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James Randi and Objectivism

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Sam Walton died the richest man in America after having raised the standard of living of the poorest in this land more than all the government welfare and private charity during his lifetime—starting out with an Arkansas five-and-dime.

What proportion of Walton's wealth and the standard of living of his employees was due to regulation favouring his particular enterprise? You don't know this and you probably couldn't even quantify it.

This is why it makes better sense to look at the Objectivist aims using commercial or industrial sectors for which we have a complete history. The rational producer and the rational consumer ought to be easy to define. That's why I thought we should stick with the airline industry since it's one of the few that qualifies.
 
I'm surprised this hasn't been posted already:
There are two books you can read in high school that will affect your entire life thereafter: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged.
One of these books is a far-fetched, totally unbelievable fairy tale that will stunt your emotional growth for years to come.
The other one has orcs in it.
Or this.
 
we can plainly see what makes management tremble by where their PAC money goes. They tremble at the thought of more government regulation. They fear more public scrutiny of their practices. They loath being held accountable for their actions.

PAC money cannot buy favors from a government that is not allowed to do anything else but stop the initiation of force.

They can fear all the public scrutiny and accountability they want. In a capitalist society there would be no refuge and no exceptions. The public are ruthless, you know.
 
The entire history of capitalism is a record of the little guy getting more benefit from the most creative and productive while contributing less. And no matter how monumental the sums of money the producers earn, it can never equal the happiness that devolves from creating the values that move mankind forward. Doubt it at your own peril.

Really, the entire history of capitalism?

Although you are right about one thing, just look at these little guys...
 

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Words have specific meanings in each of their possible specific contexts. In the present philosophical context of political principles that definition is not valid.

Yeah, thanks. I knew what he meant. You chose to split a hair instead of actually addressing the issue. It's as big a waste of time as dwelling on a typo. Not accepting his clarification is intellectually dishonest.
 
So your counter-argument to my argument that marriage would make perfect sense in an Objectivist society is that my argument is an Objectivist argument. :boggled: I have to ask: are you familiar with Dr. Hsieh's work? If not, are you willing to admit you're judging this woman's arguments based on knowing absolutely nothing about them? If you are familiar with her work, would you care to provide some discussion of her points on this issue?

Well I have to say even though I am trying to drop the snarkness I started with that you have got it the wrong way around - it is up to you to show your argument not me to guess what your argument is.

That aside I am not judging her arguments at all. I have not got a clue what her arguments are so I could hardly do that could I? What I was pointing out that no matter what ism/ideology people profess to follow they seem to always end up being able to justify them living the way everyone else does in their culture/society. It is akin to the very surprising fact that most Muslims are born into families whose religion was also Muslim.

And can I point out that you have not yet given an argument to counter the point that someone else made about marriage and its compatibility with your chosen ideology (or if you have I've missed it) - saying that someone else has such an argument doesn't count.
 
The USA was founded on the principles of liberalism with a surprising amount of pragmatism thrown in, I thought you were arguing for objectivism not liberalism?

The US was founded, at least in the 1770's phase, with very little involvement of political philosophy, but was mostly a legalistic argument against continued allegiance to the crown. The Declaration is mostly a list of the king's violations of the venerable Common Law.
 
You misunderstood sort of by not sticking to the context of the present government founded in 1776-89. The founding you are referring to was a mish-mash of European laws/traditions and anarchy.

So, all those slaves who were legally forced to work for the benefit of the "most creative and productive while contributing less", what was that all about?
 
What if my main concern is that your plane will crash into my home? Don't I get a say in where you get to fly that plane? Let's say a lot of people are worried that you plane will crash into their home, can we deny you the airspace over our property? And since planes never simply drop straight down, can't we insist that there be a margin of safety around our houses so that your disabled smokers plane won't glide into our bedroom window?

Property rights is not such a clear cut issue. You live in a society, you should have some control over what your neighbors do with their property.

Capitalism does not alter the fact that negligent death and property damage are crimes. And regulation cannot stop plane crashes.

You may not have control of property you have not earned. But you may influence the handling of that property through persuasion, boycott, shunning, and such. And when property owners agree on how property should be regulated, they can lock it in with deed restrictions that require whatever plurality or unanimity they wish to modify them.
 
PAC money cannot buy favors from a government that is not allowed to do anything else but stop the initiation of force.

PAC money starts wars. Are you so naive as to think that we invaded Iraq because of WMDs, 9/11, and a desire to bring democracy to the region? You don't think that multinational oil corporations had any influence? That they didn't profit as a result?
 
I'm surprised this hasn't been posted already:

There are two books you can read in high school that will affect your entire life thereafter: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged.
One of these books is a far-fetched, totally unbelievable fairy tale that will stunt your emotional growth for years to come.
The other one has orcs in it.

Or this.

Old and tired juvenalia.
 
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An opinion is not evidence (in this case) - you merely asserted the same claim again but in a longer form.
You've misunderstood me--the QUOTE, meaning the part of my post that was directly quoting what someone else said--proves that at least one person doesn't understand O'ist philosophy. If they did, they'd be aware that those issues had been dealt with, in pretty detailed form. This IS evidence that O'ism is not understood on these boards, because, well, one person failed to.

Also, you never addressed my point that your argument is identical to that of a theist demanding an atheist prove that gods don't exist.

You do realise that this "accusation" can just as easily been made back to you? Indeed even more so as when asked about marriage all you said was (to paraphrase) "oh someone has explained how that can be justified", you presented no actual argument or even an indication that you know on what grounds it was being justified, just an assertion that it doesn't present any problem because someone has justified it. That is hardly demonstrating a familiarity with the ideology is it?
If you want me to demonstrate my understanding, I can. I wasn't trying to argue that marriage would exist in an O'ist society--what I was arguing is that the person to whom I was responding was unfamiliar with O'ist philosophy, as this issue had been dealt with before. I referenced the preson, and her qualifications, who's work I'm most familiar with. So no, I didn't justify marriage in an O'ist society. The person I referenced did, and you completely missed my point.

Now I am more than happy to take your word that you are actually what you claim to be and do have the depth of knowledge and understanding you claim so why not stop discussing what other folk may or may not know and discuss the meat of the subject? Show us why we are wrong when we are wrong, show us why we are misinformed or have misunderstand something when we've got the wrong end of the stick.
Gee, it'd be wonderful if you actually meant that. However, obviously familiarity with the works of others who have demonstrated their understanding of the philosophy--you know, referencing recognized experts--doesn't work for you. This puts me at something of a disadvantage, because as a scientist my first instinct is to understand what previous researchers have done. And if someone else has made an argument, I see no reason to spend my time typing out that argument when I can reference it. But if you want a point-by-point rebuttal, I can oblige.

I certainly can not claim I am an expert of her ideology (I have read her works and listened to her speaking and have been discussing her ideology since I first came across it as a teenager - what can I say I've always read crap science fiction ) Surely that is a much more valuable use of all of our time?
Depends. Are you actually serious, or are you going to dismiss any reference to an expert other than myself as irrelevant? If it's the latter, I'm going to go ahead and not engage you in conversation on this topic, because you're obviously not willing to actually discuss it (I'm not saying that you necessarily are--I mean that as an "If X, then Y" statement).

stilicho said:
Which industry do you feel is entirely self-regulating?
:rolleyes: This is why discussing O'ism on these boards is usually a waste of time. NO ONE has EVER said ANY industry is ENTIRELY self-regulating. I said that some industries have introduced safety measures voluntarily. Automobiles are one example. Beer bottle manufacturing is another--once new tech took hold, child labor under horrendous conditions more or less stopped. But individual examples of self-regulation aren't good enough; you demand I answer a claim that was never made.

joesixpack said:
Pragmatism may refer to a specific school of thought, but there are other uses of the word.
I acknowledge that. That's why I mentioned specifically that we're discussing philosophy. It can be assumed, in a discussion of philosophy, that the name of a philosophical school of thought refers to that school of thought. The word "pragmatism" has been bastardized so much that you can't in other discussions, but if you use the names for philosophical schools of thought in discussions of philosophy and aren't referring to that philosophy it gets extremely confusing, often shutting down the conversation (and always resulting in these pointless sidebars). If someone wants to present a definition of "pragmatism" that is provisionally accepted on a non-precidential basis for this discussion, cool, I'll go with it--but until then, when discussing philosophy it only makes sense to assume that when one says "pragmatism" they refer to the philosophy, not some random other definition.
 
Not exactly. The public will take over the role of regulation of all non coercive acts. But they may not be involved with the use of force against force other than, as is now the case, in emergencies that call for self defense.

Yet the evidence shows that this didn't happen and that it does not happen and that what actually does happen is that what you describe as "coercion" is what is required to achieve the regulation that you seem to agree is required.
 
Capitalism does not alter the fact that negligent death and property damage are crimes. And regulation cannot stop plane crashes.

You may not have control of property you have not earned. But you may influence the handling of that property through persuasion, boycott, shunning, and such. And when property owners agree on how property should be regulated, they can lock it in with deed restrictions that require whatever plurality or unanimity they wish to modify them.

Cite?

We're not talking about stopping all plane crashes anyhow. We're talking about the Objectivist view that the intersection of the property rights of the owner with the rational choices of the customer would organically produce innovations such as flight paths, CVRs, FDRs, investigation processes, and so forth. Either that or that the rational customer would simply choose not to fly.

The evidence is that the owners and customers did not behave in the way the Objectivist thinks they would have without regulations.
 
I'd like them address the problem of children which she never really tackled and always hummed and ahhed when it was raised.

Terry Pratchett is near as far from Objectivist as you can get, but I think the approach of his Dwarfs could be easily adaptable:

When two dwarfs have a son*, until he is financially independent they keep a strict account of all expenses he incurs. Food, clothes, babysitting time, everything. Said son is not considered an adult member of dwarf society until he fully pays back the debt (with reasonable interest, we're not talking extortion here). At which point it's not uncommon for the parents to gift their son as much or more again, but it's the repayment that's the important bit.

*Even if their son is female. It's another dwarf thing.
 
....

:rolleyes: This is why discussing O'ism on these boards is usually a waste of time. NO ONE has EVER said ANY industry is ENTIRELY self-regulating. I said that some industries have introduced safety measures voluntarily. Automobiles are one example. Beer bottle manufacturing is another--once new tech took hold, child labor under horrendous conditions more or less stopped. But individual examples of self-regulation aren't good enough; you demand I answer a claim that was never made.

....

The automobile industry did absolutely nothing on its own. Go back to my example of the 1909 cross-country road race coinciding with the AYP exposition. The term "road race" can only loosely be used to describe the jumble of carriageways, stream fords, lumber-strewn paths, and alleys that passed for roads at that time.

Automobile pioneers were completely dependent on the government to provide roads or their invention would have been practically useless and they'd all have gone bankrupt.
 

Well, Ayn rand certainly heard of them.

"Now, I don't care to discuss the alleged complaints American Indians have against this country. I believe, with good reason, the most unsympathetic Hollywood portrayal of Indians and what they did to the white man. They had no right to a country merely because they were born here and then acted like savages. The white man did not conquer this country. And you're a racist if you object, because it means you believe that certain men are entitled to something because of their race. You believe that if someone is born in a magnificent country and doesn't know what to do with it, he still has a property right to it. He does not. Since the Indians did not have the concept of property or property rights--they didn't have a settled society, they had predominantly nomadic tribal "cultures"--they didn't have rights to the land, and there was no reason for anyone to grant them rights that they had not conceived of and were not using. It's wrong to attack a country that respects (or even tries to respect) individual rights. If you do, you're an aggressor and are morally wrong. But if a "country" does not protect rights--if a group of tribesmen are the slaves of their tribal chief--why should you respect the "rights" that they don't have or respect? The same is true for a dictatorship. The citizens in it have individual rights, but the country has no rights and so anyone has the right to invade it, because rights are not recognized in that country; and no individual or country can have its cake and eat it too--that is, you can't claim one should respect the "rights" of Indians, when they had no concept of rights and no respect for rights. But let's suppose they were all beautifully innocent savages--which they certainly were not. What were they fighting for, in opposing the white man on this continent? For their wish to continue a primitive existnece; for their "right" to keep part of the earth untouched--to keep everybody out so they could live like animals or cavemen. Any European who brought with him an element of civilization had the right to take over this continent, and it's great that some of them did. The racist Indians today--those who condemn America--do not respect individual rights." - Ayn Rand: Q and A session following her Address To The Graduating Class Of The United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, March 6, 1974
 

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