The individual, then, enters with a type of consideration that is no longer capitalist, but that is of a dynastic order. From that moment on, the approach that these people take of society no longer corresponds to a capitalist perspective, but to a perspective of aristocratic type. — Rafaella Leon
Here we see that in certain ways the monetary system possesses (as an extension of us) all the features of a living system. Can it be said then that we birthed an organism that is more powerful and more self perpetuating than the individual human? Or perhaps a virus of kinds that feeds off of us (a host) to survive and do it’s bidding? — Benj96
Yes, and I think that'll have to be the crux of the matter: Did Donald do what Donald did in order to set up a violent insurrection by his supporters in the Capitol? And the answer ought to be that this cannot be established, further is unlikely to be the case. — Kenosha Kid
As I was just discussing above, this seems to me to be the crux of this entrenching. If a person who you think is not crazy tells you you're wrong, but you don't think you are, it surely demonstrates as clearly as possible that something's seeming to you to be the case cannot itself be sufficient evidence that it is the case. Yet, no amount of internal reflection is going to get any more than something's seeming to you to be the case. One cannot take another person's contrary position and examine it against one's own web of beliefs. It will as obviously fail such a test as taking a Land Rover component and bolting it to a Ferrari would fail. You have to create a virtual web of beliefs built around what your (non-crazy) interlocutor is saying - a kind of joint space which neither of you actually believe in. But since neither of you own this space, there's not much incentive to do so in a combative environment.
I know it seems rather fusty, but the process of citation and building very gradually and slowly on previous work is a grand scale manifestation of this mental process, the academic corpus in general being the shared web of beliefs which neither party completely believes. This is why I think that "I've re-written the whole of..." type posts are just combative from the start (no matter the intention of the poster). They eschew the shared space of beliefs we already have. Doing so is equivalent to turning up to a negotiation with gun and expecting that not to have any influence of the parties' approach. — Isaac
For my part, the thing that I tend to find stressful is the perception that nobody agrees with me. — Pfhorrest
What are people thoughts on why they do that? — DingoJones
Adam Smith? Wealth of Nations? 1776? Thought God was producing and distributing goods and services? Did he? — counterpunch
you say so dude! — counterpunch
I thought he thought it was the rationally self interest economic decisions of individuals in a free market. — counterpunch
(...) by directing that industry in such a manner as its produce may be of the greatest value, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention.
It's fascinating, that you would comment on something you don't understand at all. — counterpunch
Extra points for writing “verisimilitude” several times. You sound wicked smart. — Xtrix
There is a significant percentage of the black community that are already there, so it's just a matter of time before the rest are pulled-up, but it is the black community that will do the pulling. — synthesis
Adam Smith described it as an invisible hand. It would be madness of the highest order to dispense with it. — counterpunch
No. I don't suggest there's anything supernatural going on, but it's strange and wonderful how the rationally self interested actions of individuals conspire to produce and distribute the goods and services people want and need without any over-arching authority. — counterpunch
You increase fairness by expanding access and opportunity. Redistribution does not work. People have to do it (succeed) themselves in order for it to be sustainable. — synthesis
that the Invisible Hand at the heart of capitalism is a miracle that affords personal and political freedom — counterpunch
Can you even prove the Floyd murder was racially motivated? You shouldn't call someone racist because they say things you don't like - when they're not racist. Just because it's not racist - that doesn't make it okay, you can still be angry just, maybe stop diluting the meaning of important words for political benefit? — Judaka
Presumably, if corporations can find loopholes to fund candidate campaigns, those candidates are beholden to those corporations, and will be in their pocket.
The other side is that spending money is the same as other choices that are supposed to be allowed in a "free" society. — schopenhauer1
How would your rank them? — khaled
Not necessarily. You could argue that weakening property rights in this manner does more harm than good since you can't really tell who has the strongest emotions, and use that as justification to keep them the same. — khaled
The market is more than just price discovery as anybody who has been cancelled can attest. It's an all encompassing force that players on all sides attempt to manipulate to their own advantage. — synthesis
Regardless of how we wish to define it, I believe we can both agree that the freer the market, the more the price of any commodity reflects the actual value contained (which is most important to having a highly efficient economy). — synthesis
I cited anecdotal evidence for the idea that resisting arrest is more likely to get you shot. — counterpunch
I cited evidence; albeit somewhat anecdotal. — counterpunch
But again, it's not the crime - it's the arrest. — counterpunch
The crime is irrelevant - except insofar as it indicates a propensity to resist arrest. — counterpunch
The same explanation applies. The systematic racism of political correctness is a consequence of the individualism and cowardice of white people; that they don't have a collectivist sense of identity, less yet racial identity, and individually, fall victim to left wing ideologues who seek to make them ashamed of their history and skin colour - not least to justify mass immigration. — counterpunch
In fact, white people should be proud of the massive contributions they have made to the world. They invented damn near everything - from the scientific and industrial revolutions, to modern democratic governance, rule of law, medical science, the steam engine, the internal combustion engine, flight, radio, television, computers, the internet and so on and on. — counterpunch
What exactly is the negative consequence of owning rather than renting that you're trying to avoid? I have my suspicions but rather than just give my answers to all of them at once I'd like to know what in particular you're concerned about. — Pfhorrest
But if you were to rank these abstract values wouldn't they be ranked by the strength of the associated emotional reactions anyways? — khaled
In other words, when both doing and not doing something will result in some suffering, you obviously pick the version that results in the least suffering. I wouldn't even mind valuing your own suffering above that of others when doing this. — khaled
Not really. The extent to which I wish not to die easily trumps the extent to which I wish it doesn't rain tomorrow. — khaled
How so? Sounds practically like the same thing to me. — khaled
You take it too far. Just apply the principle as it is. — khaled
The way I define “harm” is “Doing to someone something they wish isn’t done to them”. And “suffering” is simply the thing you don’t wish is done to you. Idk if that answers your question.
So you are harming the homeless person even if it’s a painless death (because they don’t want to die I presume) — khaled
In theory, the market should control the capitalists. If they do something wrong (economically), the market should punish them. — synthesis
It would seem that the most productive form of capitalism is where resources are being used optimally, that is, the correct marriage of resources and labor. — synthesis
As well, wouldn't accumulation slow innovation/productivity through anti-competitiveness — synthesis
I would be interested in a couple of examples. Thanks. — synthesis
Sure, it was the mindscape podcast, with guess Joseph Henrich. He has written a few books on the topic I saw. — ChatteringMonkey
The question then presumably is how much is hard-wired and how much is left to culture? — ChatteringMonkey
I do tend to throw that word around semi-consciously.... but they are indeed something more general and abstract. Examples would be something like freedom, security, quality of life etc. These are general ideas that capture the things we find the most important, and we use them as standards to measure other things by... and we also weight them against eachother to order them in some kind of hierarchy. That's where people typically will have different opinions, one person will value security over freedom, and another the other way around. — ChatteringMonkey
Yes ok, I agree with this insofar reason definitely plays and should play a role, but that role is I think ultimately only instrumental and not the bases of our valuations. So if you value X, then by way of correct reasoning you would get an objective answer to the question of how to act. But that value X is not objectively derivable from the world or reason alone, but comes from our affects. I'll try to explain what I mean with value below... — ChatteringMonkey
I don't just deem it arbitrarily. You haven't actually engaged with the argument. When do we label people as "mentally ill"? It is precisely when they start becoming a danger to themselves and others. For cases of mental illness where we find it appropriate for forcefully intervene, we are interfering because the person in question is threatening someone or is being suicidal due to impairment.
Find me a situation where we find it acceptable to label someone mentally ill and forcefully intervene in their lives when they are:
A- Not dependents.
B- Not being harmful towards anyone or themselves.
C- They did not ask us to do it. — khaled
False. Try using my system to justify murder or theft. You will fail. — khaled
When we can't defeat the point, try to defeat the person. — Hippyhead
There's a very rigid group consensus here. Readers apparently wish for me to join in the self serving chanting, to go along to get along etc. If I was smart I'd do that, and then I'd have friends. — Hippyhead
That's not because I'm smart and you're stupid. Not that. It's because I'm 68 and you're probably 22. That is, I've been doing this since before your parents were born, and you're just getting started. — Hippyhead
Is there a situation where we do something that does NOT minimize suffering of others (including yourself) and find it acceptable unless it’s dependents and it’s being done for their own good? — khaled
Actually that was the reason and which shows that politicians that supported a monarchy and see the needs of the people and react to issues before they turn into open revolution. — ssu
Yet doesn't unrestrained socialism lead to unrestrained power? — ssu
And I simply don't buy it. — ssu
If capitalism would be so all encompassing greed, how do you explain then that even with capitalism many countries do have a lot of social cohesion and are just fine with things like the welfare state. Bismarck wasn't a leftist, but he went on with social-welfare legislation. — ssu
You are absolutely correct, but corruption is part and parcel of all human activity. I do realize that the temptations are perhaps greater when wealth (power) is involved, but it's everywhere (all the time). — synthesis
The fact that capitalism does appear to result in increasing concentrations of wealth can be attenuated by keeping the system as "honest" as possible, i.e., maintaining competition, keeping the politicians somewhat under control, using real money, etc. At present, it's a complete mess. — synthesis
And I am not convinced that all but the few have such a maniacal propensity to go towards avarice. Just the same, keeping those things that can be regulated (within the context of freedom), regulated, you will get the best result possible. — synthesis
Capitalism (like all human systems) has it's issues, but it's so incredibly efficient and has lifted an incredible amount of people out of poverty. It also a system that rewards merit, hard work, and most importantly panders to the market, where it is the masses [mostly] that decide what is going to be a successful product/service.
Top-down economics (like top-down everything else) is a disaster. — synthesis
Non sequitor. "With any certainty". Really? Be reasonable. With some certainty. — khaled
That is literally the same thing as the above. You just changed "be sure" to "forseeable". Again showing that you can predict these things with some certainty. I don't understand why you insist on pretending we can't. — khaled
We already do that. Unless they are dependents or they consent to it we do not interfere with others, furthermore we consider it immoral to do so. Doctors don't go around forcefully "curing" people, people instead come to doctors. And if a doctor was going around forcing people to exercise for their health, we'd think he's being immoral, and he'd immediately get his license revoked. It's none of his damn business. — khaled
NOT having this principle would mean that if I deem you "unstable" I am allowed to do whatever to you to "stabilize" you without your consent, and without you being my dependent. Give me one situation where we consider that acceptable. — khaled
So which is it that’s wrong, our actions, or their causes? — Pinprick
I do agree with you that capitalism is not only not the problem, it's the only game in town, as socialism is simply a re-distribution scheme and communism, a pipe-dream.
It's just a matter of rooting out the corruption which has pretty much paralyzed all systems. — synthesis
And which of those does mine produce? — khaled
Right, but intentions aren’t acts, so how can the be called right/wrong? — Pinprick
I've been through a lot since then, but long story short, to me, everything, especially that in relation to human society, seems absolutely absurd. What do you think? — Ellis
For life is quite absurd
And death's the final word
You must always face the curtain with a bow
Forget about your sin
Give the audience a grin
Enjoy it, it's your last chance anyhow
Yes, it seems difficult to avoid this point, also made by unenlightened, that ultimately his racism is attractive because they are racists, his misogyny attractive because they are misogynists, his irresponsibility attractive because they are irresponsible. And after decades of being made to feel bad about this, along comes this person who exemplifies and therefore exonerates them. — Kenosha Kid