Adam Smith was seriously full of shit. — Vera Mont
Adam Smith was seriously full of shit. An Economist, was he? — Vera Mont
itself having no direct usefulness — Vera Mont
As one of the "steering media" (Habermas) money has unique and definite influences. — Pantagruel
I'd have to say that whether or not money is useful on a desert island isn't relevant to its possessing actual and unique force in the world at large. — Pantagruel
How so?I was attempting to illustrate the distinction between what I call "direct utility" and what you call "a unique force" in the modern world. Money is an artificially imposed system for measuring the relative worth of things and people, a system whereby resources are collected and allocated unevenly. That's very different from a life necessity. A monetary system can collapse, can be arbitrarily changed, devalued, even abolished, without any loss to the other. — Vera Mont
How so? — baker
Except that the disparity of rich an poor only becomes "the natural order of things" when it's pronounced so by the spokesman for the caste that has grown rich on the labour of the castes below. There is no competition between a slave-owner and his property, nor between the CEO of a shipping company and a navvy in its employ. All that guff about natural competition might make some kind of sense if everyone played on the same field and had a say in making the rules.It seems it's saying that inequality and competition are natural, the natural order of things — baker
Like I've been saying, it seems to be about the difference between an instruction and a description.Except that the disparity of rich an poor only becomes "the natural order of things" when it's pronounced so by the spokesman for the caste that has grown rich on the labour of the castes below. /.../ All that guff about natural competition might make some kind of sense if everyone played on the same field and had a say in making the rules. — Vera Mont
What you describe is precisely that artificially imposed system of valuation to which I was referring. — Vera Mont
Not all poor or otherwise disadvantaged people have a socialist (or some such) outlook — baker
Some have a bourgeois mentality -- and they don't all stay poor for long. — baker
I think I'll frame that.How is it artificial, if some people come out as the winners? — baker
Similar with the Adam Smith reference. It seems it's saying that inequality and competition are natural, the natural order of things and that one must not indulge in compassion for others or otherwise concern oneself with social justice (or with big metaphysical problems), but instead look after one's own interests and cater to one's desires. — baker
The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better was published in 2009. Written by Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson, the book highlights the "pernicious effects that inequality has on societies: eroding trust, increasing anxiety and illness, (and) encouraging excessive consumption". It shows that for each of eleven different health and social problems: physical health, mental health, drug abuse, education, imprisonment, obesity, social mobility, trust and community life, violence, teenage pregnancies, and child well-being, outcomes are significantly worse in more unequal rich countries.
Similar with the Adam Smith reference. It seems it's saying that inequality and competition are natural, the natural order of things and that one must not indulge in compassion for others or otherwise concern oneself with social justice (or with big metaphysical problems), but instead look after one's own interests and cater to one's desires.
— baker
What is your main source of evidence for the words I have underlined?
Evolution by natural selection and survival of the fittest?
If it is, then was cooperation and altruism, not also essential aspects of that experience as well? — universeness
You kid, right? — baker
So what do people in those "more equal" societies do with all that social trust, health, wellbeing, etc.? What do they use them for? There has to be some purpose to them. — baker
AKA wishful thinking.Like I've been saying all along: It is my understanding that passages like the one quoted from Smith are meant to be taken as instructions, in an ideological sense, not as descriptions based on empirical observations. — baker
:up:Like I've been saying all along: It is my understanding that passages like the one quoted from Smith are meant to be taken as instructions, in an ideological sense, not as descriptions based on empirical observations.
— baker
AKA wishful thinking. — Vera Mont
People who say they don't value money are naive, or just lying.Wrong! Wealth-accumulation is for assholes like Musk. — Vera Mont
You didn't answer my question.So what do people in those "more equal" societies do with all that social trust, health, wellbeing, etc.? What do they use them for? There has to be some purpose to them.
— baker
They're healthier and happier than the striving, climbing, back-stabbing people. Plus, they're not so assholish. They seem be okay with that.
So what do people in those "more equal" societies do with all that social trust, health, wellbeing, etc.? What do they use them for? — baker
No matter! You wouldn't understand it.(And I can't view the video you posted, it's not available where I am.)
Not all prosperous societies are American. :snicker:Has anyone ever ever observed this to be the case? It's not even true of the most basic necessities: people are still starving and freezing to death, even in prosperous societies. People are still denied life-saving medicine and clean water. — Vera Mont
Actually he was a professor of moral philosophy. That and logic is what he taught for a living.Adam Smith was seriously full of shit. An Economist, was he? — Vera Mont
This is supposed to be a philosophy forum. You should be able to offer more than your moral indignation. — baker
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