"Every objection to my "is" has turned out to be unfounded."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
You are partly right and partly not right in a manner of speaking. To be honest I have been arguing with you for awhile now because I'm always fascinated by other people's perspective's of the world and I assume everyone is 'rational in one way or another. Since I have been having trouble wrapping my head around what your thinking it has become like an itch that I can not scratch. I just thought I should make note of that before I begin.
Anyways with Hume's Guillotine I don't really have to go through the process of showing of how or why your "is" arguments are unfounded, I just know that it is a given that they form the same kind of statements that any other empirical back statement does (and/or any argument that uses the same framework) and such moral statements based on such arguments are no longer really trusted by modern or post-modern philosophers..
Why this is requires a bit of mental gymnastics that I don't really have the time for other than to mention than it is pretty much a given that "is" based arguments are the type of stuff used by those who believe in objective morality and trying to get an "ought" from any "is" (including the near infinite "is" statements used to form social and individual moral beliefs) is what could be called a non-trivial process as no-one has been able to do so without it being flawed and/or highly biased.
Why even though no one can show how to get an ought from an is, nether can it be proven that it can't be done. It is kind of like trying to prove (or disprove) there is a "God", some people think it is easy and they can do it but to do it the proper rational why is itself a non-trivial problem as well.
Maybe I shouldn't be arguing against you about why people steal, but the problems and issues with MANY OTHER counter-productive human activities since arguing about stealing is just spitting hairs. To me it seems worse when people murder others to acquire what they want (ie there are many thieves who will steal but don't have the stomach to kill in order to steal goods) since murder to get petty goods can seem irrational unless under great duress. And there is also white-collar versions of stealing that has a MUCH GREATER IMPACT in ours lives to which it make regular thieves look like children in comparison. Since you seem to be focusing on people only stealing nickel and dime stuff through regular robbery (ie high level/white collar robbery is given other names since it is much more sophisticated), I'm kind of bothered that you don't seem to consider ALL FORMS OF STEALING in your arguments.
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I think someone pointing their gun at the head of either them or one of their family would likely do it. I don't know whether you are ruling out such people as you are ruling out the criminally insane and/or inclined to commit such crimes but when you rule out BOTH people who do it UNDER DURESS AND BECAUSE THEY LIKE TO, it is a given that you are taking out nearly anyone who would want to perform ANY ACTION...
— dclements — WISDOMfromPO-MO
That doesn't make any sense."
-WISDOMfromPO-MO
What I was trying to show was that your asking "why people steal" and yet exclude certain reasons as to why people do so creates a dilemma where you may be excluding too many people to have anyone left, but I don't think you realize why I was trying to point this out.
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Criminals make rational calculations just like non-criminals do.
They may even be more rational in that sense. It probably requires a lot more information gathering and processing to successfully shoplift than it does to make a purchase at a cash register. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Ok, now we may be getting somewhere.
:)
The problem I feel I have been having in this discussion is that you are asking why certain people steal when it seems to me that there are obvious reasons/motives behind such actions. The fact that you are 'ok' to think of them as rational as you and me is seems like a step forward.
Maybe we can split the difference here a little and perhaps agree that a "rational person" like you and me can make mistakes from time to time and steal when they shouldn't. For example, when I was in elementary school and my dad didn't want to buy something (like an action figure or candy) that I asked him to, I would merely take it. I later realize that it was just wrong to take it. While it isn't the same thing their are people who steal in order to solve short term money problems (similar to how people use to kite/write bad checks) in order to delay a negative consequence till later.
If you go even further they are 'rational' people who are even under greater duress (and/or greater need to solve short term problems) who perhaps after stealing for awhile and not getting caught yet take even greater risks. For example in the area I live in there are casinos and people both end up having to sell the business and/or stealing from other to either fuel their gambling habits pay their debts. One of the bookkeepers/accountants of a local car dealership abused their privileges to access the dealers account and by the time the dealer found out he was already bankrupted.
And beyond those people are perhaps those born into a culture where they are taught to steal (and/or similar activities) as well as those who's personalities who make them more criminally inclined. Perhaps one of these examples might be an individual who was squatting in an abandoned house and would befriend other squatters (or people in similar situations), kill/rob them (and sometimes torture them as well), and then just try and hide the in the house he squatted out of. When detectives questioned him, they where not sure whether he did what he did because his mind had been fried from all the drugs he took, due to a mental condition, or a combination of both but they where pretty sure it was likely one of the three.
I don't know if the examples I just gave you are good enough to show why some people steal, but I hope it helps a little.
Also as a small note, it is almost a given that a majority of people who steal do so merely for their own reasons, immediate need, etc. so it is unnecessarily/moot to ask what intrinsic/extrinsic value is of the item they steal since the mental process of a thief is unlikely to consider such things. They simply have a want or need some immediate thing, see little to no negative consequences for taking it (or at least an "acceptable risk" in trying to take it), and then simply go about taking it. It isn't really that much different then for some gamblers who keep putting money into the machines all the time knowing that perhaps they shouldn't be doing it, while at the same time thinking it won't hurt to just spend another $10, $20, etc before they leave the casino. Even if by the time they leave they have spent their rent money and now have their hands on their head while waiting for the bus.
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"Some people under those conditions choose to steal, others choose not to."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
You are correct but such arguments don't really help your position or understand the problem and are more or less moot to even point out. We already know that many people who can afford to pay for things, understand the negative consequences of stealing, and not under any duress to steal are very,very, very unlikely to steal; however the same can not be said of those under different conditions.
It may be cheating but as a rule of thumb I think it is safe to assume that people that do not steal if given the chance either can still afford enough things that they feel they don't need to steal, either know and/or afraid of the consequences of stealing, and/or not under enough duress to make them feel the need to steal. At which point people go from not being willing to steal to being willing and able to do so is kind of moot since it is almost a given that as things get worse more people are likely to steal and when given a life or death situation (or what someone believes is one) such as a disaster where someone has to loot and/or steal to get supplies they need to survive (ie absolute need for something nearby that they can't purchase normally / near zero possibility of negative consequences if they steal/ Under extreme duress to make them want/need to steal), nearly anyone who is willing to steal will do so even if they know doing so is ethically/morally wrong in all other situations.
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"This is a straw man, red herring or some other fallacy.
I never said that anybody does or does not qualify as "rational", let alone that any particular behavior such as "doing it for fun" disqualifies anybody as rational.
I said that things like doing it for fun must explain the choice to steal--the thing stolen does not explain the choice to steal."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
Ok, you got me on that part since while rereading it I believe I most likely misread something in your post and assumed something you really didn't say. When I start writing a lot on a topic, I sometimes start shooting from the hip and get a bit careless in my arguments, but since I'm "ok" with accepting such fallacies when people point them out (which doesn't always happen when they don't really read my posts) I don't think it is really a bad thing.
With the number of fallacies I have seen in other peoples posts I think it is safe that I have some in my own when I'm not careful enough when I reread them and/or my post get so long that it is hard to do it properly
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"I said no such thing.
I said that I can't imagine a scenario where the value of the intrinsic qualities/properties of a tangible economic good could in the mind of any rational economic actor economically justify the marginal choice to steal ("I could steal this. I could pay for it at the cash register. I could forgo trying to acquire it. I could beg that shopper over there to buy it for me. What should I do? Hmm.") rather than not steal. I asked for an answer to a question: the intrinsic value of what tangible economic good could ever in the mind of an honest, rational economic actor who is considering all possible options economically justify the option of stealing?"
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
I don't know if your talking about a particular situation you have in mind where someone may want to steal something in a super market and they are not under all real duress and/or need to steal it or if you are talking about a set of situations where someone may or may not steal. I don't want to accuse you of cherry picking but if you exclude too many of the examples where it is pretty obvious why someone would steal and then only select those where it isn't very likely that they will steal.
And with them then pose the question "Why do (these) people steal?" without really informing those you are asking what your trying to do, it is a given your going to create A LOT of CONFUSION. I don't know if this was in any way intentional, but I think it is reasonable for anyone reading this to understand why this would create a problem.
While reading you posts I have been under the impression that you are only working with a sliver of what could be the considered the general population as a whole, but every time I have inquired about this you have been evasive enough that I can not determine if it is your actual position.
However with this part of you post I think it is a good possibility that this is what you are really thinking.
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"I recall only getting one response that has any semblance of being an answer to the question: it depends on the person."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
If you give credit where credit is due, I think I have pointed out nearly countless times that it depends on the person AND CIRCUMSTANCES. Whether a person would or wouldn't do it has quite a bit to do with upbringing but what upbringing a person gets also depends on CIRCUMSTANCES. So in the end it is mostly about CIRCUMSTANCES if you really think about it
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"Well, again, if it depends on the person then we could engineer society so that stealing never occurs. We could put all the people for whom the intrinsic value of an iPhone makes them steal in an environment free of iPhones and those people would never steal. We could organize society around everybody's calculations and eliminate stealing. But that is counterintuitive. People steal for an abundance of reasons other than the value of the good stolen. Eliminating this good from that person's environment and that good from that person's environment won't change the fact that people rebel against authority and that stealing is one way that they do that. They will steal for the sake of rebelling, among other intangible things. The intrinsic value of the good they steal will at the most decide what they steal."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
I'm still confused as to why you are focused on why people steal instead of why anyone does something counter-productive. Most people focus on how to be "good" (or at least some kind of "moral" actor), do that which is useful to them and others (ie. helping other may help themselves in return), and avoid counter productive actions. I believe looking at these kind of issues as more of what morality is about, but I hope there is some logical reason for you to be fixated on just why people steal, and possibly within that question why people steal pertaining only to a certain group who it is uncertain whether they would steal or not. .
Societies, corporations, and governments are on a constant vigil to keep people stealing from them so I believe they are almost as protected as they could be, but I'm unsure if the same can be said of average plebs and/or if you arguments pertains in any way to those who steal from them.
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"Some people say that economics and politics are the same thing. Other people say that economics and politics are not the same thing ("It's good politics, but bad economics").
I think that a feature of politics that does not necessarily apply to economics is that in politics values and resources are allocated authoritatively.
I have never heard imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism, etc. being described from any perspective (neoclassical economics, economic anthropology, etc.) when addressing how values and resources are allocated non-authoritatively. The authoritative part, it seems, is always presented as something that distorts the non-authoritative part (like when neoclassical economics says that government intervention in the economy results in less economic output than if government had not intervened)."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
I'm unsure what you mean by this when I try to wrap my head around it. While reading and rereading this passage it is reminds me of something I might find in a random library if I just picked it up and flipped to some random page.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that without more background context and less fluffy and/or ambiguous words it is almost as hard to know what you are saying then if I was given something created by a postmodernism generator.
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"The role of tangible economic goods in economically justifying in people's minds the marginal choice to steal remains in doubt."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
When you say "MARGINAL CHOICE" are you talking about the group of people who are walking a tight-rope on whether they will or will not steal (which I mentioned earlier) or is there another set of people you have in mind?
I have time and time explained about the motives, behaviors, backgrounds, etc,etc of what likely explains the circumstances and other stuff you might find in a Psych 101 class if someone asked this about the general population, but I don't believe you are really concern with that particular issue.
Without being certain about the set of people you are considering, it is near impossible to answer such questions by just trying to guess what group you are referring since no model will work with the wrong group being considered
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"And just because something is not economically justified does not mean that people won't do it. People make decisions through irrational thought/feeling processes all of the time."
--WISDOMfromPO-MO
I agree and have mentioned this in an earlier part of this post.
:)