The correspondence theory is often traced back to Aristotle’s well-known definition of truth (Metaphysics 1011b25): “To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true” — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
What would you say is the goal of philosophy? — A Christian Philosophy
As I explain in another video, philosophy means "love of wisdom", and wisdom means "conforming our beliefs to reality (i.e. true beliefs) and our behaviour to reality (i.e. right behaviour)". — A Christian Philosophy
You'll struggle to find a freer system anywhere else — Tzeentch
That would be communism, which already has been tried and it has failed several times. — Tzeentch
Clearly, the answer to those flaws it not more government, — Tzeentch
Your position doesn't make any sense. On the one hand you reel against the terrible economic freedoms, and how those freedoms are responsible for all the terrible things that befall people in society, and on the other hand you deny such freedoms exist! So what is it going to be? — Tzeentch
(1) You stated that voluntary association is a key difference between employment and government.
(2) I'm saying that one also has the choice to leave a country if one does not like the laws.
(3) Both are voluntary. No one has a gun to your head. You're free to choose.
— Xtrix
And I've repeatedly argued this type of argument throws all sense of proportion out of the window. The idea we're freer to choose the country we live in than we are to choose our occupation is just silly. — Tzeentch
No, when someone says "Work for me or starve to death", I think that's clearly coercion. — Tzeentch
There's a significant difference between an average worker who has plenty of choice regarding his occupation, and someone who is economically completely cornered. — Tzeentch
choice of work and choice of nationality the same. — Tzeentch
That people may eventually be in a position to change that conditions does not change government's essential nature - violence and coercion. — Tzeentch
Oh, there's plenty of alternatives. Be a wage slave at Wal Mart, or at Cosco, or at Target, or at McDonalds, or at Burger King, or at an Amazon warehouse. Lots of options. What about the option NOT to be a wage-slave? Or to work at a worker-owned/run enterprise? Those choices simply aren't presented in this system.
— Xtrix
Nonsense. You're free to do all of those things. — Tzeentch
All of those things are out of reach if one doesn't have any good ideas, initiative or a desire to incur the risk of investment. — Tzeentch
And I believe here we are getting to the real meat and potatoes of the anti-capitalist idea - that building a business is something that should magically happen to us, without any effort, without any intellectual effort to produce a good idea, without any investments that incur risk. It reeks of entitlement. — Tzeentch
If you want to have stability, no responsibility and no risk, you're free to be a "wage slave", whatever that means. And even in those situations a person can grow if they want to, but if they work resentfully, believing they deserve more without actually working for it, believing that because they work a simple job, there are no skills for them to develop there, it won't get them very far and in this case their supposed poverty is self-imposed. — Tzeentch
I want workers to control their workplaces and to make decisions together. Bezos doesn't run the Amazon warehouses, the workers do. The Waltons don't run any WalMart store you go to, the workers do.
— Xtrix
See my point about the costs incurred by business-owners. — Tzeentch
We don’t expect rationality from religious belief or entertainment, yet neoliberalism and financial engineering have been far more directly responsible for keeping the global self-delusion of limitless growth going. — apokrisis
I’m saying the problem is deep rooted as modern identity has been constructed around the “limitless growth” that fossil fuels promised. Our political and social economy is premised on it. — apokrisis
Thus to fix the problem, it is not just about providing better information. It is about redesigning the very psychology at work in “tackling the threat”. — apokrisis
Does anyone really fear death given its inevitability and the fact sleep comes for us every night? — apokrisis
Still blaming illusions, religion, witchcraft, irrationality, for the problems of science and technology? No, it is not the insane who are destroying the world, but the reasonable, pragmatic, scientific, progressives. — unenlightened
Without this will to survive that comes out as a feeling of invincibility, the species would not face challenges that it otherwise does. — god must be atheist
Something to what you say from an etymology and historical perspective, but lets not consider etymology and tradition to be the final authority on what a term means. — Yohan
If the path of least resistance is to go on pretending to deal with an existential threat then that's the path we'll most likely take right past the point which it's too late to do anything about it. — Baden
The disaster movie and the disastrous headlines psychologically relieve us of the will to act. — Baden
We are not going to go out on the street protesting until our crops are dying and we don't have enough to eat because only then social reproduction is really threatened. — Baden
Aren’t you conflating two different attitudes?
One is techno-optimism. We are self making gods. Our fate is in our own hands.
The other is old fashioned fatalism. We are the playthings of the gods. It is what it is. — apokrisis
So the problem isn’t “media” in the sense of public misinformation. The problem is much deeper. It is in the mind of the global social organism receiving any message. Our collective identity is predicated on the exponential growth that became a thing with the industrial revolution. — apokrisis
Philosophy (original meaning) is the search for truth — A Christian Philosophy
US demographics is far better, thanks to immigration. — ssu
And you think in those profit and non-profit organizations the managers didn't listen one iota at their workforce about anything? Nope, zero. They had their information from God (or something) and preached it to the organization without wanting to hear any feedback? — ssu
So I'm not sure just how great powerhouse China actually is. Let's look after a couple of years. — ssu
Having lived in several cities and towns in the US - That’s because you don’t know how a corporation functions.
— Xtrix
I've worked in corporations, but have you? — ssu
Really? Compared to what? North Korea? :roll: — ssu
Even if they (the CCP) say there still Marxist-Leninists, they do have private property (especially after Mao). With so many billionaires and real estate bubble bursting, I don't think the country qualifies for a true communist state. — ssu
In reality, the "community", the people likely won't give a shit about a corporation if they don't work there. Likely the only reason they would want to complain about something. — ssu
Neither the workers, nor the community, nor the customers, have any say whatsoever in the major decisions of the company I have already outlined. Zero.
— Xtrix
Zero? That is simply not true. — ssu
And basically, if you run down your company for short term profits, guess what, sooner or later the company is a former company. — ssu
No I don't think so. Don't believe the hype. Individual-1 is dead man trundling. Desantis is loathsome even in Florida. — 180 Proof
Anyway, as for 2022, long before Moscow Mitch conceded this week (or last) that the Dems are likely to pick up seats in the Senate, I'd been saying at least since SCOTUS wantonly shat on Reproductive Freedom that the Dems chances of holding the House & Senate were good. Recall the anti-abortion referendum got crushed in ruby red Kansas just a couple of weeks ago! (Iirc, about a third of rural Republican – women – no doubt voted against the GOP measure!)
And since the public J6 Hearings have significantly moved polls on Independents away from the GOP this summer and extreme Trumpstains are on so many ballots around making otherwise safe seats competitive, Dems midterm chances have only improved. The latest news about tr45h being investigated for Espionage, etc can only turn off / frighten the same Independent and moderate Republican suburban voters who bailed on the GOP in 2018 and 2020. And y'know there's at least a footlocker's worth of boots to drop before November, don't ya? :up: — 180 Proof
Situational morality is better than none, I suppose, but I see it for what it is, and I am minimally moved.
However, her loss does crystallize something for us that many had already known: that the bar to clear in the modern Republican Party isn’t being sufficiently conservative but rather being sufficiently obedient to Donald Trump and his quest to deny and destroy democracy.
We must stop thinking it hyperbolic to say that the Republican Party itself is now a threat to our democracy. I understand the queasiness about labeling many of our fellow Americans in that way. I understand that it sounds extreme and overreaching.
But how else are we to describe what we are seeing?
Furthermore, that "moral" world without private property has been tried again and again, with absolutely horrible results. — ssu
And now the idea of a stakeholder is widely accepted. — ssu
And you have here, just to give an example, Nordic corporatism — ssu
The public has no input on the decisions of the corporation.
— Xtrix
And just what ought to be the input of people who don't have a clue what the corporation does? — ssu
Workers have no input either.
— Xtrix
:roll:
Have you had a job? I would disagree here. — ssu
I distinguish between the use of physical force - violence, coercion, etc., and other kinds of power.
To me, while both can be problematic, physical force is more clearly visible and definable, and easier to argue against on the basis of fundamental human rights.
So illegitimate use of physical force I can agree with. Illegitimate use of any kind of force (which is essentially as fuzzy as the word 'power'), I cannot. — Tzeentch
I don't think the use of physical force is ever just. Justice implies an element of goodness - I don't believe violence possesses any such quality. Though, sometimes its use may be excused (self-defense) or begrudgingly accepted as an evil necessary to prevent worse (government). — Tzeentch
Not exactly. He discusses the relationship between the 19th century capitalists and the ordinary worker, and claims that it was not strictly exploitative, but to a large degree mutually beneficial. — Tzeentch
Of course there is a free market. — Tzeentch
It's exactly the low level of regulations of and interference with the market one finds in a free capitalist society that provides people with a certain degree of choice — Tzeentch
Obviously when something incurs a sufficiently high cost, it can no longer said to be voluntary. I've already said that for someone living in dire poverty, choice of employment may not be voluntary.
However, in what world is an impoverished worker freer to leave the country than he is to find a different employer? Again, you're throwing all sense of proportion out of the window, and that will make reasonable debate impossible. — Tzeentch
The vast majority of people have plenty to choose from when it comes to employment, even unskilled workers. — Tzeentch
I don't believe there are so many people who can truly be said to have no alternatives whatsoever, even by reasonable standards, but to the degree that there are I can agree that they are in a precarious situation and their relationship with their employer isn't entirely voluntary. — Tzeentch
But you simply refuse to acknowledge the fact that you're welcome to leave the country -- no one is forcing you to stay. So by staying and living in this country -- just as staying and working in a corporation -- you consent to the rules. Don't like the rules and conditions? Sorry, but you can leave.
— Xtrix
You don't apply this standard yourself, so why would I take this argument serious? — Tzeentch
By the time one even has the chance toleave a country[leave a job], usually several decades into one's life, one has become firmly rooted in thatsociety[job]. Not to mention it would require a considerable investment of time and money. — Tzeentch
And ultimately, this isn't even a choice you can make on your own. You need the approval of both your country of birth and your country of destination, in other words, you need to conform to laws, and laws are enforced through violence, so you're not 'free to leave' at all. — Tzeentch
This attempt at making a change in employment the same as migrating is just silly. — Tzeentch
You're comparing apples to oranges. When one lives in absolute poverty and those are your only options I might agree that employment isn't voluntary, but there's not a modern country in the world in which those are your only options, and the free market is largely to thank for that. — Tzeentch
There’s much more freedom with the government and the law of the land. Don’t like the laws? Work to change them, or leave. No one is forcing you to stay in the country.
— Xtrix
"Much more freedom" how? — Tzeentch
How is it easier to migrate to another country, which essentially implies one also needs to find different employment, than it is to find only different employement? — Tzeentch
And the idea it is easier to change the law than it is to change employer is equally something I cannot imagine you genuinely believe. — Tzeentch
What you're doing is departing from all sense of proportion — Tzeentch
Also, how come you ignored about 75% of my earlier post? — Tzeentch
As many of the owners today are institutional investors and mutual funds, the role of the employed managerial class is the most important. — ssu
But just where do you draw the line for accountability? The law defines it. If the management does poor business decisions and the corporation goes bankrupt, that in itself isn't a crime. If the technology changes and the corporation is unable to cope with the change, is that a crime? It's poor management, lousy work. But not something that breaks the law. — ssu
Your choice to work anyone is, technically, voluntary. You can quit. — Xtrix
Your use of the word "technically" implies you yourself see the issue with that statement. — Tzeentch
In the case of government there was never even any agreement. — Tzeentch
You cannot in one sentence reel against capitalist exploitation of workers, implying their labour is performed involuntary, and in the next imply that switching jobs is the same as switching countries. — Tzeentch
If you want to use such an uncompromising standard in discussing human affairs then I'm afraid we'll have to start the conversation over, and we'll see where that uncompromising standard brings us. — Tzeentch
In the case of work you do have a say. Isn't your choice to sign a contract with an employer completely voluntary? — Tzeentch
My 'social contract' with my government has no such voluntary elements. In fact, they never had me sign anything! — Tzeentch
A co-opt or a stock company are far closer to each other than you think. — ssu
They have to abide to the existing laws. You cannot deny that. — ssu
Look, there is either private ownership or public ownership. A cooperative, an association and even a non-profit organization are private. If you aren't a member of them, you have no democratic say their actions. — ssu
Yeah, that's called being an entrepreneur. — ssu
Just what are you talking about here with "democracy". — ssu
When you understand the above, then think just what is the question that you have mind when you argue that there isn't "democracy" in a business enterprise. — ssu
Ownership creates that accountability. — ssu
government ownership — ssu
I believe the best mode for humans to coexist is voluntary. That's how I and most people (including most business!) conduct themselves every day. I don't desire to live in a society in which voluntariness cannot be achieved, but alas I have little choice. — Tzeentch
That is not feasible for a modern state. — Tzeentch
Our principle shouldn't simply be against the use of force, it should be against illegitimate power.
— Xtrix
I disagree.
Violence, threat of violence and coercion are all clearly definable along the lines of physical force. — Tzeentch
Illegitimate power is essentially undefinable, so I could never agree to trusting governments, as flawed and corrupt an instrument as they are, with defining such a term. — Tzeentch
I might agree with you that the power of multinational organisations may need to be curbed. I would do so specifically on the grounds that their power is now seeping into governments - an instrument of force - putting an instrument of force in the hands of private individuals. — Tzeentch
To point at the power of multinationals and conclude therefore private ownership (capitalism) needs to go (I'm not sure if you're arguing that, but I certainly have seen it suggested on this forum) is several bridges too far for me. — Tzeentch
Friedman certainly never spared the robber barons, — Tzeentch
highly aggressive, I'm thinking Xtrix — Yohan
He was pretty maniacal before Streetlight left. Streetlight was a bad influence. — Tate
Nah, he's like Streetlight in that he loses his mind if you disagree with him. — Tate
He is authoritarian, he is patronizing, he acts in bad faith. And now that he's a moderator, we can't do anything against that. — baker
He tells people to kill themselves. And he's getting away with it. — baker
as I long for death,
— Darkneos
Then why are you still around? I don’t mean this to be callous — and I’m not encouraging suicide — but genuinely curious. If you long for nothingness, why keep going? — Xtrix
at its essence government is predicated on violence and coercion — Tzeentch
it is a deeply flawed method of organizing human coexistence — Tzeentch
So here, the term 'libertarian' means the opposite of what it always meant in history. 'Libertarian' throughout European history meant 'socialist-anarchist.' The worker's movement--the socialist movement--sort of broke into 2 branches, one statist, one anti-statist. The statist branch led to Bolshevism and Lenin and Trotsky and so on; the anti-statist branch, which included left-Marxists like Rosa Luxumberg, kind of merged with a big strain of anarchism into what was called 'libertarian socialism.' So 'libertarian' in Europe always meant 'socialist.' Here, it means ultra-Ayn Rand or Cato Institute or something like that. But that's a special US usage...
Financial regulation of the financial sector was done after the '29 crash and usually referred to laws like the Banking act of 1933 (the Glass-Steagal act). Bretton Woods refers to a currency system where the dollar was pegged to gold and other currencies to the dollar and was done after WW2. — ssu
Won't he die someday? — 180 Proof
Wrong. Please know the reality. — ssu
Not in the quantity now they would have had to. The simple fact is that the Federal Reserve was the largest buyer of this huge increase in debt until the start of this year. — ssu
Really? Tell me just what single owner is bigger? — ssu
You seem to think the Fed prints money and that’s what the Congress uses to send checks.
— Xtrix
Actually, yes. — ssu
Last year (2021) the US federal government collected $4.05 trillion in revenue. It spent the government spent $6.82 trillion. Hence the federal government spent $2.77 trillion more than it collected, resulting in a deficit and new debt.
Who do you think bought that new debt? Who suddenly had a lot more US treasury securities? Think. — ssu
The Federal Reserve is the largest single owner of US treasuries. — ssu
A "thin connection" counted in trillions. :snicker: — ssu
And what is so hard for you in understanding a sentence like above: " the U.S. Federal Reserve has significantly ramped up its holdings of Treasury securities as part of a broader effort to counteract the economic impact of the public health emergency." — ssu
What makes you so confident about that? What mechanisms do you believe were at play that caused this success? Why were these successful policies later abandoned?
"Figure it out yourself" won't do. — Tzeentch
You suggest to view these men as inhuman monsters that reduce human beings to cogs in a market machine — Tzeentch
Can you explain to me the economic mechanism that ensured, as you say, no major crashes took place during this period, and why we are not utilizing this mechanism today? — Tzeentch
I truly hope you don't view classical liberalism as espousing such a view. — Tzeentch
If you want to minimize the role of the central banks, be my guest. But that's nutty in this World, in my view. — ssu
If the government cannot cover it's expenses by tax revenues, it can turn to the central bank, which either buys government bonds to finance this or simply prints more money to cover the expenses. — ssu
it's about both monetary policy and events like Russo-Ukrainian war. And monetary policy here is actually linked to the COVID response. — ssu
Let's keep the conversation honest. The birth of the United States was a period full of conflict and wars against nations that were at that time much more powerful. To just chalk that all up to "small government" is very convenient for you, and in my opinion bereft of any reason. — Tzeentch
Ups and downs is the nature of economics. It's exactly the desire to forcefully stop that fluctuation that makes government interventions so problematic. — Tzeentch
Imperfect man will always need some government, but too often we forget that its the same imperfect man that takes the reigns in government. — Tzeentch
If you argue that inflation doesn't export itself in a globalized world, you are simply going against the facts. — ssu
The global economy has had low inflation and low interest rates for many years. Before the financial sector and the central banks caused asset inflation. — ssu
The Fed’s policies move asset prices. That’s it. Fiscal policy— the government giving it checks, etc. — has some effect, sure. But it does not account for the higher prices of oil and gas.
— Xtrix
Umm, I think you have not studied economics. — ssu
I do like to debate issues with you and don't want to be irritating or condescending. — ssu
So I'll give you an example of just why monetary policy and fiscal handouts do effect things like price of oil. — ssu
Second question: If we agree that at least some would spend a lot more than before, do you think that their increased spending would create "supply chain issues" or not? — ssu