 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          BC
BC         
         If I take your money via taxation, then I am coercing you by forcibly appropriating your wealth for the rest of society. — Pneumenon
 _db
_db         
         The egalitarian answer would appear to be a containment of everyone at the same level, so that everyone has roughly equal power over everyone else. There could be minor power differences, but there must always be the possibility of upward mobility. — Pneumenon
 BC
BC         
         ... it seems to me that, whether it's censorship or taxation, you are ultimately either containing someone or allowing them to contain everyone else. The egalitarian answer would appear to be a containment of everyone at the same level, so that everyone has roughly equal power over everyone else. — Pneumenon
 BC
BC         
         The question, then, is not, "Is coercion acceptable?" but "When is coercion acceptable?" — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         Taxation is not coercion in that one accepts taxation as part of citizenship. — Bitter Crank
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         This would seem to imply that citizenship is voluntary. That's not necessarily the case. It's the same problem as with Hobbes' social contract; when the hell did I get the choice to sign that contract? — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          unenlightened
unenlightened         
          BC
BC         
         This would seem to imply that citizenship is voluntary. That's not necessarily the case. It's the same problem as with Hobbes' social contract; when the hell did I get the choice to sign that contract? — Pneumenon
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         If I take your money via taxation, then I am coercing you... — Pneumenon
 Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         Here it is right at the start; there is no 'your money' or your anything except by way of the social contract. We agree not to break down the fence round 'your' pumpkin patch, as long as you agree to pay 'your' taxes. — unenlightened
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          BC
BC         
         Remember when I said that it's a matter of when to coerce, not whether? — Pneumenon
 BC
BC         
         French president insists Britain WILL face Brexit 'consequences' as David Cameron has to deny a 'conspiracy' over claims the Calais jungle could be sent to Kent
Francois Hollande claims he doesn't want to scare anyone with his warning
But amid a new scaremongering row, the PM denies there is a 'conspiracy'
France threatened to relocate thousands of migrants from Calais 'Jungle'
French economy minister claimed Brexit would provoke France into move
But Out campaign insists the move has been orchestrated to scare voters
 mcdoodle
mcdoodle         
          photographer
photographer         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
          photographer
photographer         
          Pneumenon
Pneumenon         
         Yes, but I wasn't really focusing on that example so much as turning it to thinking of conscience as a kind of self-coercion that is intricated in the very notion of self. — photographer
 mcdoodle
mcdoodle         
          photographer
photographer         
          The Great Whatever
The Great Whatever         
         The question I'm interested in is this: given that coercion is part of what makes a bunch of humans hanging around into a society, how much sense does it make to have "minimizing coercion" as your big end-game? — Pneumenon
 mcdoodle
mcdoodle         
          Shevek
Shevek         
         Ownership came into being with agriculture, because you have to invest work for future reward. So you need ownership for culture. It is always open to you to be a hunter gatherer or robber pillager. There's nothing tacit about the social contract unless you don't bother to think about it and the alternatives. — unenlightened
I brought up 'state of nature' and I think your strictures are wide of the mark. From Rousseau to Rawls thinkers have addressed these issues by working from these 'fables', because they arguably make good starting-points, they're not cunning devices conjured up by the Koch Brothers so we don't see things clearly — mcdoodle
 unenlightened
unenlightened         
         Of course 'ownership' in a broad sense, that is, the effective control of something (and exclusivity to whatever surplus is gained from it), existed in varying forms in pre-modern times. But 'ownership' is a legal concept... — Shevek
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.