With this said, given that the basis for a political philosophy lies in establishing moral claims about how individuals should behave, and given that we have no utterly precise system of morality to establish ethical truths reliably, there is no way to determine a correct political philosophy. ]
rickyk95 — rickyk95
Politics is simply the authoritative allocation of resources.
Economics is supposedly the non-authoritative allocation of resources, but some people will probably tell you that it is another form of politics.
Either way it is about resources and their allocation, not the moral lives of people.
The best way to deal with resources, not a good life, is what politics is concerned with.
"Politics is who gets what, when, and how" -- Harold Lasswell.
There is a component of politics that deals with social issues, but how these issues are dealt with is a mess. The allocation of resources is much more straightforward, the top 1% get the largesse. — Rich
Redifining politics the way you do doesnt free it from its attachment to morality. In other words, there is no way of deciding who gets what resources and who doesnt without involving moral claims... — rickyk95
If say "person A has a right to vote and person B doesnt", or "Person A should be convicted for using drugs", there is an implicit judgement of what is right and wrong. — rickyk95
There could be coin toss. Heads, capital punishment is the law. Tails, capital punishment is abolished — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Or you could simply use force. Cross the border with tanks and infantry and say "This land is now ours". — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Somebody could subjectively believe or objectively know that a policy is morally wrong but enforce that policy anyway because he/she likes being in a position of power and needs that policy to keep him/her there. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Even in that case: if I pass and enforce a policy that I believe to be wrong in the benefit of my own interests, this implies that what Im doing is wrong, and that perhaps some other policy would be right, therefore carrying an implicit moral claim. — rickyk95
I think you may find that right/wrong rarely enters into the equation of policy-makers and their donors. — Rich
Among the place, what is right and wrong is diverse as the number of people in the populace. People all have their own views on what is right and wrong. — Rich
Doing this would implicitly acknowledge that tossing a coin to decide what laws are implemented would be the moral thing to do. In other words, you would be tacitly communicating that the allocation of resources by sheer luck is ethically right... — rickyk95
It strikes me as fascinating how you wouldnt consider this to carry moral baggage. If I suddenly came to an empty piece of land besides your house with a tank and declared its mine, I imagine you would have something to say about the rightness or wrongness of such an action. Would you not ask yourself if someone needs that land more than I do? Do I deserve that land if I wont use it productively? etc... — rickyk95
Even in that case: if I pass and enforce a policy that I believe to be wrong in the benefit of my own interests, this implies that what Im doing is wrong, and that perhaps some other policy would be right, therefore carrying an implicit moral claim. — rickyk95
We cannot have an ultimately right political philosophy with diverging notions of morality in our way. — rickyk95
Either way it is about resources and their allocation, not the moral lives of people. WISDOMfromPO-MO
— WISDOMfromPO-MO
No, either way it is about much more than that, as I have shown. — Thanatos Sand
With this said, given that the basis for a political philosophy lies in establishing moral claims about how individuals should behave, and given that we have no utterly precise system of morality to establish ethical truths reliably, there is no way to determine a correct political philosophy.
many people's views on freedom of choice vary and clash, and many people want more than just freedom of choice. They want safety, security, culture, health and many other things. — Thanatos Sand
But freedom is a universally acknowledged "good", in principle. — Jake Tarragon
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