Do you mean if the Supreme Court leaned towards Trump their actions could backfire in the Senate runoffs? — Brett
The CEO does have a responsibility to his shareholders to produce as much profit as possible. — Brian Gomes
I don't know; I see the continual rise of technological humanity as inevitably leading to the degradation of soils, destruction of habitats and extinction species; which which all ultimately be to our own detriment and possibly demise. — Janus
How about shielding? If the question does not make sense, then you're out of your depth. — tim wood
this is true. The question begs itself, however unanswerable it may be, to be: is there understanding of physics that make space travel possible? — god must be atheist
If you agree that the laws of nature describe the universe, then you must agree that these laws themselves cannot create anything, they cannot inject consciousness into matter, they cannot provide matter with the ability to perceive. — leo
So if the laws themselves don’t do that, what does? Unconscious matter spontaneously becomes conscious, magically? That’s what you have to admit, if you assume that the universe wasn’t conscious in the past. — leo
Regarding laws of humans and laws of nature : humans follow the laws of humans most of the time, from an outside point of view one could say these laws are only descriptions of how humans behave but they don’t constrain humans. If a human is observed to break a human law, one could put that observation into the list of “unexplained phenomena” that one hopes to be able to explain in the future. Or one could say these laws were only approximations and come up with more accurate laws. Isn’t that what we do with matter? — leo
The difference is that we know how to break some laws of humans but we don’t know how to break laws of nature. Or maybe miracles are what happens when humans manage to break these laws. — leo
Trump will go around preparing for a "The Real Inauguration", the inauguration of the real President, but in the end nothing will come out of it and it will turn out to be a scam to get people to give money to fund his oncoming legal battles. — ssu
This one is easy: the observer is also a physical thing. Physical things observe other physical things, and the web of all that observation (which is also interaction, physical things acting upon other physical things) is what constitutes reality. — Pfhorrest
You can never know, not even statistically, where a virus particle will end up even if you know all the forces and fields acting on it. — Sir Philo Sophia
only changes where the matter inefficiently spends addition KE and employs intelligence to reconfigure its own matter and redirect its own KE against all the natural forces, and resist giving up its PE when PLA would otherwise dictate it. I say no inanimate matter can do that combo. Please give me your best example of inanimate matter can do that combo. thx. — Sir Philo Sophia
sure. why does that hurt your head? what laws of physics apply to intelligence or consciousness??? — Sir Philo Sophia
nope. see my above. physics does not apply to contextual algorithms under self control that have the ability to gain and not spend PE when PLA would ask for it (efficiently) back. those can manipulate physics and environment to serve their needs/goals, not be completely controlled/limited by local physical dynamics, can shift physics limits to other parts of the (dead) system. locally alive using physics to beat/avoid physics in achieving its goals, which goals are greater than what PLA would have dictated otherwise. — Sir Philo Sophia
bad example. 2nd law covers that by saying the entropy had to shift to outside of the lowered entropy system. my virus example is not shifting PLA anywhere. PLA completely does not apply to predict the virus path or behavior or future potential energy. — Sir Philo Sophia
sorry to break it to you, but that is what all definitions do. — Sir Philo Sophia
when the ballistic motion turned into motion that defied gravity it required excess PE — Sir Philo Sophia
and free will control of exactly how and where to and when to enact and direct converting PE to KE. — Sir Philo Sophia
PLA only applies where motion/actions are dictated purely by Lagrangian dynamics as the general mathematical model. So, please explain what dynamics model can account for "turn on the missile's rocket booster and change the control surfaces to redirect air lift forces to point upward, then the missile has redirected and powered itself to exactly to go completely against the downward force of gravity"? — Sir Philo Sophia
no. that only works if all the forces on object are a constant field throughout the path, such that a Lagrangian equation can be formed. no dice! violates PLA per my above. — Sir Philo Sophia
sure, but does not apply to my example as I mentioned above. — Sir Philo Sophia
Clearly, the goal of changing the missile's trajectory from natural ballistic to instead take the path of most action required spending KE and negentropy not accounted for by PLA as it brings new forces and dynamics to the equation governing the objects motion, for which there is no Lagrangian equation that can be formed to model. Thus, PLA violated at some point during the transformation process, from natural ballistic to controlled path of most action . I'm all ears, how otherwise... — Sir Philo Sophia
Think of the goal like categorizing a bin of unknown objects as one kind or another (apples or oranges) according to the most simple observable definition that works and is practical to implement. — Sir Philo Sophia
according to my definitions, an object can deviate from PLA if it has at least "primitive free will" and excess PE to spend, at very high cost, to avoid PLA. For example, if you balletically shoot a missile from the ground into the air it must follow the PLA path under the force field of gravity making a parabolic path back down to the ground. However, when you turn on the missile's rocket booster and change the control surfaces to redirect air lift forces to point upward, then the missile has redirected and powered itself to exactly to go completely against PLA, indeed it is taking the path of most action, going directly upward against gravity, and can continue to do so until it burns all of its PE (fuel) to achieve the least KE efficient motion possible. — Sir Philo Sophia
In other words, the laws of Newton could be stated not in the form F=ma but in the form: the average kinetic energy less the average potential energy is as little as possible for the path of an object going from one point to another.
A free market is one in which all trades are uncoerced. — Pfhorrest
I consider certain kinds of contract, including those of rent and interest, to be coercive because rather than just agreeing to owe some capital or labor in exchange for some other capital or labor, they require you reflectively agree to agree to owe more, and not even in exchange for anything more, just in "exchange" for the other party allowing you to keep what they've already given you. It's in the same category as selling oneself into slavery: it's giving up not just a first-order liberty (by taking on an obligation) or claim (by transferring property), but a second-order immunity (from having new obligations placed on oneself, or one's property transferred away from oneself). You can't freely give up your freedom like that; and it's not even really a trade at all, which are entirely on a first-order level. — Pfhorrest
A market with no enforcement of contracts at all would be strictly freer, yes. Though I'm not sure it would be strictly better; I think some contracts are morally justifiable. Some narrow limitations on freedom are better than the alternative: I shouldn't be free to punch you in the face, for example, or to burn down your house (even if nobody's in it). — Pfhorrest
And yeah, not only the Islamic world of the middle ages but much of it today, as well as the Catholic world of the middle ages, have/had strict bans on usury, and I think that's great, except that they had a huge gaping hole: they only cared about money-lending, not any other kind of capital-lending. Renting out housing, for example, is perfectly okay by them. So there are convoluted contracts involving a combination of money lent "interest-free", property rental, and insurance, which replicate the effects of money lending at interest, and circumvent the whole ban, making the whole thing pretty toothless. — Pfhorrest
Where are the stats that people are more likely to move from middle to lower class than middle to upper middle? I feel like if this were true we'd be seeing an increasingly large lower class which I don't think we're seeing. Keep in mind the "bottom 20%" of income earners is not the bottom 20% population-wise. It's actually a significantly smaller percentage. — BitconnectCarlos
In my view the thing that makes such markets unfree is primarily the existence of rent and interest, which are only tenable institutions because of state enforcement of the contracts that create them. I think there are good deontological reasons why those kinds of contracts, as well as others, are not valid and so should not be enforced. The reaction of the market in the absence of such enforcement will then lead to significantly more egalitarian results. — Pfhorrest
it's a result of state intervention to protect capital and wouldn't happen in a truly free market — Pfhorrest
Sorry, I don't follow. Are there molecular intentions as contrasted with atomic ones? My guess is you're making a reference to the complexity of the moral sphere and that my take on it is too simplistic and fails to capture or address morality's breadth and depth.
Well, I agree with you that there's more to morality in particular and human personality in general but the point is, if I may be so bold as to say so, the underlying idea of altruism is rather simple - others must be more important than yourself. Whether this fails to acknowledge the intricacies of the "web of relations" or not is a different story. All I'm concerned with, at the moment, is showing how, within the framework of existing moral paradigms, true altruism isn't just possible but is alive and well, needing a mathematical perspective to be seen. — TheMadFool
Are you referring to my attempt to, in what in the eyes of many will appear not only disgusting but also in complete contradiction to the spirit of morality, reduce altruism and by extension, all of morality, to nothing more than a simple calculation, the likes of which we breeze through with the least bit of care in our daily lives? — TheMadFool
At this point, all I can say is that quantification (in your terms "commecialisation") is baked into the very notion of good and bad (morality) for the selling point of morality is that good is better than bad and "better" is a word that is, from its definition, inherently quantitative. — TheMadFool
I see it rather as framing the foundations of commerce in social terms. — Pfhorrest
Such that if you are doing nothing, you are doing nothing wrong, which is as it should be. — Pfhorrest
The problem stems from there being such a difference between the beggar and Bezos in the first place, which my modification to the usual contractual-propertarian libertarianism is meant to address. If a society's deontic principles result in the already-rich getting richer and the already-poor getting poorer, rather than everyone trending toward the middle over time all else being equal, then something somewhere has been done wrong, and I identify that "something done wrong" as primarily the institutes of rent and interest. — Pfhorrest
In practice perhaps, but not in the structure of the contract itself. A mortgage contract doesn't say that you may not enter into other kinds of contracts. It does, however, say that upon certain conditions you pre-emptively agree to owe more money than you've already agreed to owe (interest), which would be invalid under my principles. — Pfhorrest
But... but, you refrained from actually giving your wording of it. — god must be atheist
Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law.
The usual conception of a maximally free society allows maximal liberty, except as limited by claims to property, including one’s own body (“that’s me/mine, you can’t do that unless I consent”) as well as maximal immunity except as limited by the power to contract (nobody can change your liberties or claims unless you agree to it). — Pfhorrest
And I also advocate a similar exception to the power to contract, saying that people are immune from contracts that would limit their ability to exercise their power to contract. This not only means that you can’t sell yourself into slavery, but also things like non-compete clauses, and broadly all contract of rent and interest, fall afoul of this exception. — Pfhorrest
Freedom is removal of restrction. Less restrictions, more freedoms.
Absolute freedom is the removal of all restrictions. Including the restriction of absolute freedom. — god must be atheist
My understanding of the CI is "do any action if and only if you think everyone in the world would not disbenefit from it, even if all and everyone did the same action."
Please agree with me if you find my quote acceptable, or true. If this is not acceptable, and not true, please respond with your working definition of CI written in your response here. — god must be atheist
In this I regard the child as not having a choice. — Brett
Where an ideology is based and develops from a moral position it seems to me that the moral has been drawn into service of the idea. Which means it’s no longer a choice to be made by the individual but virtually a maxim to live by. If the choice is no longer made by the individual then that person is no longer free and if they are not free to choose between to alternative outcomes then they are not capable of making a moral position. — Brett
It seems to me that the one thing we all have in common is reason. Reason cannot very according to culture, can it? There are no degrees of reason like skin colour for instance. — Brett
My query is that if one should be able to marry whoever one wants, and that is a universal maxim, is it moral if it involves marriage between an adult and a child in a culture that approves of it? — Brett
But when you say “ CI is something you do, for yourself” do you mean you choose it yourself or you do it not for yourself but for others. Does it make you a moral person because you do it for yourself? — Brett
I still want to find out if morality is different from ideology. What is ideology? What is the source of ideology? — Brett
However to use a categorical imperative as a means turns it into a hypothetical imperative. A categorical imperative serves ends only. The moral crime of killing is not the means to be something, it is the end in itself. — Brett
Except the categorical imperative. The categorical imperative is reason in action and this reason is universal. — Brett
Can ideology really create a moral position? — Brett
But being moral us making the right decision, and, according to Kant, — Brett
That seems reasonable, but if we apply it universally then it means an adult male can marry whoever he wants. It doesn’t say anything about age or consent. Nor does it address cultural differences, — Brett
Kantianism might be an ideology but it’s not a moral. — Brett
They may say they frame their their decision in moral terms, but is it really moral in Kant’s terms or just ideology. — Brett
I don’t know if a moral can be based on ideology. Is it still a moral decision? — Brett
If it’s a moral decision then what would the Categorical Imperative be that makes it a moral choice, and therefore the right choice? — Brett
I think what I’m trying to do is work out what are we addressing social issues with, are we addressing them morally or ideologically? — Brett
In theory then you would have to apply non-action to everything you do. Can you really see that as the moral choice when you do it sometimes and don’t other times? — Brett