http://thoughtsonliberty.com/how-to-know-youre-not-a-true-libertarian
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-21 11:24:00 UTC
http://thoughtsonliberty.com/how-to-know-youre-not-a-true-libertarian
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-21 11:24:00 UTC
THINKING (SEARCHING) VS REASON AND INDUCTION
(from elsewhere)
Matt Dioquardi is very clear here, and I wanted to save this quote for my own reference. But it’s so good it’s worth sharing.
For those who follow science more so than philosophy, you might note that David Miller’s “thinking” is equivalent to Kahneman’s “searching” with “System 1”.
While in any deduction the information must be present in the extant statements, Induction is logically nonsensical since the information cannot be present for it to function. But we do add information to any question when we perform our acts of free association. This action is not rational, as in “System 2” thinking, but we do intuitionistic searching for possible relationships with “System 1” thinking. To the computer-science savvy mind, this is an obvious process we are familiar with. But I suspect prior generations conflated the two or gave precedence to reason which is subject to reflection (we can observe) over searching (intuition) which is not subject to reflection (we can’t observe it). When the evidence is now, that we do a lot more searching (its faster) than we do reasoning (it’s slow and expensive).
QUOTE:
—“One could argue that we need a manner of going from particular data points to a general theory — and that this is the problem of induction. One could simply say, I don’t understand how we do this, even though we do this. There’s a fine line where someone could *reject* induction philosophically, but still argue for it methodologically … the problem is then perhaps formulated as trying to explain why we methodologically accept induction, but reject it philosophically … something like that …
Or one could argue that even once we have a theory, we need some type of confirmation of that theory, and so this is the problem of induction.
There’s no end to the manner in which one can argue we still have a problem here — and so we still need to find a solution. I’m not clear on this, but I think there are ways in which Bayesianism can be formulated so that it can be argued that it makes no use of induction — though I’m suspicious about this claim.
But putting all this aside, I think the methodology Popper presents, if accepted, simply does away with these problems. They cease to exist. So there is no problem of induction. There’s no inductivist problem. Induction is simply misguided from the get go. It posits a *justificationist* requirement where one is never needed.
Of course, if one wants to argue Popper is wrong, then that’s a different issue …
Even on the issue of “problem finding”, I think what David Miller states in his essay, “Do We Reason When We Think We Reason, or Do We Think?” might be relevant. He addresses the issue of schools that want to teach “critical thinking”: “— Matt Dioguardi
LINK: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/people/associates/miller/lfd-.pdf
As a now-committed operationalist, I have some difficulty with Miller’s approach. Formal logic is not operational. But he seems to consistently come to the correct conclusions. And this paper is evidence of that fact.
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-21 03:49:00 UTC
LIBERTY IS UNNATURAL
—“THE THIRST for liberty does not seem to be natural to man. Most people want security in this world, not liberty. Liberty puts them on their own, and so exposes them to the natural consequences of their congenital stupidity and incompetence. Historically, it has always been forced upon the masses from above. Whenever they have formulated demands of their own, it has been demands for privileges, not for liberty.”— H. L. Mencken
(thx Thomas J. Flannery) 🙂
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-21 00:17:00 UTC
—“From scientific point of view – rational egoism it is the ability to be proud of your exceptional work.”— Kirill Latish
🙂
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-20 08:40:00 UTC
CAN LANGUAGE TRANSFORM MAN?
—“The sourcebook for general semantics, Science and Sanity, presents general semantics as both a theoretical and a practical system whose adoption can reliably alter human behavior in the direction of greater sanity. Its author asserted that general semantics training could eventually unify people and nations. In the 1947 preface to the third edition of Science and Sanity, Korzybski wrote, “We need not blind ourselves with the old dogma that ‘human nature cannot be changed,’ for we find that it can be changed.”—
While I agree that we can transform man, I would caution that we can transform him to the common language of science, which corresponds to reality, or we can transform him in a hundred other ways, which conflict with reality. At least most physical scientists seek to transform man’s thinking such that it corresponds to reality. Economics, as we have seen of late, transforms man to think in terms not correspondent with reality. The remaining social sciences transform him to correspond with reality even less so.
The language of science appears to be universal and transformative for all.
My question is why we cannot use operational language to transform ethics, economics and politics into a universal language that corresponds to reality as does that of the physical sciences.
Korzybski, Alfred (1994). Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics (5th ed.). Brooklyn, NY: Institute of General Semantics.
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-19 06:52:00 UTC
VOLUNTARY EXCHANGE AS DECIDABILITY
(worth repeating)
—“Austrian principles are intuitively constructionist (consisting of a sequence of human actions). And the ethics of voluntary transfer (the requirement that transfers consist of voluntary exchanges) are an operationalist’s method of testing each original/primitive/minimum activity (exchange) as ‘computable’ (decidable).”—
I think that may be one of the most important paragraphs that I’ve written of late.
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-19 04:51:00 UTC
–“Not quite sure what you are trying to win and all the big words obscure things so that it all seems a fog to me. I like your poems so much more that are plain and simple but say so much…”– Kerry
Kerry, there are things that I can easily express as experiences, and things that are extremely difficult to express as experiences. I know it’s better to express anything as experiences. But I start out with these things that are very abstract, and work, usually over months, by trial and error, to reduce them to something that’s simple and insightful – and hopefully aphoristic. But to convert something like that to poetic and experiential form requires almost as long as it takes to reduce it to aphorism. For many people, experiential intuition is a very important vehicle for meaning – for confirming the true. But I work largely with ideas that are counter-intuitive (not obvious). And much of human experience requires we seek the compromise of nash equilibria and pareto efficiency, not what we most desire – and most intuit.
–“Not quite sure what you are trying to win and all the big words obscure things so that it all seems a fog to me. I like your poems so much more that are plain and simple but say so much…”– Kerry
Kerry, there are things that I can easily express as experiences, and things that are extremely difficult to express as experiences. I know it’s better to express anything as experiences. But I start out with these things that are very abstract, and work, usually over months, by trial and error, to reduce them to something that’s simple and insightful – and hopefully aphoristic. But to convert something like that to poetic and experiential form requires almost as long as it takes to reduce it to aphorism. For many people, experiential intuition is a very important vehicle for meaning – for confirming the true. But I work largely with ideas that are counter-intuitive (not obvious). And much of human experience requires we seek the compromise of nash equilibria and pareto efficiency, not what we most desire – and most intuit.
http://heartiste.wordpress.com/2014/06/17/there-are-single-moms-and-then-theres-everyone-else/SINGLE MOMS:
The problem with this metric is that it doest differentiate by race and income.
Whore that I am, scoundrel that I am, I have to support monogamy. Even if it means the mediterranean model. The family is so important that even state redistribution cannot compensate for its absence. There is a difference between insuring tragedy (accident), and funding social disintegration (redistribution). My empathy is one thing. But the evidence is something else. Families are just better. So the only way to fix this is to remove insurance, and increase the moral hazard. That won’t affect teh middle class, but it will affect the underclasses. And that’s who is creating all the problem.
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-18 06:13:00 UTC
ELI ON THE VIRTUE OF VIOLENCE AND NECESSITY OF AGGRESSION
—“What I think I can enforce – and benefit from enforcing – is a prohibition against negative sum aggression (involuntary transfers) and a mandate for positive sum aggression (the suppression of free-riding.)
Even private property is a form of aggression. Fencing off unowned land, formerly free for use by all, and announcing that – henceforth – trespass will be punished by violence, is inherently an aggressive act. Property is a social construct. Using violence to uphold a social construct is aggression.
This is not an argument against private property, this is an argument for aggression.”— Eli Harman
Aggression and violence are value neutral. The only question that matters is whether one is constructing property rights – the prohibition on free riding – such that we have the incentive and ability to develop a division of knowledge and labor. That division of labor compresses time, and increases productivity, such that through constant competition we can cooperate for the purpose of constantly decreasing prices – costs to us.
Aggression and violence in the construction of property rights is not only a virtue it is arguably the highest most productive virtue than man can pursue.
Source date (UTC): 2014-06-15 15:07:00 UTC