Form: Mini Essay

  • But Why Are Austrians Draw To The Austrian Model?

    (not profound, but almost) (good Austrian argumentative material) I need to update Peter Boettke’s definition of Austrian Economics to include the reasons WHY certain groups of people are morally and intellectual attracted to the Austrian model, rather than just the methodological differences: 1) The testability of incentives as rational 2) The visibility of voluntary versus involuntary transfers 3) The visibility of the redistribution of risk to entrepreneurs, and the impact on entrepreneurial incentives. 4) The visibility of the impact on opportunity costs. 5) The visibility of the cumulative effect on opportunity costs. 6) The visibility of decline in linguistic, rational, social, moral, mythological, and institutional capital. The longer your time preference the higher the cost of the portfolio of opportunity costs. (I should diagram this out a bit.) It was very frustrating to read the number articles of late that just put us outside the consensus, and paint us as extremists. I mean, I know that *I* agree with the mainstream: they affect what they measure. They achieve their short term objectives. But I disagree with the mainstream that the accumulation of externalities is inferior to the short term benefits. I don’t think honest progressives like Karl Smith disagree that there may be a cumulative effect of continuous distortion of the monetary system. I think they just feel that the moral good in the short term is greater than the risk and damage in the long. Now, I was right in my prediction, and Paul Krugman was wrong, that voters would absolutely NOT tolerate what they viewed was immoral behavior; and that the Germans would simply adjust Europe slowly rather than allow ‘immoral’ redistribution, or financially expensive adjustments to occur rapidly. Politics is a moral, not empirical exercise. (See my post on Paul Krugman’s Moral Blindness). And he couldn’t grasp that. The first problem of politics may be the suppression of violence. But the SECOND problem of politics, is the suppression of free riding. It doesn’t matter the size of the group, whether tribe or nation. Now, just because we are too unsophisticated to measure the impact on moral, social, calculative-coordinative, and institutional capital except in the longer term, because we don’t know how to price it, doesn’t mean that that stock of capital, priced or not, doesn’t increase or decrease. Or that we do not depend on that stock of capital as much or more than any other. So, given that the math in economics isn’t really all that challenging (knowing which data to pull, and its construction is), it’s not that Austrians are afraid of empirical work. (Although we get more nuts and fruits because we lack that filtration system). Its that what we care to measure doesn’t leave behind a record of prices. And opportunity costs dont create a record of prices. Furthermore, the use of large scale aggregates, launders all causality from the analysis. And in our view of the world, basing policy on these aggregates, unless it is extremely TACTICAL and LOCAL (loans, and debt forgiveness), pays the vast majority of attention is to that which matters very little, and ignores that which matters very much. We can spend down social and moral capital, just as we can spend down environmental capital, but we must give these things a few generations to recover. We have been spending it down for over fifty years. Probably a century as of 2014. I think our side does disagree with the fact that ‘it’s all demand’. And I am not certain that we are right. I’m certain that there are extremely negative consequences for stimulating demand unless it’s given directly to consumers as cash by bypassing the financial system. But the cumulative effect on the quality of goods and services still appears to diminish – although proving that’s a very hard task of teasing signal from noise. The stock of capital that troubles me most, because of the Marxist, Freudian, Postmodern, and Feminist attacks on the meaning of terms via obscurant language, is the stock of metaphysical bias embedded in the language. It’s eroded pretty consistently since the first world war. Even if our scientific language (nod to Flynn) is increasing, our stock of moral capital in the language is declining rapidly. This stock is what the Postmoderns attempt to ‘steal’ from the commons. And they are very good at stealing. So, in POLITICAL ECONOMY I tend to look at our biases as a division of knowledge and labor along time preferences. With Austrians and conservatives with very long time preference (aristocrats) and common people with shorter time preferences, and most progressives simply displaying conspicuous consumption as a means of demonstrating status. I don’t really care about the mathematical and procedural Platonists. They’re everywhere. But that’s an entirely different battle. Austrian Economics isn’t a debate over method. Thats a nonsensical sideshow. It’s a debate over priorities. Our methods are different because our TIME PREFERENCE is different – and we don’t have the LUXURY of taking the EASY way out, because our stock of preferred capital isn’t PRICED. It’s just HARDER to do what we do. That is how we must position it. And with that positioning we wipe out the influence of the … ahem, silly ideological pseudo-Austrians bent on stealing our name and identity. That’s my mission with reforming libertarianism anyway. Cheers Curt Doolittle

  • But Why Are Austrians Draw To The Austrian Model?

    (not profound, but almost) (good Austrian argumentative material) I need to update Peter Boettke’s definition of Austrian Economics to include the reasons WHY certain groups of people are morally and intellectual attracted to the Austrian model, rather than just the methodological differences: 1) The testability of incentives as rational 2) The visibility of voluntary versus involuntary transfers 3) The visibility of the redistribution of risk to entrepreneurs, and the impact on entrepreneurial incentives. 4) The visibility of the impact on opportunity costs. 5) The visibility of the cumulative effect on opportunity costs. 6) The visibility of decline in linguistic, rational, social, moral, mythological, and institutional capital. The longer your time preference the higher the cost of the portfolio of opportunity costs. (I should diagram this out a bit.) It was very frustrating to read the number articles of late that just put us outside the consensus, and paint us as extremists. I mean, I know that *I* agree with the mainstream: they affect what they measure. They achieve their short term objectives. But I disagree with the mainstream that the accumulation of externalities is inferior to the short term benefits. I don’t think honest progressives like Karl Smith disagree that there may be a cumulative effect of continuous distortion of the monetary system. I think they just feel that the moral good in the short term is greater than the risk and damage in the long. Now, I was right in my prediction, and Paul Krugman was wrong, that voters would absolutely NOT tolerate what they viewed was immoral behavior; and that the Germans would simply adjust Europe slowly rather than allow ‘immoral’ redistribution, or financially expensive adjustments to occur rapidly. Politics is a moral, not empirical exercise. (See my post on Paul Krugman’s Moral Blindness). And he couldn’t grasp that. The first problem of politics may be the suppression of violence. But the SECOND problem of politics, is the suppression of free riding. It doesn’t matter the size of the group, whether tribe or nation. Now, just because we are too unsophisticated to measure the impact on moral, social, calculative-coordinative, and institutional capital except in the longer term, because we don’t know how to price it, doesn’t mean that that stock of capital, priced or not, doesn’t increase or decrease. Or that we do not depend on that stock of capital as much or more than any other. So, given that the math in economics isn’t really all that challenging (knowing which data to pull, and its construction is), it’s not that Austrians are afraid of empirical work. (Although we get more nuts and fruits because we lack that filtration system). Its that what we care to measure doesn’t leave behind a record of prices. And opportunity costs dont create a record of prices. Furthermore, the use of large scale aggregates, launders all causality from the analysis. And in our view of the world, basing policy on these aggregates, unless it is extremely TACTICAL and LOCAL (loans, and debt forgiveness), pays the vast majority of attention is to that which matters very little, and ignores that which matters very much. We can spend down social and moral capital, just as we can spend down environmental capital, but we must give these things a few generations to recover. We have been spending it down for over fifty years. Probably a century as of 2014. I think our side does disagree with the fact that ‘it’s all demand’. And I am not certain that we are right. I’m certain that there are extremely negative consequences for stimulating demand unless it’s given directly to consumers as cash by bypassing the financial system. But the cumulative effect on the quality of goods and services still appears to diminish – although proving that’s a very hard task of teasing signal from noise. The stock of capital that troubles me most, because of the Marxist, Freudian, Postmodern, and Feminist attacks on the meaning of terms via obscurant language, is the stock of metaphysical bias embedded in the language. It’s eroded pretty consistently since the first world war. Even if our scientific language (nod to Flynn) is increasing, our stock of moral capital in the language is declining rapidly. This stock is what the Postmoderns attempt to ‘steal’ from the commons. And they are very good at stealing. So, in POLITICAL ECONOMY I tend to look at our biases as a division of knowledge and labor along time preferences. With Austrians and conservatives with very long time preference (aristocrats) and common people with shorter time preferences, and most progressives simply displaying conspicuous consumption as a means of demonstrating status. I don’t really care about the mathematical and procedural Platonists. They’re everywhere. But that’s an entirely different battle. Austrian Economics isn’t a debate over method. Thats a nonsensical sideshow. It’s a debate over priorities. Our methods are different because our TIME PREFERENCE is different – and we don’t have the LUXURY of taking the EASY way out, because our stock of preferred capital isn’t PRICED. It’s just HARDER to do what we do. That is how we must position it. And with that positioning we wipe out the influence of the … ahem, silly ideological pseudo-Austrians bent on stealing our name and identity. That’s my mission with reforming libertarianism anyway. Cheers Curt Doolittle

  • SAVED BY CHURCH AND GOD. SAVED BY ACADEMIA AND STATE. There isn’t any difference

    SAVED BY CHURCH AND GOD. SAVED BY ACADEMIA AND STATE.

    There isn’t any difference you know.

    Universities were extensions of the church, and with the decline of the church, the university has replaced the church as the source of civic religion, and the promise of prosperity.

    But, going to college doesn’t, it turns out, teach you much. It just sorts us into how much hard work we can adapt to in any given period of time.

    And it turns out that the church didn’t save you, and academia didn’t save you.

    We rebelled against the little slips of paper the church gave out. We are rebelling against the little slips of paper academia has given out.

    Why is it that the church doesn’t warranty your access to heaven, or academia your access to prosperity?

    If you could take them to court like any other merchant, what would change in both church (premodern religion) and academia (the modern and postmodern religion)?

    If someone will not warrant their goods, what does that say about them and their goods?

    Fraud is fraud.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-25 04:37:00 UTC

  • IS MATHEMATICAL PLATONISM IMMORAL? (with Davin Eastley) Isn’t math just an abstr

    IS MATHEMATICAL PLATONISM IMMORAL?

    (with Davin Eastley)

    Isn’t math just an abstraction? A language? Well, so is postmodernism a language. So is marxism a language. So are all monotheistic religions constructed of a language.

    1) Abstraction is a fuzzy word. It can either mean “imaginary” as in “I imagine”, or “analogy” which is a higher constraint. I think you mean, analogy.

    2) Operational language, in both science and philosophy, makes fuzzy, loaded, or erroneous analogy extremely difficult. Because, if you cannot explain something in operational language YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND IT. Operational language is not only a truth test, but a comprehension test.

    3) The language of mathematics is platonic. And the fact that it is so common to use terms like ‘mathematical structure’ is because of obscurant, non-operational (unscientific) language. But it does not have to be stated in obscurant, non-operational (unscientific) language.

    4) I think its useful to ask the question, WHY we need mathematics as a tool? Why? Since nothing in mathematics cannot be expressed in operational language, and mathematical platonism is an unnecessary but useful linguistic convenience, then, why do we need it to augment or extend our sense, perception, understanding, memory and comprehension?

    5) Does the flight of an arrow exist? Or can we forecast and recall the flight of an arrow? Does an n-dimensional cartesian point exist? Or can we describe such a thing via operations? Both are reproducible. What is the difference between the description of a unicorn and the description of a vector space? Surely we would not say that the unicorn exists?

    6) Existence is persistence. How do unicorns, flights of arrows, and vector spaces exist IF they exist? And is that existence a form of persistence? If so, do then, our emotions exist? Do gods exist?

    They do not exist. They can be constructed. They can be repeatedly constructed. But they cannot exist.

    Mathematics is the process of constructing proofs. Proofs are internally consistent. But they are not statements of ‘truth’. Mathematics as expressed is non-correspondent. However, there are no mathematical constructs that cannot be expressed as relations that ARE at least conditionally correspondent.

    And this is a very important question for ethics to answer. Yes, ETHICS.

    Obscurant language is unethical.

    It is no different to teach infinity as extant, versus as an impossible operation that we forecast as a potential, than it is to teach god is extant, versus the anthropomorphization of a given family structure too large to cooperate by familial means.

    It is no different to teach a limit function as a compensation for the variability of precision given the context of the calculation, than it is to teach that our collective belief can alter the course of natural events.

    These are fallacies.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-24 06:37:00 UTC

  • If you hate the world, it will hate you back. If you mistrust the world, it will

    If you hate the world, it will hate you back.

    If you mistrust the world, it will mistrust you back.

    If you like the world, it will like you back.

    If you love the world, it will love you back.

    The only ‘world’ that you actually know: is the one of your own direct experience.

    That world is comprised of only the people you interact with.

    We all learn by imitation. We all reflect what we experience.

    Give the people you interact with, whatever you want them to respond with.

    But be careful you’re giving of yourself, not requesting of them.

    Science has done a thorough job of determining that our most egalitarian instincts are merely a form of self interest, or an expression of kin selection.

    Emphasis on Care-Taking is either an effort to obtain hormonal ‘highs’, or a search for status seeking and the equivalent hormonal ‘highs’.

    However, instead of the pretense of ‘acting egalitarian’ and pursuing self interest for the purpose of obtaining hormonal ‘highs’, one could instead, make investments in the present and future, by actually HELPING others in many small ways.

    Beware of people who ‘outsource’ compassion to the state. Its just another form of conspicuous consumption, and conspicuously consuming at other people’s expense, and at no personal cost.

    The person who ‘votes left’ does nothing except steal. The person who goes out and helps people having difficulty by spending his or her own time and money is the only person worthy of respect and admiration. Everything else is purely selfish.

    Love the world.

    Not by feeling it.

    But by demonstrating it.

    And the only demonstration, is the contribution of your time, money and effort to help others who are in need.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-16 21:50:00 UTC

  • BUT WHY ARE AUSTRIANS DRAW TO THE AUSTRIAN MODEL? (not profound, but almost) (go

    BUT WHY ARE AUSTRIANS DRAW TO THE AUSTRIAN MODEL?

    (not profound, but almost) (good Austrian argumentative material)

    I need to update Peter Boettke’s definition of Austrian Economics to include the reasons WHY certain groups of people are morally and intellectual attracted to the Austrian model, rather than just the methodological differences:

    1) The testability of incentives as rational

    2) The visibility of voluntary versus involuntary transfers

    3) The visibility of the redistribution of risk to entrepreneurs, and the impact on entrepreneurial incentives.

    4) The visibility of the impact on opportunity costs.

    5) The visibility of the cumulative effect on opportunity costs.

    6) The visibility of decline in linguistic, rational, social, moral, mythological, and institutional capital.

    The longer your time preference the higher the cost of the portfolio of opportunity costs. (I should diagram this out a bit.)

    It was very frustrating to read the number articles of late that just put us outside the consensus, and paint us as extremists. I mean, I know that *I* agree with the mainstream: they affect what they measure. They achieve their short term objectives. But I disagree with the mainstream that the accumulation of externalities is inferior to the short term benefits.

    I don’t think honest progressives like Karl Smith disagree that there may be a cumulative effect of continuous distortion of the monetary system. I think they just feel that the moral good in the short term is greater than the risk and damage in the long.

    Now, I was right in my prediction, and Paul Krugman was wrong, that voters would absolutely NOT tolerate what they viewed was immoral behavior; and that the Germans would simply adjust Europe slowly rather than allow ‘immoral’ redistribution, or financially expensive adjustments to occur rapidly. Politics is a moral, not empirical exercise. (See my post on Paul Krugman’s Moral Blindness). And he couldn’t grasp that. The first problem of politics may be the suppression of violence. But the SECOND problem of politics, is the suppression of free riding. It doesn’t matter the size of the group, whether tribe or nation.

    Now, just because we are too unsophisticated to measure the impact on moral, social, calculative-coordinative, and institutional capital except in the longer term, because we don’t know how to price it, doesn’t mean that that stock of capital, priced or not, doesn’t increase or decrease. Or that we do not depend on that stock of capital as much or more than any other.

    So, given that the math in economics isn’t really all that challenging (knowing which data to pull, and its construction is), it’s not that Austrians are afraid of empirical work. (Although we get more nuts and fruits because we lack that filtration system). Its that what we care to measure doesn’t leave behind a record of prices. And opportunity costs dont create a record of prices. Furthermore, the use of large scale aggregates, launders all causality from the analysis.

    And in our view of the world, basing policy on these aggregates, unless it is extremely TACTICAL and LOCAL (loans, and debt forgiveness), pays the vast majority of attention is to that which matters very little, and ignores that which matters very much.

    We can spend down social and moral capital, just as we can spend down environmental capital, but we must give these things a few generations to recover. We have been spending it down for over fifty years. Probably a century as of 2014.

    I think our side does disagree with the fact that ‘it’s all demand’. And I am not certain that we are right. I’m certain that there are extremely negative consequences for stimulating demand unless it’s given directly to consumers as cash by bypassing the financial system. But the cumulative effect on the quality of goods and services still appears to diminish – although proving that’s a very hard task of teasing signal from noise.

    The stock of capital that troubles me most, because of the Marxist, Freudian, Postmodern, and Feminist attacks on the meaning of terms via obscurant language, is the stock of metaphysical bias embedded in the language. It’s eroded pretty consistently since the first world war. Even if our scientific language (nod to Flynn) is increasing, our stock of moral capital in the language is declining rapidly. This stock is what the Postmoderns attempt to ‘steal’ from the commons. And they are very good at stealing.

    So, in POLITICAL ECONOMY I tend to look at our biases as a division of knowledge and labor along time preferences. With Austrians and conservatives with very long time preference (aristocrats) and common people with shorter time preferences, and most progressives simply displaying conspicuous consumption as a means of demonstrating status.

    I don’t really care about the mathematical and procedural Platonists. They’re everywhere. But that’s an entirely different battle.

    Austrian Economics isn’t a debate over method. Thats a nonsensical sideshow. It’s a debate over priorities. Our methods are different because our TIME PREFERENCE is different – and we don’t have the LUXURY of taking the EASY way out, because our stock of preferred capital isn’t PRICED. It’s just HARDER to do what we do.

    That is how we must position it. And with that positioning we wipe out the influence of the … ahem, silly ideological pseudo-Austrians bent on stealing our name and identity.

    That’s my mission with reforming libertarianism anyway. 🙂

    Cheers

    Curt Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-16 06:34:00 UTC

  • ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF PLATONISM IN THE STEM FIELDS I have been struggling with

    ON THE DISTRIBUTION OF PLATONISM IN THE STEM FIELDS

    I have been struggling with this idea for a while: that, for some reason, of the empirical fields, including math, physics, engineering, computer science, and economics (into which I include the social sciences), it appears that platonism seems to originate in philosophical spiritualism, gain legitimacy in mathematics and roll downhill until it is cleansed by computer scientists and engineers.

    What’s interesting to me, is that it just seems, in all the fields, that platonism is the definition of most philosophy, so pervasive in math, to the point of being endemic and inescapable and impervious to correction, even if it doesn’t need to be.

    …Human Beings As They Dream…

    …………..Philosophy…………………….

    ………………Logic…………………………

    ……………–Math–……………………..

    ……..Physical…….Behavioral………….

    ..(constant vs inconstant relations)…

    …….Physics………Economics………….

    ………….(observation)…………………..

    Engineering—Computer Science…..

    ………….(interaction)…………………….

    …Human Beings As They Really Act..

    It’s just strange that the only empirical people you seem to be able to trust are people who work with machines. ‘Cause they can tell the difference between an abstract name for something and the operational process for bringing it into being. Computer scientists never make this mistake. Mathematicians do all the time, and actually defend what they do not themselves understand.

    I have heard a lot of criticism of engineers and computer scientists over the past few decades and I’ve just found that sure, in any discipline there are idiots. There are ‘scientistic’ physicists too, and ‘financial economists’. But the difference between fields is the use of operational language, and operational language isn’t platonic.

    That’s what makes ‘science’ into ‘science’.

    – OPERATIONAL LANGUAGE = HUMAN ACTION.

    Human action that is open to sympathetic testing – experience.

    Praxeology was backwards.

    You can sympathetically test something.

    You cant deduce much from that tho.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-15 13:52:00 UTC

  • THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT The enlightenment mythos was almost as damagi

    THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT

    The enlightenment mythos was almost as damaging was christianity. The greatest tragedy in human history may have been the christianization of Europe. The empirical side of the enlightenment was desperately needed to escape jewish mysticism that held us in ignorance for a millennia. Equality under the law, was important for the spread of commerce.

    But, just as moving people from christianity’s mysticism via Darwin was, let’s say … incomplete, it is very hard to move people from equality of property rights, equality under the law, and the equality of family interests, to what the socialists accomplished, which was equality of opportunity, material equality, inequality under the law, eradication of the common law by legislative law, and the destruction of the nuclear and absolute nuclear family in pursuit of ‘individualism’.

    We have a very hard time overturning this mythos. This mythos is even rampant in libertarianism. Libertarians are just as enamored of the fallacy of equality as are socialists. Libertarians want to retain meritocracy, sure. But most of us assume the same naive belief that if others ‘only understood’ they would adopt our system of values.

    But that’s just demonstrably false, both logically, praxeologically, and empirically. The majority of the world detests property rights and individualism.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-15 04:03:00 UTC

  • PROBLEM OF RATIO-MORAL VERSUS RATIO-SCIENTIFIC ARGUMENTS (interesting) “Ratio-Sc

    http://www.propertarianism.com/tools-and-techniques-for-political-debate/a-list-of-terms-for-use-in-evaluating-political-debate/THE PROBLEM OF RATIO-MORAL VERSUS RATIO-SCIENTIFIC ARGUMENTS

    (interesting)

    “Ratio-Scientific vs Ratio-Moral Argument”

    Historically, Political speech has been structured morally:

    I) as an expression of positive or negative reaction (IRRATIONAL SELF)

    II) as an appeal or pleading (RATIONAL BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS)

    III) as a polemic or criticism (RATIONAL AND ARATIONAL TO AN AUDIENCE)

    To express one’s feelings or reactions without the structure of reason, is not a debate. It’s just sentimental expression. It’s an opinion poll but not an argument. It’s an expressed reaction without a request for opinion. But it’s not an argument.

    To enter into debate, one forgoes one’s right of violence. Theoretically in pursuit of the truth, for mutual benefit. That is the purpose of a debate. (This fact, that gets to the problem of why argumentation is correct for deductive purposes but incorrect for causal purposes).

    To publish one’s arguments in a political context, one conducts oratory, not debate. Oratory falls into the following structural categories:

    (Forms of Oratory: or ‘publication’)

    a) RHETORIC / “Rhetorical argument”: A type of argument, spoken or written, between an orator or writer and an audience, that uses reason (logos), appeals to emotion (pathos), and appeals to community norms (ethos), to persuade the listeners to take the side of the argument presented.

    b) APOLOGIA / “Apologetic Argument” / “Apologist” : A type of argument whereby an individual defends a religious, political, or cultural position or dogma through the systematic use of reason. An “Apologist” refers to authors, writers, editors or academic journals, and public leaders who commonly defend what are usually minority positions that are the subject of consistent or popular scrutiny.

    c) POLEMIC : A type of speech intended to establish the supremacy of a single point of view by refuting an opposing point of view about a matter of significant public importance in Religion, Philosophy, Politics or Science.

    d) PHILIPPIC : A type of speech that is emotive, fiery, damning, or a tirade, for the purpose of condemning, discrediting, disempowering, and ostracizing a particular political actor.

    e) JEREMIAD : A long literary work, usually in prose, but sometimes in poetry, in which the author bitterly laments the state of society and its morals in a serious tone of sustained invective, and which contains a prophecy of society’s imminent downfall.

    (For more, see my guide on DISCOURSE: IRRATIONAL (expression) vs RATIONAL (debate) vs ORATORY (publication) at http://www.propertarianism.com/tools-and-techniques-for-political-debate/a-list-of-terms-for-use-in-evaluating-political-debate/#II )

    LIBERTARIANISM IS STRUCTURED RHETORICALLY, and libertarian ethics are structured as an APOLOGIA by Rothbard.

    Ratio-scientific argument from analytical philosophy, is either true or false, but it is not an appeal for consent. That is non-logical. Contract is consensual, but truth is independent of consent.

    RATIO SCIENTIFIC ARGUMENT IS ABSENT RESPECT FOR CONVENTION.

    The purpose of the scientific method is to CORRECT our sense, perception, memory, calculation, and narrative (causal relations), habits, norms, traditions, myths and metaphysical assumptions about the structure of reality. Otherwise the discipline of science would not be necessary.

    The purpose of MORAL speech in the form of RHETORIC and APOLOGIA, is to APPEAL to norms embedded in memory, and narrative, in order to obtain consent.

    The purpose of RATIO SCIENTIFIC argument is to describe a set of causal relations that produce an outcome. In other words: a formula or recipe. The formula or recipe either works or it doesn’t. But it’s not a matter of consent, or preference. It’s just true or false.

    One can say that the formula isn’t logically sufficient or solid. But one cannot prefer or object to the conclusion.

    One doesn’t write these things as appeal, one writes these as positives statements that are open to TESTING, not as appeals that are written to obtain CONSENT.

    Whether one agrees or not with them must be a matter of the argument, not wither one likes or dislikes it. Formulae and Recipes produce what they do. One can like the product or not, but the formula or recipe works, then it just does.

    I would like it very much if it was possible to convince people to adopt libertarian ethics and a libertarian morality. As it is currently structured it is not rational to think so. I am not trying to persuade people to adopt libertarianism. I am trying to demonstrate that if one desires LIBERTY, then one must ACT in such fashion that human beings will produce it. That is not a moral question. It is not a rhetorical question. It is a SCIENTIFIC QUESTION. Either people WILL or WILL NOT, when subject to incentives A, produce behavior B.

    THE ARGUMENT FOR THE STRUCTURE OF ETHICS AND MORALS

    The argument that demonstrably, we ALL act in our reproductive interests, within the structure of production, structure of reproduction, and structure of property rights which we call ‘norms’, and that ALL our discourse is little more than JUSTIFICATIONARY attempts at resisting against, cooperating with, or thieving from one another within the boundaries of those productive, reproductive, and normative constraints. That is an argument that is extremely difficult to prove.

    Nothing else is actually logical.

    If we want liberty then, we must create institutional incentives for liberty.

    Asking people to ‘believe’ in libertarianism or, marxism is equally ridiculous.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-13 13:01:00 UTC

  • LACKING A ‘BOOK’ – YOU NEED A BOOK We benefit from the evolutionary structure of

    LACKING A ‘BOOK’ – YOU NEED A BOOK

    We benefit from the evolutionary structure of aristocracy. But we are harmed by by the loss of Druidic mythos, and the failure to articulate the necessary properties of the aristocratic egalitarian society

    EITHER THEFT IS IMMORAL OR IT ISN’T – THE MANNER OF THEFT OR THEFT?

    Is theft only wrong when it is intersubjectively verifiable? Or is theft wrong, in that it is destructive of cooperation, no matter whether it is visible or not? I think it is hard to convince people of anything but the latter.

    Is ownership determined by action? If ownership is determined by action then institutions that require respect of property are a commons that is paid for by action, in voluntary exchange.

    While I don’t want to, at this moment, write something very long to demonstrate this argument in detail, it is, as far as I know, an impenetrable criticism of rothbardian ethics, and a replacement of those ethics with propertarian ethics as the only LOGICALLY POSSIBLE definition of property rights. It is a replacement of the ethics of the ghetto with the ethics of the aristocracy.

    It is not possible to have an institution of property rights on the rothbardian model, because it is a praxeological disincentive to develop property rights.

    Aristocratic propertarianism is the replacement of rothbard’s individualistic me and my promise of violence with the egalitarian us and our promise of violence.

    It is the corporation. The corporeal-ization of property rights.

    It is not logical that individuals can create ‘possess’ property rights. One can demand them in exchange. But it takes a minimum of two people to create property rights, because they can only be obtained in exchange.

    ORIGINS

    Sitting in Church at the age of 12, I promised myself I would write that book. Yes, we have the (rather pitiful) book of Jerusalem, but Athens didn’t give us a book. Plato’s tried but his book is a catastrophe. Aristotle didn’t survive well enough for us enough to work with as “a book” – although it might be reconstructable in at least small parts. The Monarchies didn’t leave us a book. Although we could argue that Smith and Hume together made a pretty good pass at it democratizing it. Chivalry left us a book: arthurian legends. And I think the reason we don’t have a book, is that the church imposed its book – and that book wasn’t a very good one. Not as good as Aristotle’s would have been. That book, and the church, were a prohibition on writing the book of aristocratic egalitarianism. Albiet, the church is the OTHER HALF of aristocratic egalitarianism.


    Source date (UTC): 2013-11-13 02:07:00 UTC