I didn’t say I was unsure about the practice. I was unsure about the answer to your quibbling question. — NOS4A2
You gave the example of Mao and communists China. Can you offer a similar example for individualism or is what you’re talking about merely theoretical? — praxis
It’s just dressed up Ayn Rand — i.e., an excuse to be a selfish asshole. — Mikie
You'll find that when individuals have the freedom to pursue their own self interest, the vast majority of them will seek voluntary, mutually beneficial cooperation with other individuals. — Tzeentch
we are all secretly selfish assholes — Tzeentch
Yes— the motto of Ayn Rand and other self-absorbed persons. — Mikie
Why this resentment towards the most natural drive imaginable?
Pursuing self-interest and being selfish are not the same. — Tzeentch
Why this resentment towards the most natural drive imaginable? — Tzeentch
Turns out most people who talk about “self interest” (Friedman, Hayek, Mises, Sowell, Ryan, etc.) just happen to advocate for policies that have eroded democracy and lead to inequality not seen since the pharaohs. — Mikie
It’s taking “I should have the right to own slaves” and making a theory of it. — Mikie
The very idea of self is a fairly recent invention. — Mikie
It’s not the most natural and it’s not the “default.” — Mikie
Turns out most people who talk about “self interest” (Friedman, Hayek, Mises, Sowell, Ryan, etc.) just happen to advocate for policies that have eroded democracy and lead to inequality not seen since the pharaohs.
— Mikie
Is that so? Please explain when their ideas were adopted, and how it led to the problems you describe. — Tzeentch
But before you do that, perhaps you might also want to explain how exactly individualism relates to liberal economic theory, because that link isn't immediately apparent to me. — Tzeentch
The very idea of self is a fairly recent invention.
— Mikie
Recent meaning invented within the last three-thousand years? — Tzeentch
Then what would you argue is the default state? — Tzeentch
Guess you do support collectivism after all. :up: — Mikie
I’m glad I did vote for it. It achieved all I ever wanted and more. — NOS4A2
Surely. I'll assume your question isn't disingenuous.
The era of neoliberalism, which we're still living in (as you know), was advocated for years prior to their implementation (in the late late 70s -- Carter but mostly Reagan, Thatcher, most directly under Pinochet and the Chicago Boys) mostly from the Austrian school. You can look to the Mont Pelerin Society, the University of Chicago, and others for examples. They were in the background throughout the New Deal era and had always been against those policies. They came in to fashion during the crises of the 70s. — Mikie
The underlying assumption, as repeated again and again, is that government is the problem. Plenty of evidence for this claim, of course -- and plenty to blame the government about. But notice what's advocated and what the result has been: globalization, destruction of unions, tax cuts, privatization. We see the results all around us. Wealth inequality is a major one, but there's plenty of others: environmental destruction; defunding of public schools; real wage stagnation; greater corporate concentration; etc. — Mikie
No, more like the last 400. Probably less. At least today's conception. — Mikie
The default state of a human being? Care. But that's Heidegger-heavy and probably more appropriate for another thread. I have no doubt that people have desires and needs and so forth. So do all animals. But it's not the whole story, and it's not (in my view) fundamental. The interpretation of it as fundamental, the belief that it's the "true" and default state of a human being, is flawed -- it's incomplete and secondary. — Mikie
]Never figured Trump for a collectivist. The difference is that I didn’t vote for it and you did.
Guess you do support collectivism after all. :up: — Mikie
I’m glad I did vote for it. It achieved all I ever wanted and more. — NOS4A2
Nice. So you're a proud fascist and collectivist. Yet you rail against the latter. — Mikie
You’re just making stuff up now. — NOS4A2
The reason I asked is because I do not believe their ideas have ever been truly implemented. — Tzeentch
Laissez-faire capitalism doesn't exist in the modern age. — Tzeentch
While it's true that many of the thinkers you listed named government as the problem, when in our lifetimes have we ever seen a substantial decrease in government spending in the western world? I don't think that has ever happened. — Tzeentch
I think appointingliberalism or individualismcollectivism as the scapegoat is far too easy, and not supported by much evidence. — Tzeentch
The result is governments that are incapable of carrying out their primary tasks towards their citizens, while simultaneously having forged an unholy alliance with big business against the ordinary man. — Tzeentch
As far as I know, elaborate conceptions of the self are common in some of the oldest philosophical texts known to man, like those stemming from the ancient Indian and Hellenistic periods. — Tzeentch
If we suppose that the human being desires something to care about (presumably other people) and this is vitally important for the human being's happiness, how can caring not be in his self-interest? And doesn't that confirm what I stated earlier, that pursuing one's self-interest often times involves the well-being of others around us? — Tzeentch
Proof positive that you voted for a collectivist — Mikie
According to you and your imagination. — NOS4A2
Never figured Trump for a collectivist. The difference is that I didn’t vote for it and you did.
Guess you do support collectivism after all. :up:
— Mikie
I’m glad I did vote for it. It achieved all I ever wanted and more.
— NOS4A2 — Mikie
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