bmacwilliam

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Everything posted by bmacwilliam

  1. Never claimed this. You said "Just try and find situations in which you are absolutely sure that you can't get caught" What I mean is, certaintly of not getting caught is not required. It doesn't matter. Risk can be present and still be rational. Risk is not sufficient for irrationality. How many people living on welfare do you know? I know a couple, none of them gain from it in any meaningful sense of the word. In fact it's destroying their lives. I can't see what *I* could gain by the undeserved. For sure, those people who cannot work for disability reasons certainly gain. Others, with differing morality that, according to you or me, probably should be working, would nevertheless claim that they gain. You're so sure you can dismiss this as "imagined" gain, somehow not worthy of 'real' gain? Well then does this mean necessarily that 1) It is impossible for you to ever gain thusly because you can't see it now? and 2) This state of affairs applies to all? Bob
  2. Exactly. Your gain could be very different from mine. Well, what about the contractor who morally opposes unions, who nevertheless does their office renovation for good money. He feels a little wrong about it (helping a group he despises), but should he not do it? Maybe... Is it irrational for him to do it? Proves lack of self-esteem? Don't think so. What if his kid needs braces (or food for that matter). Irrational now?? A million examples. If the "immoral is the irrational" is your claim, you must provide an argument for this. You must show how this is always so. Bob
  3. Well, good questions. "I think it is irrational because morality is a key to happiness" Perhaps, but your morality is not a key to my happiness. " If you disregard your own morals, you're hurting yourself more than anyone else..." That's an empirical question if it is to be rational. Small moral transgression with relatively large gain?? Not so simple. Bob
  4. Maybe you should try it out, Bob. Just try and find situations in which you are absolutely sure that you can't get caught and take money that isn't yours. In the meantime, I'll work on being a better professional. In 3 decades we talk again and see how this worked out for us and whose choices were deemed more rational by reality. I can't see what you can gain from the undeserved. If you disagree here, you really should consider a criminal career. I will not insult you by telling you not to become a criminal for any reason other than selfishness. There's lots of people here on OL who disagree with me on that point and believe you should play nice for the sake of others. You don't have to be 'absolutely sure' at all, of anything, to make perfectly rational decisions. The point is not morality, the point is the claim of unbreakable connection between morality and rationality. "I can't see what you can gain from the undeserved." I do not believe that you believe this - seriously. We both know that welfare is largely or entirely undeserved. To say people don't gain from it though is a bold-faced denial of reality if I've ever seen it. Ludicrous. Bob
  5. "arrogant proposition" "top of your nothing hill" "don't yet deserve a conversation" Your apoplectic emotional responses don't even begin to answer what is a rather simple question addressing a quite common family of decisions people have to make every day. I use an extreme example for clarity, but the general 'family' of decisions includes a huge variety of situations where there is combination of low risk, high reward, but moral 'problems'. I am not the one claiming the connection between moral and rational. I see a rather obvious disconnect and it's up to the positive 'claimer' to explain why there is irrationality here, not immorality. All you've said is that it "feels like such an immoral thing to do, that it MUST be irrational too!!". No, morality here is offside/irrelevant because I agree with you. I'm only questioning the rationality. It needs to be proven irrational in a coherent/non-emotional, dare I say 'rational' way. "everything costs something" Sure, so we do a cost-benefit analysis? "profit and loss" Will this analysis lead to the irrational? "risk" is this the key factor? No, nada, nope. Maybe it's irrational because it 'feels' so wrong that it has to be? Sorry, not good enough... Bob
  6. That disagreement of ours is the fundamental one in a lot of questions I believe. You see a bag of money fall off a truck. You are sure nobody is around to see you take it. You take it. Moral? - no, that's easy. Irrational? - never heard an argument that makes sense why this is irrational. Bob Maybe that's your money and you're chasing robbers. Maybe it's the old Soviet Union and it's a government truck and friends and relatives have been sent to the Gulag. These contextless examples are worthless except for me to point out the lack of context. --Brant Fine, the Bank's money. As Ayn Rand once asked Leonard Peikoff: "Can't you think in principles?" Now that you are trying to (feebly) establish a context for your example, you fail to acknowledge explicitly what you do implicitly: the original proposition--yours--is irrational, which is why it cannot be answered rationally on its own merits or terms. --Brant Why is it irrational for me to take something that is not mine if I calculate the risk is low and the reward high? I can make an argument for the immoral, but not for the irrational. How on earth is this proposition fundamentally irrational? bob
  7. You don't understand why a taking a 1% chance of getting killed is stupid? More to the point, you don't understand the difference between what's rational for a mangy dog scrounging for scraps in an alley from what is rational for a human being? Self-esteem -> self-interest -> ego -> understanding Man's nature -> principles -> reason -> benevolent universe -> thriving -> Self-esteem -> ... "Don't mistake the finger pointing at the moon for the moon" -Bruce Lee "You don't understand why a taking a 1% chance of getting killed is stupid?" Nope, I don't. Not at all. You can't base rationality on risk. Many risks are taken willingly, with money and with life and limb all the time and are perfectly rational. It would never be rational for join a army or accept any dangerous job for that matter. Risk doesn't cut it. Sometimes risk is perfectly rational - 1% or much more sometimes. Bob
  8. That disagreement of ours is the fundamental one in a lot of questions I believe. You see a bag of money fall off a truck. You are sure nobody is around to see you take it. You take it. Moral? - no, that's easy. Irrational? - never heard an argument that makes sense why this is irrational. Bob You assume persons with no egos and no values. Even so, a "bag of money" is nothing in the context of a useful life. Even if you had a one in a hundred chance of being caught it's like playing on the freeway: simply stupid. Go ahead. Try to explain why this is irrational. Not immoral. Why is it stupid? But more importantly, why is it irrational? Bob
  9. That disagreement of ours is the fundamental one in a lot of questions I believe. You see a bag of money fall off a truck. You are sure nobody is around to see you take it. You take it. Moral? - no, that's easy. Irrational? - never heard an argument that makes sense why this is irrational. Bob Maybe that's your money and you're chasing robbers. Maybe it's the old Soviet Union and it's a government truck and friends and relatives have been sent to the Gulag. These contextless examples are worthless except for me to point out the lack of context. --Brant Fine, the Bank's money.
  10. That disagreement of ours is the fundamental one in a lot of questions I believe. You see a bag of money fall off a truck. You are sure nobody is around to see you take it. You take it. Moral? - no, that's easy. Irrational? - never heard an argument that makes sense why this is irrational. Bob
  11. No way. Castro, Stalin and others succeeded not because of luck, but because they were smart, cold, calculating, selfish, rational monsters. Hence the problem. Bob And they succeeded in what, BTW? It's "rational" to be a monster? It was "rational" to invade Russia? It was "rational" to sacrifice whole armies, which was a Hitler specialty? It was "rational" to induce the mass starvation of millions? Etc. Oh, sure, it was "rational," "if," "if," "if." --Brant Hitler wasn't on my list. He ultimately lost. My point is though that Stalin and Castro were highly self-interested and calculating people who were not ultimately destroyed by their actions. Quite the opposite actually, they prospered by them. So, I think there needs to be a better argument for non-initiation of force other than it destroys one's life or self-esteem or whatever. That doesn't cut it for me. You said in another post that 'qua man' is "best is an individual matter". Yes, I see it that way too but Rand didn't. If she would have said this much then I wouldn't be so hostile to her views. You also (very astutely IMHO) said "The "proof" is in the politics informing the ethics to some extent" Yes, I see it to a rather large extent and I don't like it because I think she would never have admitted this in a million years. As well, I don't think this is a "honest" place to start, or at least it's not honest when she explicitly says she starts with other premises. Bob
  12. No way. Castro, Stalin and others succeeded not because of luck, but because they were smart, cold, calculating, selfish, rational monsters. Hence the problem. Bob
  13. Okay, pull out the ethics. What are you going to put back in? --Brant Well, if I knew that, I'd be a philosopher (and broke and living in my parent's basement). Bob Man qua cat? --Brant Well, the question is what is the proof, or even the standard of proof to determine which 'man qua man' is best? That's the problem. IMHO, Rand does not offer any convincing argument for her version. Bob
  14. Okay, pull out the ethics. What are you going to put back in? --Brant Well, if I knew that, I'd be a philosopher (and broke and living in my parent's basement). Bob
  15. Although I don't share completely this outlook, my biggest objection to this is simply that Rand's ethics are inconsistent. Is your life (even qua man as problematic as that is) your standard of value - or not? What about when it violates another's property rights? I understand the objection - that stealing for example doesn't pass the 'qua man' test, but that is a very weak argument. Bob
  16. How is is short-sighted? Stalin? Castro? It works for many people for their entire lives. Has to be a better reason than 'short-sighted'. Bob
  17. My problems are not with the concepts of self-interest, or capitilism, or rationality etc. My problems are with Rand's derivations through her ethics. I just don't think any of it holds up to the slightest scrutiny. Bob
  18. Sure is. However, if you have an additional neuron available to process this 'idea', it is also one of the easiest ideas to use to expose Objectivism's nonsense. She obviously does not mean 'simple existence' so there's an implied judgment of what is "proper". What is right or proper or ethical cannot be simply defined as that which promotes one's life "qua man". "qua man" has the "proper" idea already in it. This logic is trivially circular. Or, the alternative that "right" or "proper" then must at least sometimes mean things that are not life promoting. Now we clearly have a big problem with "life as the standard of value" assertion. Obviously, this "proper" fails that test. Seems rather obvious that Rand's ethics are quite transparently false. Bob
  19. Oh crap is right. Bob, I've been saying this kind of stuff way before I ever read anything by you. It's all on record. This is the crap I don't like from you. Along with the strawmen arguments. Funny how you only just now noticed my position. I thought you had been reading my stuff for some time. It's not like there's a lack of my posts to read that deal with this... Michael The obvious fact that you are so hostile, yet agree almost entirely with what I'm saying is your problem, not mine. My strawmen are your strawmen, but the reality is that the straw is only in your mind. The fact that you don't conclude that your (and my) position essentially guts Objectivism of its key tenets is a contradiction you have to deal with. The fact that you agree with me almost completely, but cannot take that final step speaks to an emotional commitment, not a rational one. But hey, I'll let the reader decide if your posts are emotional or not. Now isn't that charitable of me? Bob
  20. Orrrrllllllly? Correct, that's the point that you said I missed (again). Contradictions don't help your argument, especially contradictions in the same post. Sure, and that's why it's wrong/fallacious. Let's set aside the fallacy just for a second, and look at this another way. Rand... BobI notice that a. you pretend not to know what "per se" indicates. b. you have conveniently split apart my two sentences that begin with "this is" (ie, this was not...and, this was an...), as if they are not connected. c. Realising that you weren't going anyway with your "fallacy" attack, you then introduce "wrong/fallacious", and quickly move on to "Let's leave aside the fallacy just for a second..." No "contradiction" exists in my argument right through this thread: "per se", means that IN THIS CASE, my argument is not purely against altruism, but against the compatibility of it, and romantic love. I've consistently spelled out my rejection of altruism. Here, is no different. You reinforce your dishonest attempt, by quoting two sentences out of context with each other. Putting up a smoke-screen for your hasty retreat, your only recourse is then a general and meaningless tirade against Objectivist ethics. Blah, blah. So you don't agree? - too bad. Find your adrenalin fix with someone else. I can handle anything - but not deliberate dishonesty.. Tony Dishonesty now? That's a sure sign you've got nothing left. "Realising that you weren't going anyway with your "fallacy" attack, you then introduce "wrong/fallacious", and quickly move on to "Let's leave aside the fallacy just for a second..." That's called an additional item. Of course you knew that, but call me dishonest. Again, quite nicely Randian. "tirade against Objectivist ethics." Uhhh... Yeah... It's nonsense. That's what I've been sayin'. Are you paying attention here?? Bob
  21. I don't think so. Even mathematically. Pick an attribute to maximize (profit, money/price are easy examples). Even achievement works but is admittedly less precise, but I think the principle applies. There will be a maximum attained at some combination of individual oriented actions and dependency needs somewhere in the middle ground area. Price a good too high, no customers, no profit. Too low, no profit either. Somewhere in the middle a max profit point exists. Bob
  22. I think Michael is correct... Oh crap...did I write that??? Sumbitch... But anyway, he really is correct, and I agree quite strongly with the following: "Instead of positing the human nature distinction you are mulling over as either-or (i.e., man is either all individual or all social), I did the common sense thing and decided that people consisted of both." Yep. "I use 20% social and 80% individual as the make-up of human nature to help guide my own thinking and living as an individual." Sounds reasonable. "Monster companies like Facebook and Twitter are built solely on supplying satisfaction for that social urge." Nice observation. "I cannot escape the conclusion that if the field of ethics is to be based on human nature, we have to include the social part." Like, totally! You're right, I see now I've convinced nobody !! "This is a big issue and it does not necessarily negate Objectivism." D'oh!!!!!!!! Besides this statement sliding dangerously close to a contradiction on its face, I don't get it. I've tried to get it, but my tiny little mind just can't grasp this last part. There must be some deep meaning in there or something, but it escapes me. But how do you think Rand herself might address this??? Bob
  23. Orrrrllllllly? Correct, that's the point that you said I missed (again). Contradictions don't help your argument, especially contradictions in the same post. Sure, and that's why it's wrong/fallacious. Let's set aside the fallacy just for a second, and look at this another way. Rand uses such an ridiculously extreme definition of altruism (cue Michael to go apoplectic because he won't be able to parse anything beyond this) that is so very very far removed the common use of the term to argue in support her version of 'Rational Selfishness'. Then, in a rather sneaky (ok, not that sneaky, but obviously sneaky enough for many) way, she pulls the bait and switch to argue against any altruism or any transfer of resources whatsoever (back to the mainstream altruism definition now - the 'switch') from producers to the leeches. This may be smart (I don't think so really), and it is certainly devious and manipulative. Why did you and so many others get sucked into this rather obvious nonsense? I don't really know, but its unfortunate. While I think the fallacy is obvious, the bait and switch even more clear, if that's even possible. Bob
  24. I guess you're just to lazy to read the posts regarding why the argument is fallacious. I understand. I'm too lazy to repeat it here. Have fun playing in your straw trying to get the horse to drink it, or whatever nonsensical point you're trying to make. God forbid you'd ever even attempt to directly address a point. Don't start now though, that would be disappointing. Bob
  25. "I made a statement of Objectivist principle" Yes you did, you towed the party line. That's why I made the Randian remark. And yes this Objectivist principle is indeed clearly, obviously, and quite trivially fallacious. Yes, I see a fallacy here and I've outlined why. "According to (O'ist) rational selfishness, where there is love, there is no altruism; where there's altruism, there can be no love." This is fallacious. In this form, the argument is trivially circular. God exists. How do you know? Because the Bible tells me that. Why should I believe what the Bible says? Because the Bible was written by God. See how the conclusion (God exists) is included in the premise (Bible written by God). Sometimes this can be sneakier. Rand was good at this. In the other forms, the more detailed Objectivist forms, the "no altruism" idea is contained in the premise(s). Look...it...up... It's called "Begging the question" or "Petitio principii". You cannot use "Rational selfishness" as an argument against altruism because the argument against altruism is contained in the "Rational selfishness" concept(s). Bob