Unlike loose aggregates of individuals sharing a roof, families are raised by one another, play with one another, work together, love one another, and so on. The dynamics of their relationship are different. They are not only nominally or proximally bonded, but have a history together. — NOS4A2
One can be confident that when someone speaks of “common ownership” or “public control” of this or that, the political subject in his mind is invariably some kind of association or group, maybe society writ large, but in every case an idea without any particular referent. — NOS4A2
I think that’s a great point. The larger the aggregate, the more difficult it is to discern the extent to which its members relate. A prerequisite of a “real relation” might be that people know each other or interact with each other. — NOS4A2
As such my relation with the government is as a serf to his landlord, or as a slave to his master. — NOS4A2
I think that’s a great point. The larger the aggregate, the more difficult it is to discern the extent to which its members relate. — NOS4A2
That is to say, our ethical obligations are to individuals, and not abstractions. — schopenhauer1
The reason I follow their rules is because they are allowed to kidnap me or kill me if I do not. — NOS4A2
Thus, your life is always in a way a serf. Your very procreation means that you must comply (with the game of life) or die. — schopenhauer1
Peter L. P. Simpson has often drawn attention to the fact that the state has a monopoly on coercion (and violence) in the modern world, and that this is different from any time in the past.
I don’t think that’s true at all and we fundamentally disagree. There is no similarity. There is no person to seek consent from. There is no prior realm of freedom from which we are plucked and placed in a prison-like condition, against our wishes. Existence is all there is. — NOS4A2
Compliance is necessary for survival. Even hermits were socialized to some extent, and even their existence presupposes a culture which allowed for them to be individuals who can (try and probably fail) to subsist by themselves). But usually we must live in some sort of.. wait for it... society!No compliance is necessary, only being. — NOS4A2
More often than not parents relieve their children from burden, feeding them, carrying them, housing them, protecting them from all manner of danger. — NOS4A2
That's a straw man of the argument. No person exists to suffer is one state of affairs and a person exists to suffer in another. That second state of affairs is the problematic one. No one said "better off", just that one state of affairs is problematic, so don't cause that state of affairs.If you wish you were never born it is because you regret your life, yourself, maybe your family, not because you were better off before you were conceived. — NOS4A2
Thus, your life is always in a way a serf. Your very procreation means that you must comply (with the game of life) or die.
— schopenhauer1
I think the difference is that nature is not a feudal lord. Nature has no will and therefore does not coerce. Neither is it capable of injustice. — Leontiskos
Are you a platonist? — NOS4A2
This is just an attempt to repackage your same old argument. In your attempt to defend your desire to benefit from society without taking any responsibility you introduce a "metaphysics" which is nothing more than an abuse of terminology that is already problematic enough. — Fooloso4
Fooloso4, is there a term for when someone willfully pretends like an argument was never made and you start over and over and over again from scratch? — schopenhauer1
a term for when someone willfully pretends like an argument was never made and you start over and over and over again from scratch — schopenhauer1
Well, this goes back to word games and sense and reference. I was playing with words here a bit. We are a "serf" to the burdens and overcoming of harms that life offers. There is no getting around this taskmaster (metaphor obviously). This is why I have always maintained that life provides "de facto" dictates that we must follow. — schopenhauer1
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