CFLarsen said:Did I make my claim before or after you made yours?
Claus, you asked for my OPINION about the free market. Then you made a CLAIM about patents. Back it up or stop whining and pretending you're a skeptic.
CFLarsen said:Did I make my claim before or after you made yours?
shanek said:Claus, you asked for my OPINION about the free market. Then you made a CLAIM about patents. Back it up or stop whining and pretending you're a skeptic.
CFLarsen said:Oh, man...that is so pathetic.
You are merely stating opinions, while I make claims, therefore you are not accountable for your posts, but I am?
If you cannot argue like a man, you are excused to the kiddie's table.
Cain said:For the sake of the movement, please stop.
shanek said:You made a verifiable claim. You did NOT back it up. You are NO skeptic.
Your stubborn dogmatic and repeated insistence that “the pencil†answers all questions is really pretty silly. The pencil does show that free markets work at producing goods and services that people need, without an overall master plan directing operations. I don’t dispute that and I suspect most others on this board wouldn’t. My own views are broadly libertarian, actually. The problem though, is that you are a fundamentalist, and fundamentalists ignore the exceptions to the wonderful theoretical scenarios they paint.shanek said:
And I can't tell you how to make a pencil, either. Gee, they must not exist then!
CFLarsen said:Oh, this is rich. You did not make a verifiable claim?
shanek said:How is my stating an OPINION that patents were not part of a free market system in any way a verifiable claim?
RichardR said:Your stubborn dogmatic and repeated insistence that “the pencil†answers all questions is really pretty silly.
Here was my simple question, which arose from a claim you made:
are patents needed to protect pharmaceutical companies?
It seems to me that there are only two possible answers to this, either “yes†or “noâ€.
(I may be wrong – if someone can think of a third answer, please enlighten me.
Refusal to answer the question because it is “immaterialâ€, doesn’t count.)
If you answer “noâ€, then I have the obvious follow-up question, how would a pharmaceutical company protect its inventions?
An obvious example is law of contract. Without a law of contract, no contract could be enforced (peacefully), and the free market would not function. Since there is this exception to your, the market always provides solutions premise, the burden of proof is upon you to show that the market would in this case provide a solution.
You have failed to make the case, though.
CFLarsen said:Then, what have you been arguing these past 8 pages?
shanek said:There's another question you've just refused to answer...and by asking a question that I have already covered here. Pathetic.
CFLarsen said:OK.
You are not able to explain what you have been arguing for the past 8 pages.
shanek said:Claus, you are a LIAR. I have said several times that the entire purpose of this thread is to refute an argument from incredulity that you and many other posters have made.
Now, answer the questions, and stop with the pathetic, desperate personal abuse.
It didn’t answer my specific question, yet you continued to pretend it did. Answer the question please, don’t just say “oh pencils must not exist thenâ€. That’s just looking really silly.shanek said:Strawman; I make no such insistence. I only insist that it answers your specific questions, and it does.
No proof they’re not, either. There is actually no proof of anything, just evidence.shanek said:And my answer to that is: there is no proof that they are.
Yes, I know about fallacies, which is why I followed it up with “I may be wrong – if someone can think of a third answer, please enlighten meâ€. This is just intellectually dishonest of you.shanek said:Then you are no skeptic, because any skeptic knows about the fallacy of the excluded middle. And we employ that knowledge every time we debunk alleged UFO abductees, talking-to-the-dead psychics, or just about anyone else.
Your last answer was to refuse to answer.shanek said:What about the one I've been giving?
The “have you stopped beating your wife†question is invalid because whether I answer “yes†or “noâ€, I am admitting I beat my wife. The question is a dishonest one designed to make the questionee look bad no matter what he says. My question was a valid question designed to ascertain your view on a specific issue. So your response is a false analogy. And a red herring. Funny, I thought any skeptic knows about fallacies.shanek said:Okay: Have you stopped beating your wife? Yes or no, please, and don't refuse to answer the question on some bogus basis of invalid assumptions.
This is the frustrating thing with you. Why don’t you just give the three possibilities again? I’m not plowing through 8 pages to find them. What are they? Why is this so hard?shanek said:I have already given three possibilities. This is ridiculous.
But it would be worthless without law of contract. You missed the point – the free market does not always come up with a solution and so it will not necessarily do so here.shanek said:The difference is, a contract is voluntarily agreed to by all involved parties. That's why it's justifiable to have a structure in place to enforce it.
Hardly.shanek said:I don't have to "make the case" as the burden of proof is on those who claim that patents ARE necessary (meaning, there is no other option). Coming up with the alternatives that I have is actually going beyond the call of duty, and yet, here you are, insisting that I do more while ignoring the fact that the people WHO ARE MAKING THE CLAIM have done ABSOLUTELY NOTHING WHATSOEVER to back it up.
No. Never said I could. Never asked you to prove they aren’t, either. Pretty silly to demand proof though – I’m looking for evidence to suggest whether patents are necessary or not. I haven’t seen any evidence that pharmaceutical companies could protest their inventions without them. Always willing to look at some, though.shanek said:So, can you PROVE that patents are necessary?
CFLarsen said:So sad. You are truly a fanatic. It doesn't matter how much you hurt other people, as long as you yourself benefit.
Stop.
CFLarsen said:I agree.
Shanek is abusing the skeptical movement for his own political goals. He is not interested in countering the false claims and beliefs that hurt so many people world-wide, and hinders human and scientific progress.
All he wants is power for himself, so he can force his egomanical, selfish and heartless political agenda on other people. And he takes advantage of this forum, the credibility of the people who support it, the JREF and James Randi himself to achieve it.
It is shameful.
RichardR said:It didn’t answer my specific question, yet you continued to pretend it did.
No proof they’re not, either.
Your last answer was to refuse to answer.
The “have you stopped beating your wife†question is invalid because whether I answer “yes†or “noâ€, I am admitting I beat my wife.
This is the frustrating thing with you. Why don’t you just give the three possibilities again? I’m not plowing through 8 pages to find them. What are they? Why is this so hard?
But it would be worthless without law of contract. You missed the point – the free market does not always come up with a solution and so it will not necessarily do so here.
Hardly.
shanek said:i]You[/i] are the ones holding back skepticism, not the rest of us.
How would they stop another company doing a chemical analysis of their product, and just producing the same molecule for sale?shanek said:One option was the protection of trade secrets, which does not require government.
How would this prevent a company with no license agreement from doing a chemical analysis of their product, and just producing the same molecule foe sale?shanek said:Another option was a contractual license agreement, which requires no government intervention, only the normal contract laws to be enforce to resolve disputes.
How would this stop another company from doing a chemical analysis of their product, and just producing the same molecule for sale?shanek said:The third option was the private "patent" exchange company, which, like #1, would require no government intervention and would only require the contract laws as protection to resolve disputes.