I guess my background question has to do with events in the US from the1870s to WW1: the idea of eugenics settled pretty quickly and deeply into the national consciousness.
It was an age of revolutionary engineering feats. It made sense to look at humanity as something to engineer. Why was it that any counter view was too weak to temper that impulse? — frank
I agree that ambition and rewards for achievement are not antithetical to "society" as the collection of what people value at the same time. People have been raising children for time out of mind with the purpose of replicating what they see as the best thing to be. To that point, Margaret Thatcher once said: "Society does not exist. There are only people and their families."
Her statement is absurd from the point of view that she said it while shaping the circumstances of such people. But there is a value in the point of view being expressed. There is a connection between civil institutions and what makes a person more or less effective within them. A parent makes their best effort at preparing their child for whatever that is. What is strong for some situations is a weakness in others. In some times, being strong and forthright and vocal about things will get you killed. In others, being silent and reticent will make you a door mat for others.
And it is at this point the question of the best form of government should be framed. There are conflicting versions of the best things.
We are not ready for Plato's discussion of the Good. — Valentinus
In regards to your remarks about Roman society, one of their innovations was a process of introducing new citizens on a large scale.
So, is that an expansion of rights or a participation in a larger a set of privileges? — Valentinus
Saying that "Laissez faire" is "good" and socialism (or any ideology that doesn't agree with Laissez faire beliefs) is "evil" is a bit of a Binary/False dilemma fallacy.By "strong," I mean creative individuals with ambition and determination. By rewarding such individuals with wealth and power, society in general becomes leaner and fitter.
Opposition to this view is essentially an anti-life ethic which promotes mercy and pity over greatness.
Agree? — frank
maybe social eugenics was just a very old idea in newfangled mechanist clothing? Same great taste, but now its scientific. — csalisbury
It seems like both? If I read you right, do you mean a larger participation in an existing set of privileges? — csalisbury
Social Darwinists favor death for the weak, so why would they mind if some portion of the population moved to Sierra Leone? — frank
The kind of engagement I was interested in was: imagine radical rightists are taking over your country. What would your response be? — frank
As someone who is slanted toward Machiavellianism I'm not bothered if someone doesn't want to paint things into a "good"/"evil" perspective. However if you ARE arguing for social Darwinism I kind of doubt that you don't put things in some kind of good/evil perspective since you need to follow some kind of metrics that enable to rationalize how and why one ideology is better than another.There is no evil in social Darwinism. Is that a problem for you? — frank
Does rewarding the “strong” necessarily make others “stronger”? — I like sushi
Correct me if I’m wrong but did you just say that Laissez-faire social Darwinism is a good argument against social Darwinism? Err? — I like sushi
By "strong," I mean creative individuals with ambition and determination. By rewarding such individuals with wealth and power, society in general becomes leaner and fitter.
Opposition to this view is essentially an anti-life ethic which promotes mercy and pity over greatness.
I used to identify as anarchocapitalist. I look down on pity, altruism, etc.
But I'm concerned about myself, not society. Why should I care about "society"? It's largely made up of imbeciles and cowards. — yupamiralda
, the title is not a philosophical supposition, but is up for good solid psychological examination. And the fact is that in a group in which "creative individuals with ambition and determination" are anything more than a large minority, cooperation will quickly break down. — Banno
Now, while I'm playing social critique, have a think about what a nation in which this occurred would look like. one, perhaps, in which there was so little trust in ones fellows that one felt obliged to arm themselves, perhaps. One in which folk were too distrustful of one another to set up a decent health system. That sort of thing. But of course, that'd never happen. — Banno
Laissez faire says we should let Nature tell us what works instead of the other way around. — frank
That's a fine example to the Naturalistic Fallacy of course - and also the fallacy of appealing to nature, so well done, two for the price of one. — Banno
But you seem to have missed the point; the research shows that unfettered competition results in social disintegration, not social strength. So go for it; those who cooperate will win. — Banno
Morality isn't really an issue here. — frank
Well, that's not true. You are asking what we ought do, and that is an ethical question. — Banno
But on the scientific front, it is a misconception to think that Darwin held that it is the strong that survive. It is not always the strongest that survives. The species that survives is the one that is able best to adapt and adjust to the changing environment in which it finds itself. — Banno
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