Author: Curt Doolittle

  • THE VIRTUE OF SUPERIORITY “….the Nietzschean argument [is] that the act of dem

    THE VIRTUE OF SUPERIORITY

    “….the Nietzschean argument [is] that the act of demanding recognition and achieving self-worth may be inherently aristocratic and inegalitarian insofar as this demand is driven by a high emotional desire to be recognized as a superior rather than as an equal. “

    (The fear of being left behind.)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 13:28:00 UTC

  • Back when I was in university, I did a little work with war games. It was very l

    Back when I was in university, I did a little work with war games. It was very little. But the experience was life altering.

    The absolute out-of-the-blue perfection of Putin’s invasion of Crimea is EXACTLY the kind of scenario that lands in your lap.

    I can pretty easily imagine what’s going on in the states right now.

    There is no compelling strategic interest in crimea.

    The Russians have a legitimate claim to the territory.

    We have used the same arguments in Panama and other places.

    BUT

    The west’s self image is predicated on being the police of self determination and the prohibitor of taking territory by force. The west loses, it loses it’s entire claim for moral legitimacy.

    It would have been easier for Putin to just engineer crimean annexation without troops. But you know, it’s BETTER FOR HIM to exercise muscle.

    GUTLESS MORON IN WASHINGTON

    This is why you don’t elect progressives to the presidency.

    They’re almost always confused. This president is not only confused. but lazy and stupid.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 12:56:00 UTC

  • GEEK ERA *STUDY* OF A WORK – HUNTING FOR NECESSARY ARGUMENTS. Reading is differe

    GEEK ERA *STUDY* OF A WORK – HUNTING FOR NECESSARY ARGUMENTS.

    Reading is different from studying. Studying means to me, not understanding the author’s arguments so much as understanding what his various arguments could imply.

    0) I read the TOC and random paragraphs in the interesting chapters.

    1) If it’s worth reading in depth, I read it once – really, just to understand the author’s theory.

    2) I convert it to text – usually from pdf to text file. A couple chapters at a time. I can almost always find it on line. If I can’t then I literally scan it a chapter at a time by hand.

    3) I edit the text file so that it’s suitable for spoken works.

    4) I convert it to computer generated speech.

    5) I listen to it, usually three or four times. Sometimes more.

    I ‘study’ the work until I can’t find a single idea in there left to benefit from.

    The truth is, that most authors’ theories can be deduced from the TOC and the book jacket. Just as most books are really better stated as a ‘paper’ than a book. They’re simple.

    A lot of work is predicated upon theories that are nonsensical. And I simply can’t put up with reading them. Others are biased (Fukuyama’s) but I can see through the bias. Some are simply wrong, or failed attempts as pseudoscience (Mises praxeology and Rothbard’s ethics), some are obscurantist pseudo-scientific masks for ignorance (Freud), some obscurantist and fraudulent (Heidegger), some mystical (religion), and as such, I consider most of them ‘evil’ and I just ignore them.

    History tends to be a little less victim of stupidity than philosophy. And as Durant said, the answers to questions of man are in history, not in philosophy. There are no answers there.

    Very few works are substantial enough (like Hayek’s) to actually STUDY. Some works are just so large (histories) that I find I have to listen to them a few times before I’ve exhausted the possibilities that the author has made possible.

    I guess one of the things that helps us study others is that, we write to understand and communicate to others our understanding. Books are experiments. I know some people seem to have much higher reading comprehension to me, because they’re trying to understand the author’s point of view. And I sort of don’t work that way. Instead, I simply am looking for theories. For arguments. Not justifications. But NECESSARY arguments.

    NECESSARY is very different from JUSTIFICATIONARY.

    And if you HUNT for NECESSARY arguments you will find very few of them. And when you do, it’s like finding buried treasure.

    There are very few necessary arguments.

    And fully informed, warrantied, voluntary exchange is one of them.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 12:47:00 UTC

  • RE-READ CHAPTERS 8+ IN RICARDO DUCHESNE’S “UNIQUENESS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION” L

    RE-READ CHAPTERS 8+ IN RICARDO DUCHESNE’S “UNIQUENESS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION” LAST NIGHT.

    I got most of it directly from Mallory and Gimbutas. But he has just tied a bow around all of it so well, that I gotta say he’s done the best work so far.

    (Renfrew on the other hand is f’king postmodern criminal.)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 12:00:00 UTC

  • DOES THE SKYSCRAPER HYPOTHESIS OF ECONOMICS APPLY TO THE WARSHIP AND WAR? I bet

    DOES THE SKYSCRAPER HYPOTHESIS OF ECONOMICS APPLY TO THE WARSHIP AND WAR?

    I bet it does. In fact I think Im sure it does.

    World’s largest aircraft unveiled and hailed ‘game changer’ – Telegraph http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/greenertransport/10667081/Worlds-largest-aircraft-unveiled-and-hailed-game-changer.html


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 10:10:00 UTC

  • I guess I’ve sort of turned critical rationalism on it’s head, and stated that s

    I guess I’ve sort of turned critical rationalism on it’s head, and stated that science is a more SIMPLE theoretical system that addresses but a subset of the requirements for theory, and that by extending the scientific method to the social sciences (morality) we make obvious that the scientific method is simply ‘the epistemic method’ and that it’s the only one available to us.

    Cool. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 09:45:00 UTC

  • THE CANONS OF THEORY (reposted for archival purposes) If you understand (a) the

    THE CANONS OF THEORY

    (reposted for archival purposes)

    If you understand (a) the scientific method, and (b) Critical Rationalism AND (c) economic epistemology and (d) a bit of cognitive science we can extend the ‘science of theories” as placing the following constraints on us:

    1) Explanatory Power (it survives as a general rule in a multitude of examples – theory means ‘general rule’) +

    2) Testable : Verifiability + Falsifiability (we can think of multiple examples where we can verify it, and it further survives contradiction by a multitude of examples) +

    3) Compactness (it is insulated from obscurantism and error) +

    4) Parsimony (it is insulated from obscurantism an error by a minimum of dependencies) +

    5) Empirical (observable, perceptible – even if only through instrumentation, such as tools or prices.) +

    6) Constructable (can be stated as a sequence of observable human actions – ie: it’s possible or ‘real’) +

    7) Rational (incentives – once reduced to statements of construction it each of which is open to sympathetic testing, we can directly perceive the rationality of any incentive.) This is the meaning of Praxeology that Mises mistook for the a-priori.

    In the case of Human Action the Empirical (observable) requirement, places the constraint on any theory that at all states of a sequence of actions, the incentives of the actors are rational.

    This definition of THEORY is the modification to the scientific method that I’ve added to Propertarianism.

    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 09:42:00 UTC

  • Obama is the worst president in American history – even worse than Carter

    Obama is the worst president in American history – even worse than Carter.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 08:32:00 UTC

  • CONFUSIONS (CRITICISM) [QUOTE]It is not, as you claim a “competing theory of jus

    http://vulgarlibertarians.com/against-the-basic-income-guarantee-2/MATT’S CONFUSIONS (CRITICISM)

    [QUOTE]It is not, as you claim a “competing theory of justice” to the libertarian one. It is a theory of human welfare. I invoke it not to challenge the libertarian theory of justice, but as way of providing some content to the idea that the government should ensure that nobody is so harmed by its acts of injustice that they are unable to live a minimally decent life. There’s no dishonesty here on my part. Just an apparent confusion on yours. – Matt Zwolinski [/QUOTE]

    MATT’S CONFUSIONS

    1. Yes it is Matt. Your Rawlsian restatement is precisely a competing theory of justice. The libertarian theory of justice expressly PROHIBITS statements on ends, stating that the ONLY justice is voluntary exchange.

    2. There is only one POSSIBLE universal moral statement : voluntary cooperation for mutual gain in that which can be acquired – from the most concrete to the most experiential. And its corollary: the prohibition on parasitism in all it’s forms (criminal, unethical, immoral, conspiratorial action) the most common of which is free riding.

    3. Therefore the ONLY POSSIBLE moral institutions that we can create are those that extend the opportunities for voluntary exchange – constantly expanding our cooperation on means, and letting catallaxy determine SCIENTIFICALLY through EXPERIMENTAL TRIAL AND ERROR, the most desirable ends.

    [QUOTE]There is no “issue of collective obligations” here. A criminal never gains the right to rob others to pay his debts. That would only create more victims who must then be compensated. Calling such further theft “morally required” is just amazing.– JesseForgoine[/QUOTE]

    MATTS CONFUSIONS

    1. No. A corporation that we shall call ‘the government’ can never incur debts on the actions of individuals in its employ – especially if there are no individuals in its employ.

    2. Yes. A corporation that we shall call ‘the government’ can incur debts on the actions of the polity as collectively exercised by vote.

    3. Even if exercised by vote (of shareholder/citizens), the fees should be paid exclusively by those who mandated it (voted in favor of or against, the action). This eliminates moral hazard.

    4. The libertarian solution to this problem is to require prosecutors to carry malfeasance insurance. This insurance would be very high. And the insurance companies would do a far better job of policing justice than does justice itself – (spoken as a one-time justice department employee.)

    So, no, MATT IS CONFUSED as we can see from his initial proposition that some arbitrary statement of welfare determined by some arbitrary person or group, rather than scientifically determined by the market, under the assumption that liberty and voluntary cooperation – cooperation on means – is the optimum human welfare, versus the involuntary, forcible extraction of rents to achieve a messianic, unscientific (foolhardy) ‘end’ defined spuriously as ‘welfare’.

    SOLVING MATT’S CONFUSION

    I’ve argued elsewhere that the (rothbardian) libertarian assumption that individuals should pay the high cost of respecting property rights, forgoing free riding, and forgoing demand for state intervention, and forgoing rents, is a violation of property rights.

    When our aristocratic egalitarian ethic (liberty) evolved in prehistory, it was because we have almost all been private property owners, and heads of families. We were marginally indifferent in our production. Heroism (raiding and trading) were the only ways of dramatically increasing one’s wealth relative to the productivity of the land that bound all others.

    But under industrial consumer capitalism, our labors are no longer of much value to the organization of production. In fact, increasingly, smaller numbers of people will be required to organize production. The current trend will continue, and we can’t think of a logical reason why it wouldn’t.

    Therefore at present, more than a third of people are either present in the work force, or available to the work force, but unskilled and incapable of using the tools necessary to participate in the art of the production of goods and services.

    So Keynesian models that attempt to reach full employment are little more than a logical error.

    However, we are still equally capable of performing the work of constructing the normative commons that makes organizing, executing and distributing production, possible at low transaction cost.

    As such, it is only right and just that we compensate people for respect of property rights, and policing the prohibition on parasitism i all its forms that creates the high trust necessary for us to conduct highly productive efforts in every niche possible.

    So my argument, in Propertarianism, is that among the logical errors of the enlightenment were (a) that we were equally capable of participation in production (b) that labor was the primary problem of production when in fact, voluntarily organizing production through natural incentives was the primary problem (c) that because of these errors we assumed that there was no cost to respecting prohibitions on parasitism – when logically it is a very high cost for the unproductive to respect prohibitions on parasitism (free riding, criminal, unethical, immoral and conspiratorial behavior.).

    So it is a violation of property rights NOT to pay people to police the normative commons (and physical commons for that matter) and yet expect them to refrain from engaging in parasitism – the most dangerous parasitism being their natural demand for the state as a vehicle for extracting rents.

    The question is whether participation in the market itself is sufficient compensation for that respect. Whereas that’s non logical since those without a way to obtain money cannot participate in the market.

    DESTROY THE STATE

    Pay people to respect property rights. Dont’ pay people who don’t. If you are ‘hired’ to respect property rights you get paid to do it, and you lose your job if you don’t. If you’re hired for this job you can get an employment contract. Pay unproductive people to share the interests of the productive people in eliminating immoral conspiratorial activity (the state), in favor of moral cooperative activity (property rights).

    It is better to fight for the attention of consumers than it is to fight the state.

    MATT ZWOLINSKI

    Matt is, unfortunately, a product of his environment. And he is confused about the cause of moral sentiments. Actually he’s confused about a lot of things. But that is why we have the BHL’s – because they have no rational arguments, only moral sentiments defended by weak attempts at amateurish emotional, non rational, unscientific

    WHY HOSTILITY

    The source of liberty is the organized application of violence by a diligent minority to suppress parasitic free riding so that only voluntary cooperation remains.

    If we want our liberty we must not only provide institutional solutions, but we must continue the long term fight against unscientific nonsense in various pseudo-moral, pseudo-rational and pseudo-scientific forms.

    And the BHL’s are yet another form of emotional mysticism, distracting us from discovering and obtaining the liberty that our ancestors created, and that we have incrementally lost.

    Nice people are a nice thing to share space with. However, nice people who are merely nice, but also WRONG, are just damaging to mankind. Rawls was damaging. And the BHL’s are just adding artificial flavoring to the mix.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-03-01 08:25:00 UTC

  • BANKING IN UKRAINE Ok, so I pretty much can’t get cash here. We managed to get a

    BANKING IN UKRAINE

    Ok, so I pretty much can’t get cash here. We managed to get a little earlier this week. But the banks don’t have cash.. And they have gone from working with any other foreign bank for a fee, only helping their own customers. More that 20% of bank deposits have now been drawn down. And the currency has gone from 8.1 to 11.x per dollar this week.

    We cannot continue to do business here if we cannot move money in and out of the country.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-02-28 11:37:00 UTC