My choices are not impulses. They are processing of impulses, which is done by complex feedback loops with respect to my nature. — Agustino
You said it yourself - the impulse is you. — litewave
Yes.self who can resist his own impulses, his own intentions — litewave
So I need an intention?! Who is this I?! Isn't this I the intention? If it is, then nobody needs any intention at all to act freely. They act freely by their very nature - by being who they are, an intention. And that's the real truth - you simply cannot act unfreely while being you.You're just muddying the waters. A freely willed action should be intentional, and in order to do an intentional action you need an intention, which is an impulse (a mental state) that causes the action. But since you can't choose the intention, your intentional action is caused by something you have not chosen. — litewave
So who is the you here?!But since you can't choose the intention — litewave
You are the one muddying the waters. It is really a pathetically low level of philosophy. You do not even coherently distinguish between impulses, intentions, actions and all the other relevant terms. You take intentions to be impulses for example...
Impulse -> You (the process of forming an intention, of choice) -> action — Agustino
So I need an intention?! Who is this I?! Isn't this I the intention? — Agustino
What do you choose, ever? — Agustino
False, I never said that.So now you are making an irrelevant distinction between impulse and you, while previously you said that impulse is you. — litewave
So it's impulse -> You -> action. — Agustino
Nope, those terms are related but different.An impulse in general is a cause. An intention is an impulse, a cause, too, because it causes an intentional action. — litewave
Nope. You have no understanding of feedback loops or how systems regulate themselves no? No understanding of top-down causality perhaps? :sWhat you called "the process of forming an intention, of choice" above is a causal chain of impulses which results in an intention, and the intention is an impulse that causes the action. — litewave
Nope. That's actually never the case. You keep talking about something I cannot choose, as if I was outside of the causal chain, but somehow still affected by it.The action is always determined by something that you cannot choose, and in this sense the action is not free - it is determined by something you cannot choose. — litewave
No, your argument is that your action is determined by your intention, ie by you. Do you want me to cite again the part where you say that you are your intention(s)? So you absolutely freely choose it. You don't seem capable to follow the logic of your own statements.My argument simply is that your action is determined by something you cannot choose and therefore your action is not free, at least not in the libertarian sense. — litewave
Okay, so you choose your actions. End of story. Therefore you're free in-so-far as you choose your actions, which is pretty much everytime you act.I choose my actions — litewave
False, I never said that. — Agustino
:s Maybe that "impulse" is just who I am. I am part of the causal chain afterall. Determinism and free will are not incompatible. — Agustino
Nope. You have no understanding of feedback loops or how systems regulate themselves no? No understanding of top-down causality perhaps? :s
This causal chain you're referring is not like a series of dominos, one hitting the next, etc. etc. No - it is rather self-regulating. It self-regulates and maintains itself (its own nature) by modifying and re-directing external impulses. — Agustino
You keep talking about something I cannot choose, as if I was outside of the causal chain, but somehow still affected by it. — Agustino
You don't choose to come into existence. But once in existence, you do choose things, since you are a system capable of autonomy. — Agustino
Okay, so you choose your actions. End of story. Therefore you're free in-so-far as you choose your actions, which is pretty much everytime you act. — Agustino
Yes, I alone added that value, since without me that movement of goods would not have occurred. — Agustino
Let's see, maybe I want to start a factory producing medicine. Maybe I want to invest that money in bettering - say - 3D printing technology. Maybe I will spend that money building affordable housing. Etc. I have a feeling you're thinking I or anyone else needs that money for ourselves - well obviously not. But that money is mighty useful in trying to do a lot of thing for society at a larger scale. — Agustino
Do you reckon that people who want to do something for the world should go and humiliate themselves before government bureaucrats who don't do anything, begging for a few votes here and there, give a few bribes here and there (bribes aren't just monetary, they can also be in the form of promises of what you'll do once you have power), so that they can grab the governments power to make changes in society? :s I reckon not, so therefore individuals should be allowed to accumulate large sums of money. What can I do with $100K in society? Almost nothing. I can probably do a lot of things for myself, but pretty much nothing for society at large.
And government bureaucrats are incapable to do anything, why do you think they need private entrepreneurs to do things for them? :s Elon Musk's company, for example, did what NASA couldn't do for years already. — Agustino
Starting a factory and the like are not selfish desires. — Agustino
So developing the productive capacities of my society is immoral? — Agustino
Right, so then you can understand that no man of character would stoop so low to beg for those people's votes. Can you imagine Marcus Aurelius begging such people for their votes? — Agustino
Do you agree then that a very small clog can exert great leverage on the machine, producing exceedingly great force relative to its size? If so, then it rightly deserves more.That's a non sequitur. You alone are just cog in the machine. For the machine to function, it needs a system of cogs. It's true that if you remove a cog, then the machine won't function, but it is false that one cog by itself causes the machine to function. — Sapientia
Right, he can spend other people's money buying $3000 dollar public toilets from a distant relative of his :BA government minister obviously cannot. — Sapientia
I didn't mean that. I meant that the nature of the system necessitates humiliation. It has nothing to do with lack of skill or anything of that sort. Even the most skilful humiliate themselves to rise to the top in politics.You can't have your cake and eat it. If you want business people to govern, then they have to go through the same system as the rest of us. If they get humiliated, then they get humiliated. That would just be a reflection of their lack of skill. — Sapientia
It's not about persuading people, it's about having to bow your head to the right people before you even get the chance to run, much less get elected. If the other boys and girls don't like you, you think they'll let you run? :sIf you have nothing appealing to offer, or if you are inept at persuading people, then yes, you may well face humiliation — Sapientia
No, I wasn't actually talking about businessmen. Businessmen can go into politics without being humiliated. They have money, they don't need to go around bowing their head, and kissing the hand of this and that person to obtain a bit of money to run a campaign. That's the humiliating aspect.Besides, you yourself pointed out the example of Trump, and he's hardly the first businessman to develop a relatively successful career in politics. So clearly it can be done. — Sapientia
Is David Cameron corrupt?And I don't buy this incredibly one-sided nonsense from you where you try to make out as though government is corrupt and inept. — Sapientia
Depends why I desire excessive wealth. Maybe I desire excessive wealth because it gives me the leverage I need to make what I've identified as the right changes in society.Desiring excessive wealth for yourself at the expense of many others is selfish. — Sapientia
I agree. I never said not to risk. You misinterpreted the bit about humiliation. It's not failure that is humiliating.No, a man of character would have guts, and would face up to the fact that if you want to govern, then want alone will not achieve results. You have to act, you have to put your neck on the line, and you ought to respect due process in doing so. — Sapientia
Do you agree then that a very small clog can exert great leverage on the machine, producing exceedingly great force relative to its size? If so, then it rightly deserves more. — Agustino
Right, he can spend other people's money buying $3000 dollar public toilets from a distant relative of his :B
I am more accountable than the government minister since I have skin in the game. The government minister doesn't. — Agustino
I didn't mean that. I meant that the nature of the system necessitates humiliation. It has nothing to do with lack of skill or anything of that sort. Even the most skilful humiliate themselves to rise to the top in politics. — Agustino
It's not about persuading people, it's about having to bow your head to the right people before you even get the chance to run, much less get elected. If the other boys and girls don't like you, you think they'll let you run? — Agustino
No, I wasn't actually talking about businessmen. Businessmen can go into politics without being humiliated. They have money, they don't need to go around bowing their head, and kissing the hand of this and that person to obtain a bit of money to run a campaign. That's the humiliating aspect.
Trump is a perfect example. He didn't have to humiliate himself before the donors, kiss their hands, bow his head, promise them this and that, etc. Why not? Cause he had the money. — Agustino
Is David Cameron corrupt? — Agustino
Depends why I desire excessive wealth. Maybe I desire excessive wealth because it gives me the leverage I need to make what I've identified as the right changes in society. — Agustino
I agree. I never said not to risk. You misinterpreted the bit about humiliation. It's not failure that is humiliating. — Agustino
Good, so some may deserve $20 million as a result of their work.You're losing track. That some deserve more than others was never a bone of contention. — Sapientia
The law is irrelevant. The law is going to stop neither me, nor the politician, if we really want to do something. It's not very difficult to take money from the government, politicians are all very skilled at abusing their position to benefit themselves. Look at, for example, Obama - he made many millions of dollars as President. It doesn't even take much intelligence, just shamelessness.It is not against the law for you, as a private citizen, to spend your $20 million on beer for you and your mates. — Sapientia
It's going to take me many years to spend $20 million on beer for me and my mates.to spend your $20 million on beer for you and your mates. — Sapientia
>:O Nope. If I'm an ambassador, for example, I spend money on booze because I need it - I meet with important officials who need to be treated well - I need to take them to expensive golf resorts, buy a lot of alcohol, etc. that's what it takes for me to negotiate great deals for the great & glorious nation of Kazakhstan. But of course, many of these times, I'm actually just meeting with friends. But no one knows, because I make the paperwork or supervise how it's made.It is very much against the law for a public servant to spend $20 million of government funds on beer for him and his mates. — Sapientia
No, it is not against the law, except that I worked for that money. That's MY money, not other people's. It is the result of my sweat and effort. You reckon I'm going to throw it away on beer with my mates? :sIt is not against the law for you, as a private citizen, to spend your $20 million on beer for you and your mates. — Sapientia
There are healthy and unhealthy forms of pride. Marcus Aurelius or Socrates or Seneca - all of them had a certain "pride", or better said self-respect. They wouldn't stoop below a certain level to get something done.So what? Pride comes before a fall. — Sapientia
Nope, it's not about persuasion, it's about lacking moral values so that when you have all sorts of people asking you for favours in exchange of support, money, etc. you accept them.You contradict yourself. It is about persuasion, and that is a skill. Think about what you're saying. If they don't like you, then that means that you've failed to sell yourself. And if that's an insurmountable obstacle to getting yourself elected, then you've failed to achieve what you desire. — Sapientia
To get into a political party and rise up the ranks you need to make compromises. To run for public office you need funding. To get funding, unless you have your own dough, you need to go beg around for it. And guess what, when you're begging around for it, you're going to be told: "okay, I will give you this money, but you have to promise me that once elected, you're going to make sure that this bill passes through. It's really important for our country and we need people like you to do the right thing" - of course this is just coded language for asking you to pass something that's not so great for the country but will be great for the private interests of your donor.Then what were you talking about? I think that you may need to go back, look over what it was that you said which caused me to respond in the way that I've done, and explain yourself properly. — Sapientia
It's a simple question. I asked you if he is corrupt. He was your PM. If even the PM is corrupt (Panama papers for example), imagine how everyone else must be. You say there is no corruption in the UK. You're very very wrong. The only difference between UK and the glorious nation of Kazakhstan is that in the UK the corruption is done behind closed curtains. In the glorious nation of Kazakhstan, it is out in the open.An ambiguous question. Unless you clarify, my answer is yes and no. — Sapientia
Well that should clearly matter. Someone could desire excessive wealth to live on a beach for the rest of their life with many women around them, etc. That someone obviously desires excessive wealth for selfish reasons. Another may desire excessive wealth because wealth is a form of power that allows them to make positive changes for society.No, it doesn't, not in my view. — Sapientia
Good, so some may deserve $20 million as a result of their work. — Agustino
The law is irrelevant. — Agustino
The law is going to stop neither me, nor the politician, if we really want to do something. — Agustino
It's not very difficult to take money from the government, politicians are all very skilled at abusing their position to benefit themselves. Look at, for example, Obama - he made many millions of dollars as President. It doesn't even take much intelligence, just shamelessness.
And now Malia Obama, his daughter, is hitting it at Harvard kissing rich white non-working class boys and smoking weed. Give me a break. — Agustino
It's going to take me many years to spend $20 million on beer for me and my mates. — Agustino
Nope. If I'm an ambassador, for example, I spend money on booze because I need it - I meet with important officials who need to be treated well - I need to take them to expensive golf resorts, buy a lot of alcohol, etc. that's what it takes for me to negotiate great deals for the great & glorious nation of Kazakhstan. But of course, many of these times, I'm actually just meeting with friends. But no one knows, because I make the paperwork or supervise how it's made.
Governments and the law function on the basis of paperwork. Whosoever understands this, can easily abuse government. Just don't get your signature anywhere in shady deals, and you're relatively safe. — Agustino
No, it is not against the law... — Agustino
...except that I worked for that money. That's MY money, not other people's. It is the result of my sweat and effort. — Agustino
You reckon I'm going to throw it away on beer with my mates? — Agustino
You try spending 10-15 years of your life getting to the point where you can make that $20 million fairly without being corrupt or a crook, and then see if you start spending it on beer with your mates after that. — Agustino
In North Korea the law is that there should be democratic elections. Is the law relevant or not? And if it's not relevant, then we have clearly arrived at an understanding that the mere presence of a law isn't relevant to stopping a certain activity. What else is required?Pah! No, it certainly isn't. Your dismissal is irrelevant. The very serious consequences in one case, yet not the other, in light of the relevant laws, is of clear relevance. Denial won't stop you from being arrested. — Sapientia
Okay fine, I do not think it is implausible in reality, we can agree to disagree on this point.Yes, and some pigs may fly. Point being that it's not impossible in principle, but implausible in reality. — Sapientia
The same laws exist in Russia, Kazakhstan, North Korea, etc. The punishments may even be more severe there. It doesn't seem to me like the law by itself is of any relevance.The bottom line is that, in the UK, misconduct in public office is a serious crime, and carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. A public servant who grossly misappropriated public funds for personal gain would certainly be guilty of misconduct in public office. — Sapientia
Who said that you shouldn't give alms and help the less fortunate? I was saying quite the contrary. But alms-giving isn't the same as the state coming by force and taking your money.(I very much doubt that Jesus would have been so possessive or so tight with his purse strings when considering those less fortunate). — Sapientia
Society. If I spend my money on yachts, etc. while other people in my society are starving, they will hold me accountable. The same way as if a politician steals money from the government - it's still society who will hold them accountable through its mechanisms, not the law by itself.Who will hold you to account? — Sapientia
No, what makes you think that? Quite the contrary, if I thought you a fool, I wouldn't be having this conversation with you.Do you think me a fool? — Sapientia
I do think that if you amass your wealth fairly then you should dictate how it gets spent, of course.But the system would allow me to amass all of that personal wealth, and the system would allow me to spend it as I see fit. — Sapientia
To get into a political party and rise up the ranks you need to make compromises. To run for public office you need funding. To get funding, unless you have your own dough, you need to go beg around for it. And guess what, when you're begging around for it, you're going to be told: "okay, I will give you this money, but you have to promise me that once elected, you're going to make sure that this bill passes through. It's really important for our country and we need people like you to do the right thing" - of course this is just coded language for asking you to pass something that's not so great for the country but will be great for the private interests of your donor. — Agustino
It's a simple question. — Agustino
I asked you if he is corrupt. — Agustino
He was your PM. — Agustino
If even the PM is corrupt (Panama papers for example), imagine how everyone else must be. — Agustino
You say there is no corruption in the UK. — Agustino
You're very very wrong. — Agustino
The only difference between UK and the glorious nation of Kazakhstan is that in the UK the corruption is done behind closed curtains. In the glorious nation of Kazakhstan, it is out in the open. — Agustino
Well that should clearly matter. Someone could desire excessive wealth to live on a beach for the rest of their life with many women around them, etc. That someone obviously desires excessive wealth for selfish reasons. Another may desire excessive wealth because wealth is a form of power that allows them to make positive changes for society. — Agustino
Oh right, of course, you have to be an idiot to do it under your own name. A father, a sister, a distant relative - who cares, someone to cover up.But it's arguable whether the former prime minister, David Cameron, was corrupt in his former role. The Panama Papers implicated his father. He is not his father. He did own shares, but they were sold before he entered office. — Sapientia
Yeah, Kazakhstan does too :s - you seem to be under the impression that China, Russia, North Korea, etc. don't have laws against corruption...On the other hand, he never broke any laws, and was never charged with any offence. The UK has laws on corruption. — Sapientia
Yeah but that's not because the UK has laws and regulations that Syria lacks.What I have emphasised is that somewhere like the UK is very different from somewhere like Syria. — Sapientia
That's the same everywhere. Those laws can always be used to get rid of you, and punishments are often more severe than in the UK. When China's current leader came to power and ran a campaign against corruption, many very important officials were jailed or even executed, including one of the former heads of an intelligence agency. So by no means do these places lack laws and harsh punishments. But laws are enforced by people. If you get those people who enforce the laws on your side, then you are safe, at least for some time. You're really talking as if it was oh so difficult to abuse public office.Over here, if you're found out, you can't get away with it scott free, so it's a big gamble and a disincentive. — Sapientia
Oh right, of course, you have to be an idiot to do it under your own name. A father, a sister, a distant relative - who cares, someone to cover up. — Agustino
Yeah, Kazakhstan does too :s - you seem to be under the impression that China, Russia, North Korea, etc. don't have laws against corruption... — Agustino
Yeah but that's not because the UK has laws and regulations that Syria lacks. — Agustino
That's the same everywhere. — Agustino
Good. What is it about then? I never disagreed there are differences between those places, but they're not primarily about the law and the regulations that exist.Then it would not be about the law, but a false equivalence nevertheless. Congratulations on your Pyrrhic victory. — Sapientia
The law is very similar.No it's not. Get real. — Sapientia
Good. What is it about then? I never disagreed there are differences between those places, but they're not primarily about the law and the regulations that exist. — Agustino
The law is very similar. — Agustino
In North Korea the law is that there should be democratic elections. Is the law relevant or not? And if it's not relevant, then we have clearly arrived at an understanding that the mere presence of a law isn't relevant to stopping a certain activity. What else is required? — Agustino
Okay fine, I do not think it is implausible in reality, we can agree to disagree on this point. — Agustino
The same laws exist in Russia, Kazakhstan, North Korea, etc. The punishments may even be more severe there. It doesn't seem to me like the law by itself is of any relevance. — Agustino
Elliot Morley
Former environment minister and Labour MP for Scunthorpe
Offence – Pleaded guilty to fraudulently claiming £32,000 of parliamentary expenses.
Details – Between April 2004 and February 2006, Morley submitted 19 claims for excessive mortgage payments to which he was not entitled. Between April 2004 and February 2006 he submitted 21 second home allowance forms for a mortgage he had already paid off.
Sentence – Jailed for 16 months in May 2011.
Released – September 2011 after serving a quarter of his term.
David Chaytor
Former Labour MP for Bury North
Offence – Pleaded guilty to three counts of false accounting relating to approximately £18,000 of parliamentary expenses.
Details – Submitted claims for the rent of a flat in Westminster which he had bought in 1999 and had paid off the mortgage for in 2003.
Sentence – Jailed for 18 months in January 2011.
Released – May 2011 after serving almost a third of his sentence.
Eric Illsley
Former Labour MP for Barnsley Central
Offence – Pleaded guilty to fraudulently claiming £14,000 in parliamentary expenses.
Details – Made false claims for his second home between 2005 and 2008 and also over claimed for council tax and utility bills.
Sentence – Jailed for 12 months in February 2011.
Released – May 2011 after serving four months.
Jim Devine
Former Labour MP for Livingston
Offence – Found guilty of dishonestly claiming £8,385 in parliamentary expenses.
Details – Claimed for cleaning and maintenance and printing work that the judge said was “entirely bogus”.
Sentence – Jailed for 16 months.
Released – August after serving a quarter of his sentence.
Lord Taylor of Warwick
John Taylor. First black Conservative peer
Offence – Found guilty of falsely claiming more than £11,000 in parliamentary expenses.
Details – Listed his main residence as a home in Oxford which was owned by his nephew, while he actually lived in Ealing, West London. Also submitted false travel claims.
Sentence – Jailed for 12 months in May 2011.
Released – September 2011 after just three months under the home detention curfew.
Lord Hanningfield
Paul White. Former pig farmer who became Conservative peer and leader of Essex council.
Offence: Found guilty of six counts of false accounting.
Details: Falsely claimed almost £14,000 in parliamentary expenses for overnight accommodation in London, when on most nights he was returning to his home in Essex.
Sentence: Jailed for nine months in July 2011.
Released: September 2011 after serving just nine weeks. He was re-arrested days later on charges relating to his Essex county council expenses.
Who said that you shouldn't give alms and help the less fortunate? I was saying quite the contrary. But alms-giving isn't the same as the state coming by force and taking your money. — Agustino
Society. — Agustino
If I spend my money on yachts, etc. while other people in my society are starving, they will hold me accountable. — Agustino
The same way as if a politician steals money from the government - it's still society who will hold them accountable through its mechanisms, not the law by itself. — Agustino
No, what makes you think that? Quite the contrary, if I thought you a fool, I wouldn't be having this conversation with you. — Agustino
I do think that if you amass your wealth fairly then you should dictate how it gets spent, of course. — Agustino
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