhile news about the economy falls on deaf ears. — NOS4A2
You don't appear to be addressing the actual critique. Meh. — Banno
Which amounts to: we don't know what to do, so we should do nothing. — Banno
This kind of nonsense is usually directed at the wage earner and the labor unions: to do "their share" in fighting inflation. Perhaps the flimsy argument can be hurled at companies and corporations too. Inflation, just to remind us, is basically a monetary phenomenon resulting of government spending and the printing of money. — ssu
What is that degeneration of discourse here on PF? That's a good question.What do you actually imagine is happening when you think about the degeneration of discourse? — fdrake
More like the non sequitur criticism hurled at Friedman/economics: "You mean that economic theory assumes businessmen doing business? What about the greater good for the society and what about the environment??? When you don't have those in the most basic economic model it is disgusting!!! Shame on you."Your counter appears to be the non sequitur that businessmen should not try to fix the world.
Sure. Start small. — Banno
Re-tweeted by Trump???Re-Tweeted by Trump: — Michael
Or perhaps Germany simply is now surrounded by NATO countries, not on the front line as it was during the Cold War.or, as Esper says, they are following the boundary east where the new allies are. — NOS4A2
I'm not accusing you, an administrator here, of having knee jerk reactions or I'm not declaring myself to be a paragon of courtly reason. I think that the admins and the mods do abide by the site rules. And if I have knee jerk reactions, why not make the case that I have here or there a knee jerk response and perhaps I should think it over.The predominant use of "us vs them" is to do precisely what you both are doing, declaring yourselves as paragons of courtly reason and measured opinion over and above those plebs like me who only have knee jerk reactions. — fdrake
That great, then. Such self-criticism is good, because typically people see them as being the reasonable people and others being tribal.The problem with this being that "both sides" agree with you that there is a "tribal mindset" and a disastrous "us vs them" dynamic, and the entire point of using the "us vs them" group membership signifier is a total subversion of its meaning. — fdrake
?You're both reasoning from on high, lamenting the degeneration of discourse, and if only everyone else agreed with you on how to conduct debate in less than 120 characters the world would be a much better place. — fdrake
Well I don't believe that "the other side is unreasonable and won't compromise". As you yourself put me in the box of people saying " "both sides have good points, come together!". I genuinely think that a Philosophy Forum can indeed thwart the degeneration of the discourse and even if it's meaningless if just few people discuss things on this small forum, it's at least beneficial to me. I think it's healthy to hear opposing views and if those are well thought, fact based and informative, the better. Yet if that put's me in the paragons of courtly reason -category, well, sorry for not just going with ad hominems and simple answers with emojis that I don't care the shit what somebody says. Not much reason to be here if that is the function of the forum.I think you've got a choice; acknowledge the degeneration of discourse you condemn and work within it - both sides allegedly say "the other side is unreasonable and won't compromise", so that strategy is out of the window. — fdrake
Well, I'm on the other side of the Atlantic, so indeed I'm outside being just an annoying commentator.Both forms of a principle of sufficient talking which is symptomatic of the degeneration of discourse. I think you're underestimating how complicit and embedded in the discourse you're criticizing you are; to the extent you're making standard moves in it but still believe you're outside of it. — fdrake
Critique how? Which side should I criticize? If I do them both, Americans will be just confused just where I stand. (That's the basic problem, because the thinking starts from that either you are with us or against us)In other words; you acknowledge the pervasiveness of ideology and how powerful it is, but you simultaneously do not critique it and simply hope that people will be able to overcome it through sufficient talking. That "principle of sufficient talking" is ultimately just ideology too; who're we talking to and what will be done? Talk, just talk. — fdrake
Blacks have been in the US for four hundred years and you have had slavery, so it's a bit different. Sweden hasn't had slavery (even if Swedish ships participated in the slave trade) and it hasn't had colonies in Africa or Asia. Present day non-European minorities are a new thing (Finns as an ethnic minority don't create problems).Is that reasonable to hypothesize that similar processes take place in the US right now? Maybe it could explain why courthouses have become the targets of systemic attacks. — Number2018
Fdrake, for Americans their biggest threat is their antagonistic partisan ideologues dominating every sphere of policy discussion and hence crippling the ability to make any drastic changes.Absolutely. But you're still thinking about it like a reasonable human being and not an ideologue. — fdrake
American politics goes with the latter as the objective is really to polarize and divide the people. And may I add that the portrayed image about the opposing side is painted using the worst kind of stereotypes imaginable. Just take the most eccentric and ideologically driven comments and depict them to be what the other side is all about.are you going to think about social policy that removes stressors from (potential) households and provides resource access + stability, or are you condemning single mums for being horribly irresponsible welfare queens with one side of your mouth and railing on sexual degeneracy on the other? It's the latter. — fdrake
I think that many refer also to the economic environment, or with minorities incarceration rates etc. Marriage and getting children is a financial issue also. Few if any refer just to fidelity, commitment or to having the "finish school, get a haircut and get a good job" mentality. The fact is simply that environment has this effect on people: what is common in their surroundings, people will feel is normal.They'll look at ssu's graph about poverty and marriage and treat marriage, the individual choice of fidelity and commitment, as the causal factor to be manipulated in solving the problem. — fdrake

So what's the solution? MadWorld1, how would a President like Trump (rather than like Biden) help prevent single parenthood? Require single women to have abortions? Require fathers to marry their child's mother? — Michael
Unfortunately, few families voluntarily can choose that one stays home raises the children. At worst this view is depicted as being against women being in the workforce.Very typical because it's socially necessary. How's anyone expected to juggle kids and all the other responsibilities they have? Especially when you've gotta do those other responsibilities to take care of the kids. — fdrake
Basically the correlation between single parenthood and poverty.When someone believes the nuclear family is under threat, what threats do you think they're imagining? — fdrake
Sure. And in the way you describe it:You agree that having a reliable and large social safety net is a massive benefit for a kid, why stop at the nuclear family? — fdrake
Nuclear families don't even stop at the nuclear family; they depend on nurseries and elderly relatives. — fdrake
That wasn't my intention to say, so sorry if I made myself unclear.If this is a true report, and since the protest in Portland is going on for 60 days, most likely that it has
a kind of a clear cause, differently from what ssu thinks. — Number2018
in a free private enterprise exchange economy, government’s primary role is to preserve the rules of the game by enforcing contracts, preventing coercion, and keeping markets free.
(Milton Friedman)However, there are some items where it is not feasible for everybody to do his own thing.
There are some cases in which you must have uniformity, some cases in which the answer
must be the same for all the people. The most obvious example is in the case of national
defense. There is no way in which some people in a country can be engaged in an
international war and other people in a country can be not engaged in that war. The decision
whether the country is at war is a yes or no decision that must be the same answer for all.
Education is today largely paid for and almost entirely administered by governmental bodies or non-profit institutions. This situation has developed gradually and is now taken so much for granted that little explicit attention is any longer directed to the reasons for the special treatment of education even in countries that are predominantly free enterprise in organization and philosophy.
What’s interesting is that while the article jettisons one legal reality—the corporation—as a mere legal fiction, it rests its entire argument on another legal reality—the law of agency—as the foundation for the conclusions. The article thus picks and chooses which parts of legal reality are mere “legal fictions” to be ignored and which parts are “rock-solid foundations” for public policy. The choice depends on the predetermined conclusion that is sought to be proved.
A corporate executive who devotes any money for any general social interest would, the article argues, “be spending someone else's money… Insofar as his actions in accord with his ‘social responsibility’ reduce returns to stockholders, he is spending their money.”
How did the corporation’s money somehow become the shareholder’s money? Simple. That is the article’s starting assumption. By assuming away the existence of the corporation as a mere “legal fiction”, hey presto! the corporation’s money magically becomes the stockholders' money.
I wonder why it is so difficult to report that there are a) peaceful protesters, those especially during the day who do follow curfews etc. b) protesters that will get agitated c) provocateurs who do love a riot, prepare and train for the event d) looters, who will use the opportunity to loot when the police isn't stopping them because, why not? Protests and demonstrations are made of various people with different agendas if they are of any larger size. Especially if the groups c) or d) are allowed to operate, they surely will do that. And there has to be only a tiny group. Yet I'm not seeing helicopter footage of Portland or Seattle burning, so I do believe it really is concentrated on limited areas with in the end not many people involved.It is difficult to find out what is actually going on in Portland right now. What is your view?
As far as I see, there are two major narratives in the media: peaceful protesters vs. rioters; both are completely incompatible. — Number2018
