But we'd still need a value judgement to determine how much loss of money equals how much risk to life. — Echarmion
I don't believe that rationality is precise enough to offer answers to all legal value judgements, at least not given current cognitive capacities. — Echarmion
How do you view this? If a democracy is supposed to have the goal of establishing justice, where does it go wrong? — frank
So you're probably right about this not being the place to re-hash the moral relativism argument, but the above is the interesting part with regard to this thread. Why are you drawing a limit to rationality? Whatever it is (which I obviously don't agree with) that you think rationality can use to determine values, why does it suddenly go away when determining something like the above. — Isaac
If so, then how are you judging where rationality becomes too imprecise. I always considered rationality to be best in precise situations and worse when applied to too large a scale (too many factors to be reasonably considered). You seem to be saying the opposite? That when it comes to really broad matters like human rights we can rationally determine the way forward, but for something precise like the relative value of risk to life vs loss of property, its becomes useless. — Isaac
And there it is - the problem is funding, in other words money. — Shamshir
The majority must not just want, they must want what is right. — TheMadFool
Actually you are wrong, unenlightened.One might rationally be in favour of all the above, but in general, one cannot have all 3 at once; something has to give. — unenlightened
Life is more interesting than that, and it is not just a matter of someone knowing better what is right. — unenlightened
Or they just choose something from the plate of rotten choices given to them. And just whine about the choices being bad, but not doing anything themselves.The problem isn't irrationality, it's more about basic apathy, the belief things won't improve and there's nothing you can do about it.. Ill-informed and irrational people don't vote for what's right but for what they want. — TheMadFool
For example, I haven't met the American who is happy about the country having the most expensive health care system in the World that only gives out a mediocre service (except for the rich) and results in poor health statistics compared to other countries. Perhaps it's the rich doctor enjoying his 1%-status that enjoys the system. — ssu
Look, every other health care system IN THE WORLD is cheaper than the US system. And A LOT of these health care systems even with their flaws make the people under these systems to live longer and be healthier than Americans.The problem is one cannot have a good, cheap, universal, private healthcare system. — unenlightened
When you put a regular man at the top of all the resources, the absolute nature of power corrupts absolutely. — PhilCF
Ask 1000 people off the street if they want war... you'll get 999 NOs - and yet we live in a Democracy. — PhilCF
Only one thing can ever be a goal in itself: Happiness. ( — Congau
the Philosopher King concerns himself with what is true. He collects up all the information and then makes the right choice. — PhilCF
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