Yes. Taking care of them was their creators' responsibility. If you desire people to adopt that responsibility, you will need to appeal to them through reason. Forcing you to take care of them, or stealing your money so that I can, are ethical violations masquerading as virtue. And your real question should be: what did the creators do to place themselves in this position, and how do we ensure that this doesn't happen again. Of course, if they've died that's another thing. — Garrett Travers
1) We have many means of survival. Our mental processes are only one. 2) I don't think it's correct to characterize human mental processes as primarily associated with reason.
— T Clark
What would it be then? What allows you to do anything? You'll need to expand this beyond internal confusion. — Garrett Travers
I think the claim that we develop our values through our conceptual faculty of reason is incorrect.
— T Clark
Cool, explain. Where do we get our values if not from ourselves? Saying other people will simply just mean that reason constructed values that have been passed on to us. It will be the same process. So, where? — Garrett Travers
I think one of humanity's primary values results from our social nature. We value other people. We have empathy.
— T Clark
And only in the society described above can such values be freely expressed. These are not incompatible, but complimentary. — Garrett Travers
You apparently believe that our primary motivations are based on reason. That seems like a completely unsupported and unsupportable contention. I think the ball is in your court to justify your claim. — T Clark
I guess I'll turn this around - do you really claim you value the things you do because you used reason to consider them and made a rational choice? — T Clark
Most people don't. — T Clark
Children love their mothers before they have any significant capacity for reason. Love of family is not a rational choice, although you can justify it rationally in hindsight. — T Clark
Perhaps I misunderstood. I thought you, speaking for Rand, were saying that our values were developed through reason. — T Clark
As I said, I disagree with this. If, instead, you were saying that we use our reason to express our values, I'll at least agree that it is one of the facilities we use to do so, not the only one and not the primary one. — T Clark
Please use direct quotes from Rand whenever possible. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Are not all persons in part motivated by "irrational emotions, feelings, urges, wishes or whims"? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Know your enemy. :smile: — ZzzoneiroCosm
Why does Rand espouse this exaggerated notion of altruism? — ZzzoneiroCosm
there are irresponsible people in this world. — RogueAI
They have kids without planning for it. — RogueAI
Sometimes their kids have problems. There are also tragedies that happen to parents who happen to have kids that need a lot of help. — RogueAI
So we have this group of kids who, through no fault of their own, can't take care of themselves and also, through no fault of their own, have no one to provide for them. You think private charity is enough to care for this group. — RogueAI
But history has shown that, in times of severe hardship, charities get overwhelmed. — RogueAI
So, in the Ayn Randian society, when times are tough and charities are struggling...sucks to be you? — RogueAI
History has shown us that with statist/dirigist systems. You are describing the norm with states specifically. Laissez-Faire Economies have never existed. We only know what the markets have been capable of in Dirigist systems, and it has changed the world in 200 years. At least in Free Markets, we would be able to find an uninhibited market solution. — Garrett Travers
That's true, but to implement your system, and hope that charities can take up the slack, is quite a gamble. — RogueAI
We have a system now that takes money from the richest and provides somewhat of a safety net for the worst off. — RogueAI
Are you familiar with John Rawl's veil of ignorance? — RogueAI
This first premise is simply untrue. Humans have the capability of using logic and rationality, but often times choose not to do so, or simply make logical and rational mistakes.
— Philosophim
So, what part is untrue? Not employing reason, does not negate the fact that we exist through natural processes, and have developed reason, as opposed to fangs, to survive. — Garrett Travers
Everything exists through natural processes, that's irrelevant. We have reason that we can use to survive, but we don't always use reason. — Philosophim
Her other premises are built on the idea that we are all reasonable human being who will always do what is reasonable. — Philosophim
Meaning if you don't act reasonably, you cannot obtain those values you've concluded with reason. Since many people are not reasonable, or do not always reason on every decision, many decisions by people do not meet these values. Further, I will note again, that someone can conclude values with reason that would require the murder, theft, or other harmful things to other people. — Philosophim
The word "selfish" comes with a baggage that makes it unsuitable for use in an Ayn Randian sense which I believe is about being independent, able to stand on one's own two feet; self-reliant is another word that captures the Randian spirit of being capable of looking after oneself with the minimum of — Agent Smith
Everything exists through natural processes, that's irrelevant. We have reason that we can use to survive, but we don't always use reason.
— Philosophim
Truth is the only thing that is relevant to any proposition, and whether or not one chooses to not use reason is itself a non sequitur. The premise must be addressed from the point of truth, or non-truth. You are choosing to not do so. — Garrett Travers
The premise states that humans developed reason through natural processes, and that reason is the human's means of survival. It is not a categorical proposition that describes what some, or all humans do with that reason. — Garrett Travers
This told me nothing. Is it true that we don't always use reason in our day to day actions? Of course it is. — Philosophim
No, no it is not. Plenty of people are not reasonable in many day to day actions of their lives. — Philosophim
Don't get vaccinated. — Philosophim
People overeat — Philosophim
React in anger or other emotions. — Philosophim
Reason, or rational thinking, is one aspect of humanity that it does not use exclusively. — Philosophim
A. People do not use reason in all of their decisions.
B. Even if people use reason in a decision, the conclusion of that reason may result in evil.
Therefore the final premise: The only moral system of society is one in which each human is free to pursue their own values to live and achieve their own goals,
fails because people will often times do irrational things, which can result in immoral actions, or conclude values that are immoral to others in society. You're going to really have to rebuff what is stated here. No more statements about "What I'm not doing". If you want to play, its time to get in there and demonstrate why the above reasoning is wrong. — Philosophim
Don't get vaccinated. — Philosophim
That's a conclusion drawn through the application of reason. — Garrett Travers
There's a ton of emotion in the COVID anti-vaxxer movement. Further, you might say irrationalism manifests in confirmation bias vis-a-vis Facebook disinformation. Reason might play a small role. — ZzzoneiroCosm
if I was going to be placed in a society, and didn't know what my place will be in that society, I would like a certain amount of resources (say 10% of my income to start with, going up to 50% if I'm insanely rich) to go towards the military, police protection, science projects, and a basic safety net in case I'm a disadvantaged member of society who needs some basic help. — RogueAI
Yes, evolution. We evolved to produce reason as our means of survival, rather than fangs or claws. We create concepts and frameworks of behavior through reason. To negate such an assertion, evidence will have to be provided that opposes this as a deductive conclusion, and evidence for some other processes will also have to be presented. — Garrett Travers
P2. and if it is only through this conceptual faculty of reason that humans are capable of living a life according to the values he/she develops with said faculty — Garrett Travers
No, no it is not. Plenty of people are not reasonable in many day to day actions of their lives.
— Philosophim
Nobody performs actions that extenuate their lives that are unreasonable at base value. You'll actually have to provide an example of one for this assertion to be true. — Garrett Travers
Don't get vaccinated.
— Philosophim
That's a conclusion drawn through the application of reason. — Garrett Travers
People overeat
— Philosophim
Eating is reasonable, overeating is damaging. The proposition is about how people survive. You're making my case for me. — Garrett Travers
React in anger or other emotions.
— Philosophim
This is not reason, this is the opposite. — Garrett Travers
Reason, or rational thinking, is one aspect of humanity that it does not use exclusively.
— Philosophim
Humans must use it to survive. Again, not a categorical proposition. — Garrett Travers
Is it true that we ought to encourage humankind to be more selfish — ZzzoneiroCosm
Sure, but, to the degree one makes an emotional decision, one makes a harmful decision that goes against one furthering their life. — Garrett Travers
Reason and emotion (positive and negative emotion) work together in the decision-making process. A completely rational (emotion-free) person is a kind of monster. Sociopaths tend not to have a vibrant emotional life. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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