Rights are claims on individuals or the government. — BitconnectCarlos
Even if a homeless man dies on the street are we to say that everyone who passed him by violated his rights? — BitconnectCarlos
Rights are not simply wants or desires either. Otherwise I'd have a right to constant back massages. — BitconnectCarlos
I do not accept their reasoning and think they are wrong. I believe there are good ideas and bad ideas. — NOS4A2
As far as I am concerned, it is obvious that there are very good reasons for a healthy distrust of doctors, the pharma oligarchy, and the entire medical industry. — alcontali
what information I trust, is my own choice, and is something that I decide on a case-by-case basis. — alcontali
But no, as a matter of conscience I refuse to say everything is fine when a government demands by threat of force that I give what’s mine so that it can distribute it to others. — NOS4A2
The fact that most people want this kind of authoritarianism does not suggest that I need to accept it. — NOS4A2
you can search online for people with similar medical conditions and double-check their experience. — alcontali
some doctors will refuse to prescribe Indian generics, even though they are equivalent — alcontali
I just safely assume that these people are lying all the time. — alcontali
What I am speaking about are so-called negative rights, which is essentially someone else’s duty to not interfere in my life. — NOS4A2
Of course, plenty of my fellow voters believe the government has a duty to provide for their wants and desires, and they often call these “rights”. — NOS4A2
No, I don’t consider your version of rights to be human rights at all, but merely wants and desires. — NOS4A2
Many believe the state should also intervene in economics, the environment, and even private life. — NOS4A2
state proposed by libertarians and minarchists, where a minimal state is required to defend the rights, properties and freedoms of its citizens. — NOS4A2
A frequent defence of the State's legitimacy is that its legitimacy derives from the consent of the governed. There are a number of problems with such a view. — Virgo Avalytikh
In order to rule out souls, we would need evidence that contradicts their existence. This is deduction. It's an application of the law of non-contradiction. — frank
Governments, in essence, are tax farms, which claim for themselves the unique prerogative to initiate force and invade private property, and use their monopolistic privileges to sustain themselves. — Virgo Avalytikh
This is in distinction from private service providers, which are subject to the discipline of the market; i.e. they must continually satisfy the wants of their consumers in order to survive, and accrue their revenue by voluntary transactions. — Virgo Avalytikh
Social and economic issues are really inseparable, because all activity, whether we see it as 'social' or 'economic', requires the use of scarce resources, and therefore is determined by the relevant property rights. — Virgo Avalytikh
What makes one government 'bigger' than another is the degree to which it initiates force and invades people's justly held property. — Virgo Avalytikh
Are the ways in which the State uses force permissible? If 'Yes', then everyone should be able to act similarly, — Virgo Avalytikh
That quote was part of an argument against ruling out via deduction. — Coben
how do you explain the existence of experts (in other fields)? — TheMadFool
The belief in personal authority of experts simply turns you into an intellectual have-not. — alcontali
Seriously, in God I trust and in nothing else. — alcontali
To allow the masses to make decisions would be a grave error. Of course this doesn't mean we ignore popular opinion but you did mention good candidates for leaders losing to pop idols and Disney cartoon characters and that really puts a dent in the reliability of the masses to make right choices — TheMadFool
this vindicates my call for good leaders and institutions where they may be trained . — TheMadFool
I could argue that fixing ugliness or equalizing height results in better lives for those people and levels the playing field in a number of areas. — BitconnectCarlos
But I'm dubious that it could for example turn any straight person to a true asexual if they wanted to or something else highly linked to human nature like that. — Qmeri
This I disagree with and it is also pretty much in disagreement with the OP since the whole premise of the OP was that I have found it very hard to change certain emotions of mine irregardless of how I think or behave. And the solution was to fool the emotions in a way where they don't have to agree with my thinking or behavior. — Qmeri
I really don't know how to make that clearer. Souls or ghosts are immaterial. Immaterial things don't exist. Souls and ghosts don't exist. I encounter this all the time. — Coben
Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. — Coben
I pretty much use "emotion" as anything "that feels like something" in ones experience in this context. — Qmeri
With direct I meant direct control where one could simply consciously choose what to feel whenever. — Qmeri
'm not an expert on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, so I can't say. Perhaps? — Qmeri
I was only equalizing the OP. — Qwex
using regular motion and registry to generate a field... I have created a lane in memory. My hack is to create many lanes, so that a field is generated of motion registry....My own solipsistic energy shell. — Qwex
Human nature clearly doesn't care too much about our consciously chosen goals and we seem to be emotionally interested in evolutionary goals like social status, resources and sex irregardless of what we think. — Qmeri
But our emotions do seem to care what we think about how to achieve our goals. — Qmeri
Therefore our emotions can be influenced indirectly by our conscious conclusions of how to achieve our natural goals. — Qmeri
So, with this technique one can keep ones logical world view intact while at the same time he fools his intuition and emotions to feel pretty much whatever he wants. If your emotions want to live in magical world where everything is the very best in a magically perfect way - just make your emotions believe that that is true and go on and concentrate on something you actually chose to concentrate on. — Qmeri
Schools are places of learning and it begins in the form of general knowledge in all or most subjects of importance like language, math, science, history, etc. — TheMadFool
if people want a doctor, a qualified and experienced one at that, for their aches and pains, i.e. they look for experts in the problems that concern them, why is it that they don't impose the same exacting standards for their leaders (presidents, senators, governors, etc)? — TheMadFool
Why would gene editing resulting in height equality or fixing ugliness be antithetical to human well-being? — BitconnectCarlos
I think it's a little cold and unempathetic to basically claim that you'd just like to preserve the struggles of these disadvantaged populations for the sake of "diversity." — BitconnectCarlos
you can't just throw out "diversity" or some other competing value when I mention "equality" and deny that we even value equality. — BitconnectCarlos
As technology evolves and these issues enter into the realm of possibility, what does everyone think about addressing some of nature's inequalities? — BitconnectCarlos
Ok, but we already agree that the goal itself is on the table. — BitconnectCarlos
walk up to a guy, show him a Rorschach, ask him.....what’s going on in your brain right now?
Or, I walk up to a guy, show him a Rorschach, ask him.....what does this look like to you.
Which question will he answer? — Mww
the advantage to calling the whole thing rational thought, is the absolute impossibility of individual comprehensions in particular and thereby meaningful communication in general given from it, in any other terms. — Mww
Why are you making your objections here? If you want to debate the principles of libertarianism, do it in a libertarianism thread. — Virgo Avalytikh
an accusation of post hocery, whether justified or not, has no bearing on the philosophical substance of an argument, and is concerned only with its origin. — Virgo Avalytikh
Are you suggesting that I am incapable of responding to the latest objections which my thread's dialogue partners have posed, such that I am compelled to find an excuse not to continue? — Virgo Avalytikh
I responded to objections left, right and centre, thousands of words at a time. Of course, any point at which I happen to take a break could also be identified as the crucial 'weak point' which causes my entire position to come crashing down. — Virgo Avalytikh
Try writing an essay for college in which you critique the 'timing' of an argument, rather than its philosophical substance. I grade undergraduate philosophy essays, and I can tell you that this does certainly does not cut it. — Virgo Avalytikh
you have anticipated any libertarian defence against your objections to be post hoc contrivances, which means that you are not receptive to being persuaded by them, regardless of their soundness. — Virgo Avalytikh
I intend to return to my thread in due course. fdrake is aware of this, so you need not claim any kind of victory on his part. I will contribute just exactly as much as I want to contribute, at my leisure. — Virgo Avalytikh
If you have made up your mind in advance of the argument that any defence of libertarianism is a post hoc contrivance, then it is little wonder that you are not interested in hearing a response. — Virgo Avalytikh
I certainly should not like to admit to closed-mindedness, if I were so. — Virgo Avalytikh
If you wish to take issue with the case I have made in my own threads, you are free to. — Virgo Avalytikh
