Author: Curt Doolittle

  • You know, I don’t really pay much attention to philosophers outside of economics

    You know, I don’t really pay much attention to philosophers outside of economics and politics any longer. But I have to give Rorty another go. Just to see if I’m missing something of value. Every time I re-read a great author I get something new. I can re-read a work by Mises or Hayek a half-dozen times before I feel that I’m not getting something new from it.

    My work with Propertarianism assumes that Rorty is right. But I don’t really care to further justify why he’s right (that the discipline of philosophy – epistemology – has been a failure.) It’s pretty obvious that science has solved the problem and will continue to do so. It’s pretty obvious that academic philosophy has become immaterial to society.

    This is somewhat odd, because, at least until recently, philosophy has effectively been the religion of our upper classes since ancient greece. (Which is why its in the religion section of the book store. 🙂

    But the art of philosophy: which is to reorganize and reorder our perceptions of causal relations, and the values that we should attach to those causal relations, is still a worthy discipline. We are too reliant on norms and flights of fantasy about ourselves not to have philosophy at our disposal.

    And really, it is far better to conduct our political warfare in philosophical debates than it is to in religious conflict, or open war and revolution.

    What I do care about, is that **the mind is a property engine**. Saying it’s a “difference engine” is kind of cute, and politically correct. But the differences it calculates are differences in property. If property is to be understood in it’s full scope: as humans actually use it. Rather than the narrow legal or philosophical variants of private property.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-22 11:15:00 UTC

  • NIGHT LIFE IN KIEV So, we kind of overdid it since the first of the year. And I’

    NIGHT LIFE IN KIEV

    So, we kind of overdid it since the first of the year. And I’ve been sick now for almost three weeks with one cold or another – probably my body rebelling. So, for the past week or so we’ve been trying to be good guys and keep our noses to the grindstone. (There is a Russian phrase that goes something like ‘keep working while the sun is up’. And we’ve been doing that and more. Usually till ten at night.)

    This means, however, that my posts are not anywhere near as interesting. 🙂 And I don’t have any fun photos to share.

    But luck is with us. It’s Friday. We’re invited to the anniversary party at our favorite local restaurant and pub, and they’ve reserved a table for us. (Thanks to Kirill and Alex for flirting with the girls who work there, I’m sure. It wasn’t me this time. I flirt with almost everyone. But not everyone there for some reason.)

    So maybe we will be rescued from our sobriety today. 🙂 At least everyone else will be. I’m still too iffy to celebrate much.

    I’ll just have to cheer everyone else on. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-22 10:34:00 UTC

  • I’M SURE PROFESSIONAL ACADEMICS KNOW THIS BUT… Does anyone actually READ the p

    I’M SURE PROFESSIONAL ACADEMICS KNOW THIS BUT…

    Does anyone actually READ the papers and books that they cite?

    (Exasperated.)


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-22 10:25:00 UTC

  • ARE OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP? And an aside on the morality of business

    http://www.quora.com/Entrepreneurship/What-is-the-most-effective-yet-efficient-way-to-get-rich-2/answer/Reem-Yared/comment/1778627?srid=u4Qv&share=1WHERE ARE OPPORTUNITIES FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP?

    And an aside on the morality of business.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-22 00:37:00 UTC

  • PAINFUL TRUTH. IT’S NOT RACISM. IT’S REALITY

    PAINFUL TRUTH. IT’S NOT RACISM. IT’S REALITY.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-20 23:27:00 UTC

  • PAJAMA PARTY? No kidding. Today, two women who barely know me invited me to a pa

    PAJAMA PARTY?

    No kidding. Today, two women who barely know me invited me to a pajama party. (!?)

    Is this really my life?

    I love this country. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-20 14:35:00 UTC

  • LIBERTY IS NOT A PACIFIST PURSUIT I’m not sure but I suspect that the disconnect

    LIBERTY IS NOT A PACIFIST PURSUIT

    I’m not sure but I suspect that the disconnect between liberty and violence was initiated FIRST by the enlightenment need to justify the taking of power from the landed nobility, and SECOND, by the need for women to justify obtaining the right to vote.

    (Reposted from another comment that I’ve posted elsewhere:)

    Liberty isnt’ ‘inherent’. Liberty is created by force and held by force. And no people without an armed militia to obtain and hold liberty by violence has even had liberty.

    Property is ‘inherent’ in the sense that it’s necessary for complex economic production, and it’s ‘inherent’ in that the mind is organized to make use of it.

    But liberty, which is defined as the universal prohibition on the involuntary transfer of property, is a construct made by and held by the will to use violence. Just as every other form of property is made by and held by the will to use violence.

    Liberty, as in, private property, is unnatural to man. That’s why it doesn’t exist outside of a few cases in western history. Those who are unproductive will always make claims against the productive by claiming that their resources or their labors are a commons.

    Liberty has nothing to do with pacifism. Liberty produces peace because conflict must be resolved in the market, rather than by fraud or violence.

    Pacifist libertarianism is not only illogical, and counter to the evidence, but it’s suicidal.

    Don’t buy into the christian nonsense in libertarian theory. Or rothbard’s jewish nonsense. Both are appeals by the week to a non-existant divinity.

    Liberty is created by man. Liberty is a product of the application of violence. It always has been and it always will be.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-20 11:38:00 UTC

  • Property: “..the three [necessary] elements of private property are: (1) exclusi

    http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2013/02/armen-alchian.htmlPrivate Property: “..the three [necessary] elements of private property are:

    (1) exclusivity of rights to choose the use of a resource,

    (2) exclusivity of rights to the services of a resource, and

    (3) rights to exchange the resource at mutually agreeable terms.”

    (We libertarians tend to say that Private property is a monopoly on the use of the self, those things that are homesteaded, or which are obtained by voluntary exchange.)

    The Third Law of Demand: (Shipping Out The Good Apples): “…when the prices of two substitute goods, such as high and low grades of the same product, are both increased by a fixed per-unit amount such as a transportation cost or a lump-sum tax, consumption will shift toward the higher-grade product. This is true because the added per-unit amount decreases the relative price of the higher-grade product.”

    (For those who don’t know the three laws of Demand, here are 1 and 2.)

    The Second Law Of Demand: (Price Elasticity Over Time) “…demand is more responsive to price in the long run than in the short run.”

    The First Law Of Demand: (Supply vs Demand) : “..all else being equal, as the price of a product increases, a lower quantity will be demanded; likewise, as the price of a product decreases, a higher quantity will be demanded.”


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-20 02:32:00 UTC

  • MUCH MEDICINE?

    http://www.cato-unbound.org/2007/09/10/robin-hanson/cut-medicine-in-half/TOO MUCH MEDICINE?


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-18 16:15:00 UTC

  • GIVING BIRTH TO SOFTWARE It’s so rewarding. It’s almost like the real thing. Or.

    GIVING BIRTH TO SOFTWARE

    It’s so rewarding. It’s almost like the real thing. Or. Well. It’s actually kind of better in a way. Without all those bodily fluids, and all. 😉

    No screen shots yet. Nope. Not. Gonna. Happen. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2013-02-18 13:23:00 UTC