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| The Philosopher Intelligent (and mature) discussions only. |
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May 18th, 2008, 07:06 AM
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#26 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Blowtus
Would you also care to define 'lawfully owned property'? At what point in history do you stop looking back for 'unlawful acquisition'?
Radical libertarianism always seems like rubbish with it's oh so arbitrary 'we need a state to defend our property but everything else is best done by the individual' crap.
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indeed.
Locke's shotgun rights concerning property are as absurd as a dog owning a forest for having been the first to piss there. Hell, according to homeopathic pseudoscience, it could be argued that the original homeopath quack owns all the water on earth...it's no longer international waters, it's his private property (and Locke has a lovely stupid argument against this---it's mean to hog it all when people are dying of thirst, lol).
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 07:14 AM
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#27 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
To be able to trace property back to when Og found a shiny rock to the point it arrived at my pinky would be absurd, thus there is a certain 'de-facto' aspect of property. To deny that in cases and on large scales, property has been seized is likewise absurd. I am partial to the adversarial method of determination: let those who can prove a title or de-facto claim (it was in his clear and undisputed possession previously) the property, claim it through the courts, that is what they are there for.
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an interesting tangent to this discussion might be our lovely liberal nations' (I'm not American, but it's common to most of the western democracies) habit of confiscating marijuana, chemicals, lab equipment for narcotics manufacture, etc., which are so indisputably "the private property" of those from whom it is taken as to be used as evidence against them at trial.
To talk about a nation with this and that right, while maintaining laws arbitrarily against it, it is very difficult to hold respect for the principle without calling the nation a tyranny, or respect for the nation without dismissing the claim to holding such a principle.
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 07:20 AM
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#28 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Blowtus
All property has already been claimed. (Not something Locke had to contend with)
Property grants one a measure of power.
Preserving such power, at the same time as giving no benefit (education, health, various infrastructure) to those born into the unlucky situation of having no property, can't be seen to be in the interest of those without property *at all* - so it's basically just a desire from those with property to maintain the status quo, to be able to benefit from their property and give nothing in return.
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and he had an illogical answer to that.
If Bill gates bought up a shitton of farms and horded all the crops in some guarded facility, preferring to let it rot than be eaten...that's wrong, that's no longer his property, you can't let things spoil while others are in need---Locke would have Gates give up his there held power over people...by duty.
But, of course, if Gates buys up all the farms and sells the crop overseas, going to good use, making billions, while millions of Americans are unable to feed their families, essentially overpopulated now for the amount of produce they can purchase on the global market, too bad... Gates is allowed to effectively deprive people of food until they die so long as he isn't letting the food spoil. If he was letting it spoil, to steal it from him wouldn't be stealing, to Locke, as if somehow Gates deserves his power over people in one case but not the other for some logical reason, rather than a merely pathetically emotional humanistic one.
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 07:30 AM
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#29 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by razoredge
Once again I can only ask... what are you guys talking about ?
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presently?--Locke's theory of property; look it up.
Quote:
Originally Posted by razoredge
and more
is it possible to think for ones self or is it necessary to adopt some bazaar theory posed by someone with too much time on their hands, that approaches humanity as if its some mathematic equation ?
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if you have a better idea, by all means, get to it and become a household name to intellectuals worldwide for the coming centuries.
Quote:
Originally Posted by razoredge
Im being serious, when current attitudes are not working, you fix them, not complicate and compound them, not dance around in circles thinking you have performed a cure... "let the chips fall where they may". The population is too big for that shit. Everyone has a use and purpose, it should be utilized to its fullest and justly rewarded.
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your thinking is simply too dogmatic for a philosophy forum. It's nice that you have ideals, but the point is for you to be able to persuade other people to endorse them, such as by either proving it is in their interest, which is purely pragmatic, for which you can make no moral claims, or by providing a philosophical argument in defense of it, such that people can only reject reason itself if to oppose your conclusions in pursuit of their personal desires. It, I think, is the latter we here are typically concerned with.
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 07:38 AM
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#30 (permalink)
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ὁ δύσκος λύκος
Join Date: May 2008
Location: США
Posts: 673
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I don't see where you're getting this from.
Through competition for scarce resources; I should have been more specific.
and suppose we don't care how civilization fares, why're we supposed to think we have a responsibility to accord with the following steps you consider necessary for it to fare well?
In that case, by all means go forth and loot, but don't say I didn't warn ya.
this, interestingly, legitimizes the morality of murdering homosexuals...
You make a very large leap; care to elaborate how?
As for marijuana, narcotics, &c it is not the role of government to delegate the substances which its citizens ingest, smoke, or otherwise consume insomuch as it does not cause harm to others or a disturbance of the peace, and the actions described are simply that: theft. War on drugs, war on this, war on that...all means to keep the people scared, and such means are tyrannical.
As for the dog pissing in the forest, last I checked, animals do not have property rights recognized by man, or at least lack the capacity to dispute them in the courts. Say some other man pissed in the forest and decided to claim it as his own. Naturally, he could claim it as his own (via the doctrine of terra nulla) and the state, being a protector of property and all of that, likely has a register of deeds for such purpose.
razoredge - so you would support an overbearing state that 'utilizes' us to our fullest potential? Look how well that worked out...100mln dead in Russia and China from governments that sought to do just that. As Lord Acton said, power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, and if anyone seeks to 'utilize' me, I will invoke the right to revolution and make Tom Paine proud.
Additionally, perhaps if my "contradictions and lack of awareness" is so self-evident, you should compose a counter-argument detailing the why and wherefore?
BTW, here are some links:
http://mises.org/
http://lewrockwell.com/
By all means poke around the archives, though on occasion I find myself siding with the Chicago school of economics, though it is infrequent enough that I am a de-facto Austrian economist
Why economics though? Methinks that civilization itself is shaped more by economics and the pursuit of self-interest than anything else, though the animal, base components of human nature get in the way of this on many occasions (on account of a propensity for a 'sheepish' or 'peasant' mentality that arises from fear of the unknowns of life).
Last edited by Fenrisúlfr : May 18th, 2008 at 07:48 AM.
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May 18th, 2008, 07:40 AM
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#31 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
Additionally, perhaps if my "contradictions and lack of awareness" is so self-evident, you should compose a counter-argument? 
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if you scan his posting history you'll see that he tends not to do that. 
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 07:55 AM
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#32 (permalink)
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ὁ δύσκος λύκος
Join Date: May 2008
Location: США
Posts: 673
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It is no big deal, as I am a fast typist and a faster thinker; I can counter-argue in shorter time than it takes to relieve my bladder.
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May 18th, 2008, 08:01 AM
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#33 (permalink)
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GodSlayer
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 1,971
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
I don't see where you're getting this from.
Competition for scarce resources; I should have been more specific.
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indeed, because that is a rather broad use of 'natural selection', and 'natural selection' isn't "used' "to" do something. Natural selection is just the name for why some mutations end up passed on through the generations---the other cunts fail the exam of life. This though, says only 'things happen'. 'the moon is used to distribute thermal currents around the ocean'...well, ok, sure, but if we had cause to interrupt it, does this statement bear an argument against our doing so?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
In that case, by all means go forth and loot, but don't say I didn't warn ya.
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then what good is the rest of this talk? you're here conceding that 'property rights' are merely "I'm warning you not to do that", which leads us to the next point...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
this, interestingly, legitimizes the morality of murdering homosexuals...
You may a very large leap; care to elaborate how?
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You suggested Locke's principles burden us a responsibility to allow certain rights, for if we do not then civilization cannot ensue. You've conceded that if we don't want that, or don't mind risking that, or deny that premise, then we have no such responsibility. It seems then that we stipulate rights arbitrarily as means to the sustanance of a civilization. Under such conditions, if the worldview is such that an infant has to be sacrificed to ensure a good harvest, or gays exterminated, or whatever, that being perceived as necessary for the maintenance of the civilization is sufficient warrant for such harmful actions to be committed and thought acceptable, and indeed, as estimated by they of that worldview, a responsibility.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
As for marijuana, narcotics, &c it is not the role of government to delegate the substances which its citizens ingest, smoke, or otherwise consume insomuch as it does not cause harm to others or a disturbance of the peace, and the actions described are simply that: theft. War on drugs, war on this, war on that...all means to keep the people scared, and such means are tyrannical.
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So we're in agreement that while your founding fathers took much from Locke, such principles are not that upon which the nation functions?--that, as it were, a man in his meth lab (let us stipulate it is not in an apartment complex harming others, but the sort of industrial operation one would set up if not always in fear of being busted) attacked by a S.W.A.T. team, is in fact only acting upon his rights, essentially under the right to revolution, when he blows away S.W.A.T agents... and his being sentenced to murder is an injustice according to Lockean principles, which anyone who supports such rights as he supposes, 'liberty' in general, should be outraged at (if they were people of principle). Do we agree on that assessment?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cipher
As for the dog pissing in the forest, last I checked, animals do not have property rights.
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depends who you ask. Locke's phrasing, I believe, is that we hold property over ourselves, that is what the right to life means. An animal is clearly found to exhibit the same behavior as we would define as a human appreciating the concept of his own right to life.
But more to the original point, I do not have the right to deprive you of berries merely because I stumbled around the bush first - 'shotgun, I saw it first, now you've been warned, buster!'. If I have such a right, I have the right to stab you in the back after you got their first, and have them for myself - 'I warn you to surrender'.
__________________
"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." -- Bertrand Russell
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May 18th, 2008, 08:31 AM
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#34 (permalink)
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ὁ δύσκος λύκος
Join Date: May 2008
Location: США
Posts: 673
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seditious
indeed, because that is a rather broad use of 'natural selection', and 'natural selection' isn't "used' "to" do something. Natural selection is just the name for why some mutations end up passed on through the generations---the other cunts fail the exam of life. This though, says only 'things happen'. 'the moon is used to distribute thermal currents around the ocean'...well, ok, sure, but if we had cause to interrupt it, does this statement bear an argument against our doing so?
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In the aforementioned context, the argument against doing so was civilization, as if everyone competed for resources as in a state of nature, the result would be a war of all against all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seditious
then what good is the rest of this talk? you're here conceding that 'property rights' are merely "I'm warning you not to do that", which leads us to the next point...
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Property rights are moot unless backed by force, protecting such rights is one of the primary roles of a state respectful of natural rights.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seditious
You suggested Locke's principles burden us a responsibility to allow certain rights, for if we do not then civilization cannot ensue. You've conceded that if we don't want that, or don't mind risking that, or deny that premise, then we have no such responsibility. It seems then that we stipulate rights arbitrarily as means to the sustanance of a civilization. Under such conditions, if the worldview is such that an infant has to be sacrificed to ensure a good harvest, or gays exterminated, or whatever, that being perceived as necessary for the maintenance of the civilization is sufficient warrant for such harmful actions to be committed and thought acceptable, and indeed, as estimated by they of that worldview, a responsibility.
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That is somewhat tricky. To that, I would have to reply 'extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof', otherwise one could allege all manner of absurdities i.e. 'I will have to part you and your gold or it will rain blood and hail flesh'.
However, in such exigent circumstances, often such things are overlooked, but if it is proven that an infant sacrifice would be required, I am honestly not sure what to do.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seditious
So we're in agreement that while your founding fathers took much from Locke, such principles are not that upon which the nation functions?--that, as it were, a man in his meth lab (let us stipulate it is not in an apartment complex harming others, but the sort of industrial operation one would set up if not always in fear of being busted) attacked by a S.W.A.T. team, is in fact only acting upon his rights, essentially under the right to revolution, when he blows away S.W.A.T agents... and his being sentenced to murder is an injustice according to Lockean principles, which anyone who supports such rights as he supposes, 'liberty' in general, should be outraged at (if they were people of principle). Do we agree on that assessment?
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I would be demonized for doing so, but when the state oversteps its boundaries in such a heinous manner, I would agree that he would have a right to such revolution. Though producing meth, 'to the willing there is no harm' i.e. he is not force-feeding meth into his customers. However, it would not be in his interest to exercise it so just yet, such revolutions are predicted upon other participants acting in their individual enlightened self interests (i.e. if they can take down his meth lab, they can raid my hemp plantation or impose some other arbitrary restrictions averse to my interests).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seditious
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