as thornongil and emptyheady have, cant possibly poke a hole in the argument of someone with accolades — csalisbury
That you clarify this now, albeit on page 6 of this thread, is most welcome.
That isn't clear.
According to Marquez? You're playing a crafty game here, which you must realize.
5. The evidence that long-lasting institutions have avoided producing normatively intolerable outcomes in many kinds of unknown past circumstances is also evidence that they may avoid producing such outcomes in unknown future circumstances. — Kazuma
Slavery did not avoid producing normatively intolerable outcomes. 600,000 Americans died. What caused the American Civil War? My guess is you have no clue.
What do you think? — csalisbury
Needed by whom? The helpless are unable to change things, by definition. Therefore they tolerate even their annihilation. Those who are able to change things are those who must find things 'tolerable', and that is all that factual legitimacy amounts to. — unenlightened
So this is where I'm at. I'm frustrated that people don't understand the OP, the essay it draws from, or Un's response. I want to debate it, and I'm open to real debate, but no one seems to understand the ideas they're debating. There's a lot of posturing, mostly machismo, but no one, besides Un, seems to actually grasp the idea and argumentation involved. — csalisbury
I think Kazuma chose to pull this section out of the text, because the author of the text states/signals that this is the main argument, the meat. Normally, I'd agree with you, there's something suspicious about excising one bit, setting it out, outside the rest. But it makes sense here. The author himself says this is the meat. And it is.I don't like it when people pull a few paragraphs out of a long text, and let that be the start of a discussion.
I've been fair to both sides. I'll entertain any rational - or even persuasive - argument. I talked with you for a while. I understand - I really do! - if you don't find any benefit in talking to me. But I don't understand - I really don't - if you think what I'm saying doesn't fairly and earnestly address the OP.Yea.. I wrote out a long essay and then deleted it. I'm also frustrated because this is an interesting topic to me. Repeatedly, though, I find that I can't invest in talking to you
I'm sincerely (sincerely sincerely, not just rhetorically sincerely) surprised people thought that I thought that anyone was defending slavery. — csalisbury
And we didn't, at all, have a firm understanding of what new institutions the south would have to create to deal with the vacuum caused by emancipation. — csalisbury
According to my own understanding of 'basic institutions' and Marquez's. — csalisbury
So this is where I'm at. — csalisbury
This discussion has become a mess. — Bitter Crank
It seems that there has been more 'testiness' around here lately. Some people have extended their sensitive feelers all the way across the room and squawk every time somebody touches them. Probably fallout from Brexit, Trump, LaPen, et al. Change is in the air, but we can't quite tell from which direction the next disaster will come. Makes people nervous. — Bitter Crank
Nonsense. The south today is based on the same damn principles and institutions as the north at that time: free trade, non-slave labor in the agricultural industry, etc, so there was always a firm understanding of what it would become. There was no other alternative.
Explain. — thorongil
That's just not digging idiomatic usage, and idiomatic usage don't care. Sorry! All of American English is idiomatic usage, so it seems you've just cottoned to the way people talk in a certain time and place. I don't a give a pig's brisket what you think of it, it works, and that's all it needs to do.This is where you are. The "at" is not needed in this sentence. Pet peeve, sorry.
Yeah? So if the USSR said the US should become communist, the US couldn't claim its own economic system couldn't transition into a communist system? — csalisbury
Explain my understanding of basic institutions or the understanding of Marquez? — csalisbury
I don't a give a pig's brisket (made that up) what you think of it. — csalisbury
So in society, anyone is helpless before another or an institution, for it amounts to being subject to the freedom of other people. — TheWillowOfDarkness
It's like a reflex for me, such that I would be greatly annoyed if I just let it slide. — Thorongil
Not trying to dodge it, but I honestly don't understand what you're getting at with this question.
The latter, of course.
We have reason to conserve certain basic institutions (systems of property or political rights, family structures, etc.) not because these are intrinsically valuable, but because we have little knowledge about both the actual consequences of existing basic institutions and the potential consequences of alternatives. — Marquez
Nonsense. The south today is based on the same damn principles and institutions as the north at that time: free trade, non-slave labor in the agricultural industry, etc, so there was always a firm understanding of what it would become. There was no other alternative. — Thorongil
Yeah? So if the USSR... — csalisbury
It's quite clear that he considers systems of property or political rights to be 'institutions.' And I think it would be very hard to argue that the plantation/slave system of the south wasn't a system of property or political rights — csalisbury
C'mon BC. Look at the posts that led up to this. Do you see the parallel? You can't just follow the details, the texture, the anecdotes. You have to see the line of thought.The USSR? wtf?
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