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  • (Max got me drunk. changed hotels. been here 4 days. fixed the aspie. I think it

    (Max got me drunk. changed hotels. been here 4 days. fixed the aspie. I think it was the hotel space. Too small. jeez… what is life like for normals?)


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-18 09:22:00 UTC

  • Well saying we don’t agree is to use a rhetorical fallacy. Statements are true,

    Well saying we don’t agree is to use a rhetorical fallacy. Statements are true, false, or incomplete, whether we agree with one another or not.

    1) There exist no laws of science itself. There exist, and we have evolved, procedures that we use to eliminate error, bias, wishful thinking and deceit from our hypothesis. These processes do not tell us a statement is true, they tell us only that it remains a truth candidate if it survives that set of criticisms.

    2) There exist intuitions, hypothesis, theories, laws, and tautologies, because we have constructed them, and demonstrate them as such.

    3) But there exist no non-tautological, yet certain premises: in other words, in any statement of arbitrary precision, we must seek limits, because all general rules possess limits. This is where mises failed by attempting to make use of justificationary Kantian rationalism instead of critical Popperian rationalism:science. Since there are no certain premises there are no certain deductions. Since there are laws we may deduce from them outcomes of equal precision. But if these are imprecise, then so are our deductions.

    4) We can construct descriptive statements (theories) that are true, but inactionable, because they lack sufficient precision. A regularity may be so slow (business cycles, political cycles, generation cycles, and civilizational cycles) that no matter what we do within them, it is merely noise.

    Mises proposition that history is non-regular is based upon the presumption that each exchange is unique because it is both subjective and momentary.

    But he also proposes that we can empathize (sympathize) with economic statements and thereby test the rationality of any incentive.

    This pair of propositions constitutes is a logical contradiction. Since we can decide whether an incentive is rational, and we can test the rationality of others decisions (it’s how we test liars in court), then our judgements are marginally indifferent. If they are marginally indifferent, then they can be represented as constants.

    So at one end of the spectrum, decisions are marginally indifferent and we have tested this in thousands of ways in both economics and experimental psychology.

    And at the other end his purported axioms (action), and his purported laws (inflation, the neutrality of money, minimum wage) are both sufficiently imprecise as to be inactionable. When in fact, it is possible to produce intentional externalities by intentionally mainpulating these behaviors caused by assymetric information and resource distribution.

    And we can (quite accurately) measure those distortions. So it is not that these systems are not regular (they are), or that they are not deterministic (they are), or that they are not actionable (they are actionable), and therefore they are scientifically testable.

    Instead of being impervious to science in the development of general rules, it’s that these actions are immoral: they cause involuntary transfers from people with lower/longer time preference, to those with higher/shorter time preference, and thereby not only steal, but deprive the commons of behavioral change necessary to preserve extended time preference.

    ie: mises confused a moral theft, with a scientific truth.

    This is just one of his many failings in developing his pseudoscientific kantian nonsense – for which he was outcast from the profession, justifiably.

    His second main failing was that he did not grasp that he intuited (as did brouwer in math and bridgman in physics) that praxeology produced proofs of construction, but was insufficient for deduction.

    A proof of construction is necessary (not only in economics but in mathematics) to demonstrate that an economic statement is existentially possible. It is a means of attempting to falsify a statement.

    But most economic effects are not deducible, they are only observable empirically, and then explainable. They are explainable by attempting to construct them from a sequence of rational operations. If they cannot be constructed, then we cannot construct an existence proof, and as such a statement cannot be possible.

    It is possible to construct existence proofs for human actions under Keynesianism. But these proofs tell us that such manipulation is an act of deception that causes involuntary transfers (thefts). It is not that such actions are unscientific.

    As such mises was incorrect. He convused the immoral and the unscientifc. He confused justifiacationism under moral contract, with truth-candidates that survive criticism.

    This is a non-trivial subject. It is probably one of the most important philosopihical questions that hte 20th century philosophers failed to solve. As did all those before them.

    But it’s solved now.

    Mises was just wrong. He was a cosmopolitan, and an austro-hungarian both, and he simple failed. He failed worse than brouwer and bridgman. And because he failed, and hayek failed, we were subject to a century of deceit.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-18 09:17:00 UTC

  • “I generally do not follow socialistic thinking processes such as the concept of

    —“I generally do not follow socialistic thinking processes such as the concept of trade between groups. Methodological individualism is, to me, the way to go, as Ludwig von Mises pointed out. So I am sorry I cannot agree with this analysis. Individuals trade, and individuals act. This idea of a group having some kind of living reality jump straight out of Plato and was debunked back in the Middle Ages by the philosophers called nominalists.”— Lawrence

    Well, you have to create an argument other than ‘the way to go’. Because that’s not an argument. it’s an expression of taste. 🙂

    Individuals cooperate. They form families. They form friendships. They form cooperative alliances. They form partnerships, corporations, armies, and nations. So empirically, that is what people do. And praxeologically we can easily explain why it is in their interest to do so. And we can explain praxeologicaly why it is against their interest not to do so.

    Groups who cooperate out-compete groups that do not cooperate. Universally. And the higher the trust, the more truth, the faster the rate of economic and inventive velocity. The more competitive the group.

    The west has successfully out-competed other groups precisely because we produced commons. Including the commons of property rights, rule of law, the common law, the militia, and truth telling. Even science was produced as a commons.

    There are productive commons, and parasitic commons. it matters only whether the commons is productive (moral) or parasitic (immoral). A commons is, like violence, value neutral. Commons and violence can be use to create productivity or they can be used for purposes of parasitism.

    So not only is cooperation at scale, and the production of commons methodologically individualistic, but it fails the test of methodological individualism to suggest people not seize the opportunity to cooperate to produce returns unachievable by individual action.

    Cooperation exists and moral intuition exists to preserve cooperation, for the simple reason that the rewards of cooperation are disproportionately higher than the rewards of individual production.

    So the only question is whether you can voluntarily participate and exit such commons, and if you have universal standing in defense from parasitism. If so, then only productive commons can be constructed. This is what we call the Civic Society.

    But if you don’t participate, why will members of that Civic Society tolerate your presence? They usually don’t.

    So you can’t be right. Praxeologically you can’t be right.

    Just how it is.

    Curt Doolittle

    The Propertarian Institute

    Kiev, Ukraine (London).


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-18 05:54:00 UTC

  • “Democracy has brought us both the death of Socrates and the election of Hitler.

    —“Democracy has brought us both the death of Socrates and the election of Hitler. It doesn’t get much better than that!”—

    Women. Not “us”. Women. Not democracy per se. But women in democracy. The decline of the west was caused by the enfranchsement of women into the democratic process. Prior to their enfranchisement it certainly appears that the one family (man) one vote system functioned when there were houses for each class.

    Since then, within one generation, women moved through democracy to devolve the west. And since then they have been “useful idiots” for communists, socialists, postmodernists, and feminists.

    In the medieval era through the classical liberal era, we were evolving a market for the production of commons by the negotiated construction of trades between the classes, and our fascination with reason and equality led us to the fantasy of reasoned optimum decision making (monopoly rule), rather than merely constructing trades between classes.

    I think this is the right analysis.

    For high trust westerners, a market for commons is an extremely valuable competitive advantage.

    But introduction of women into the polity allowed them to express their reproductive strategy – which the entire history of property rights evolved to suppress: parasitism.

    I love women. But they are as cognitively blind to politics as men are cognitively blind to interpersonal relations.

    Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-18 05:40:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-18 03:17:00 UTC

  • Feeling Extremely Drunk with Max Andronichuk. ;). At Mele London

    Feeling Extremely Drunk with Max Andronichuk. ;). At Mele London.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-17 18:22:00 UTC

  • “Maybe our mysterious productivity gain is in the form of less inflation than we

    “Maybe our mysterious productivity gain is in the form of less inflation than we deserve,”-mcafee

    That actually makes sense.

    And scares the hell out of me.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-17 15:05:00 UTC

  • (very aspie day today. killing me. like nyc. I wish the now-me could go back in

    (very aspie day today. killing me. like nyc. I wish the now-me could go back in time and talk to the then-me, and tell him how to live in harmony with our internal mental machine. at least I know enough to seek quiet spaces. ack. london is like a fire-hose of patterns to recognize and my machinery is having a seizure trying to make sense of it all. now i remember why traveling by car is so rewarding: its armor. insulation. gonna try headphones and see if that helps.)


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-17 13:10:00 UTC

  • Curt Doolittle shared a post

    Curt Doolittle shared a post.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-17 11:31:00 UTC

  • Walking through a London shopping mall staffed by people with black hair is more

    Walking through a London shopping mall staffed by people with black hair is more work than a fraternity gazing. Fuk.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-07-17 07:49:00 UTC