Source: Facebook

  • IF THEIR BAD ARE MORE CAPABLE THAN YOUR GOOD, WHAT HAPPENS? Good atheists, bad a

    IF THEIR BAD ARE MORE CAPABLE THAN YOUR GOOD, WHAT HAPPENS?

    Good atheists, bad atheists. Good christians, bad christians. Good jews, bad jews.

    The problem is not that one group is good or bad; it is the aggression and capability of people within the group.

    If one set of people is more capable than another, then both the good and the bad are exaggerated. This is the way to look at the influence of all groups. This is the way to look at the good and bad of all groups. More aggressive and more capable people pursue their self interest more successfully than less aggressive and less capable people.

    We all pursue our self interests. I don’t criticize people for pursuing their self interests. That would be illogical. On the other hand I am happy to criticize people for not defending themselves against the bad, aggressive and capable.

    It usually means that they are consuming rather than investing in defenses.

    Which is the case, in this case.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-12 11:16:00 UTC

  • OF RELIGION Rodney Stark’s: A Theory Of Religion Laurence Ianncone’s Economics o

    http://www.colorado.edu/economics/morey/4999Ethics/Religion/Iannaccone1998_Edward.pdfECONOMICS OF RELIGION

    Rodney Stark’s: A Theory Of Religion

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0813523303/

    Laurence Ianncone’s Economics of Religion

    http://www.colorado.edu/economics/morey/4999Ethics/Religion/Iannaccone1998_Edward.pdf

    Iannaccone, Laurence. “Economics of Religion.” (with William S. Bainbridge). The Routledge Companion to the Study of Religion, Second Edition, edited by John Hinnells. Routledge: 2010, pp. 461-475.

    Iannaccone, Laurence. “Funding the Faiths: Toward a Theory of Religious Finance” (with Feler Bose). The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Religion, edited by Rachel McCleary. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 2011, pp. 323-342.

    Iannaccone, Laurence R., Colleen E. Haight, and Jared Rubin. 2011. “Lessons from Delphi: Religious Markets and Spiritual Capitals,” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 77, no. 3: 326-338.

    BECKER

    I was heavily influenced by Gary Becker’s work. And because of my work on propertarianism, testimonial truth, operationalism, and critical rationalism, I have come to see that there is merit both in deductive(rational), operational (descriptive) and empirical (correlative) work. But I think the point is that Becker succeeds in all three dimensions when he works, and caps it off with elegant charts.

    The value of this deductive work (Stark’s) is that these statements can be implemented as software models.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-12 06:14:00 UTC

  • IS LIBERTARIANISM SUCH A TARGET? (because its immoral) (re: tyler cowen) —It i

    http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2015/05/why-is-libertarianism-such-a-target.htmlWHY IS LIBERTARIANISM SUCH A TARGET?

    (because its immoral) (re: tyler cowen)

    —It is possible to be a common sense centrist and an intellectual. The highbrow reasons for why moderate common sense positions are correct are particularly interesting to anybody with a strong desire to understand how the world really works.— Steve Sailer

    I’ll echo Steve Sailer’s position a little more precisely. But, unfortunately, that requires a mildly impolitic presentation:

    (a) while libertarianism (an economic preference) informs the nation’s christian conservatism (a normative preference), libertarianism is not informed by the conservatism. That’s the reason that libertarianism fails to expand its influence in the electorate: libertarianism outside of the classical liberal model is objectively immoral. That’s right: objectively immoral. And I’ll answer why, below.

    (b) All three influential enlightenment movements sought to express group evolutionary strategies as universal strategies (i) the anglo empirical (Smith, Hume and eventually Darwin) – to create an aristocracy of everybody, (ii) the german obscurant rationalist ( Kant thru Heidegger) – to preserve hierarchy, and (iii) the jewish pseudoscientific: (Freud, Marx, Cantor, Mises, Rothbard) – to preserve authoritarianism and separatism. Unfortunately, all three of these movements have failed at developing a universal ethics with which to inform our politics.

    (c) Politics is a moral not empirical means of decision making (Jonathan Haidt). Voting for representatives is a form of abstract aggregation. In such cases of comparing abstractions, People can do nothing else but vote their ancestral (and possibly genetic) morality. (Emmanuel Todd, David Hackett Fischer). They vote their evolutionary strategy. Monopoly decision making (majority rule) exacerbates conflict between peoples of disparate interests. And classical liberal libertarians (anglo american, empirical libertarians) have failed to produce an institutional solution that allows cooperation on means (a market) for the production of commons despite our various heterogeneous and necessary ends.

    (d) Conservatives are unconsciously aware (and unable to articulate) (a) norms are the most expensive commons we create, and those high trust norms must be protected at all costs – they are our competitive advantage in this world, and the reason for our rapid ascent in both pre-history, ancient, and modern eras; (b) that policy must reflect the inter-temporal interests of families, while law must be constructed for individuals, because the family is the means of transmission of those norms for each class, and because disputes must be objectively decidable regardless of class.

    For some reason it doesn’t occur to libertarians that the competitive advantage of western civilization lies in our unique ability to construct civil commons relatively free of privatization, and that we can do so because of our high trust society, and that our high trust society is possible because of all the people on this earth we generally tell the truth. And that truth telling is the most expensive commons one can produce.

    People cannot vote for change that is not institutionally articulated. Asking people to ‘believe’ is for prophets and priests, not scientists. Justification is for rationalists. Scientists must construct operational definitions for us to test the truth of their propositions (that is the entire point of the Austrian method.) So until classical libertarians reform the current model, and provide an institutional solution that satisfies: the exclusion of the bottom from the benefits of production of the normative, institutional and physical commons (the left); the ability to dynamically restructure the patterns of sustainable specialization and trade, free of rents and frictions (libertarians); and the preservation of the high trust norms and the family that make the construction of our commons possible, by prohibiting their consumption and requiring universal production (the right); libertarianism will remain an immoral, selfish, utopian specialization, that advocates an obscurant form of free riding on both left and right’s the construction of the voluntary order of cooperation that we call capitalism.

    Because profiting from the contributions of others (the cost of respecting property in both normative, institutional, physical commons, and in private hands, is free riding. And free riding is immoral. Because all objective moral rules are a prohibitions on free riding. And because cooperation is irrational in the presence of free riding. Thats why evolution gave us moral intuitions – despite our different self serving emphases on one part of the moral spectrum or another.

    No corner of the political triangle is correct. Each simply senses some part of the reproductive division of labor: progressive=consumption, libertarian=production and conservative=saving: just as the market forms an information system, human moral differences constitute a division of perception, cognition, knowledge and labor; and voluntary, fully informed, warrantied, exchange free of negative externality is the only test of the aggregate validity of our perceptions.

    We (libertarians) aren’t right. But we’re the smart ones. And productivity is our specialization. So we must find an institutional solution for everyone – (consumptive, productive, and retentive) not one for just us as specialists. It’s not that others aren’t informed. It’s that we haven’t succeeded.

    ( That’s enough radicalism for one post. )

    Cheers


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-12 05:56:00 UTC

  • THE EVOLUTION OF THE TERM “GENTLEMAN” The most basic class distinctions in the M

    THE EVOLUTION OF THE TERM “GENTLEMAN”

    The most basic class distinctions in the Middle Ages were between the nobiles, i.e., the tenants in chivalry, such as earls, barons, knights, esquires, the free ignobiles such as the citizens and burgesses, and franklins, and the unfree peasantry including villeins and serfs.

    In its original meaning, “gentleman” denoted a man of the lowest rank of the English gentry, standing below an esquire and above a yeoman.

    This category included the younger sons of the younger sons of peers and the younger sons of baronets, knights, and esquires in perpetual succession, and thus the term captures the common denominator of gentility (and often armigerousness) shared by both constituents of the English aristocracy: the peerage and the gentry. In this sense, the word equates with the French gentilhomme (“nobleman”), which latter term has been, in Great Britain, long confined to the peerage;

    Even as late as 1400, the word gentleman still only had the descriptive sense of generosus and could not be used as denoting the title of a class. Yet after 1413, we find it increasingly so used, and the list of landowners in 1431, printed in Feudal Aids, contains, besides knights, esquires, yeomen and husbandmen (i.e. householders), a fair number who are classed as “gentilman”.

    The British Empire begins in the 1580’s.

    The clear distinction between the aristocratic and laboring classes was pervasive. After 1600 Gentlemen would not challenge men of lower status to a duel, and a challenge to (or excuse for) a duel was based on some perceived public insult to the challenger’s sense of his honour as a gentleman.

    The industrial revolution starts in 1790.

    In (1815), the encyclopedia britannica states: “a gentleman is one, who without any title, bears a coat of arms, or whose ancestors have been freemen.”

    The Reform Acts were implemented (1832): the British equivalent of Jerrymandering was revised and the allocation of seats in parliament to boroughs (the equivalent of US counties) were adjusted. The qualification as property holder adjusted for inflation, and the electorate expanded by as much 50% – although universal enfranchisement was not yet adopted.

    As prosperity expanded, and the middle class with it, the designation came to include a man with an income derived from property, a legacy or some other source, and was thus independently wealthy and did not need to work.

    Then in (1845) we see “in its extended sense, a gentleman is accorded to all above the rank of yeomen.”

    So the title expands to cover any well-educated man of good family and distinction, analogous to the Latin generosus (its usual translation in English-Latin documents, although nobilis is found throughout pre-Reformation papal correspondence).

    And by (1856), “in its most extended sense, by courtesy this title is generally accorded to all persons above the rank of common tradesmen when their manners are indicative of a certain amount of refinement and intelligence.”

    The middle classes were successfully enfranchised; and the word gentleman came in common use to signify not a distinction of blood, but a distinction of position, education and manners.

    The term no longer required good birth or the right to bear arms, but the capacity to mingle on equal terms in good society.

    Signaling. 🙂

    In Propertarianism, a gentleman is one who pays for the cost of the commons by not only contributing in his manners, but by policing the rest of society as any good nobleman would. And as such one who does not insure the truth, the normative, institutional, and physical commons, is not a gentleman. And anyone who does so is one.

    So my perception of gentleman is simply the smallest unit of nobility: a man with nothing but his actions to justify his nobility.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-12 04:27:00 UTC

  • THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED CHRISTIANITY: UNNECESSARY (from elsewhere) The question

    THE FUTURE OF ORGANIZED CHRISTIANITY: UNNECESSARY

    (from elsewhere)

    The question is whether or not christian religion can function as a means of restoring western civilization. And my argument (and that of many others) is that it cannot. And for the reasons I stated: (a) that just as justification(rationalism) replaced mysticism, science(criticism) has replaced justification (rationalism), and people will not tolerate a return to primitive monotheistic mysticism. And (b) the forces that led to western success in the ancient and enlightenment world, were independent of the christian mythos – and much older. and (c) we cannot impose religious institutions, yet we can impose academic and legal institutions. (d) given that the differentiating feature of western civilization is truth, truth telling, jury, independent judges, and the common organic law, it is possible to use nothing more than the law to restore traditional values, and education to explain them.

    We may need a new civic religion. But the few people who ponder that new religion all suggest that it will be much closer to stoicism, buddhism and nature worship than to christianity. And given that neo-puritanism is a christian heresy, and social democracy a christian heresy, it is certainly not a safe vehicle for the transmission of our civilization.

    The germans almost exited christianity at least twice now. Had they done it in the Romantic period we might have had a chance to keep the best of old and new.

    We need our churches. We need jesus as a philosopher of the poor. But Justinian imposed christianity by force and shuttered the stoic schools (the western religion), so that they could use eastern despotic central rule in the failing empire. And Caesar murdered all our Druids, to wipe out our culture, so they could impose roman imperialism. And the enlightenment was our first attempt to restoring our people to our original correspondence with nature, rather than with babylonian tyrants deified.

    We have need of myth and ritual. We have no need for totalitarianism in our religion.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-12 01:48:00 UTC

  • (how is apple stealing market share from samsung in china? what don’t I get?)

    (how is apple stealing market share from samsung in china? what don’t I get?)


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-11 17:32:00 UTC

  • Sustained attack today by Russians using VPNs in Europe to try to break into my

    Sustained attack today by Russians using VPNs in Europe to try to break into my web site.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-11 16:09:00 UTC

  • MORE ON GEOGRAPHIC IGNORANCE Interesting offline conversation about american ign

    MORE ON GEOGRAPHIC IGNORANCE

    Interesting offline conversation about american ignorance. Yes, we are ignorant. But ignorance is a geographic necessity. Yes we are ignorant of our policies. But then, we have the best disinformation system in the world making the truth opaque to us. Yes we are ignorant, because we have a tragic education system that values eliminating the problem of diversity that preserves the political system over the education of a labor force capable of competing in a post-european world.

    Our geographic ignorance is forgivable – it’s not valuable. Our policy ignorance is something that should make us angry – it is valuable. Our educational ignorance is something that should cause us to revolt – it’s necessary for our survival.

    What we have that no one else has is total saturation in entrepreneurship, innovation, the scientific method, and heroism.

    This is enough to allow the upper classes to compete against the rest of the world, but it is not enough to allow our middle forces and labor forces to compete against the rest of the world.

    We need better education or we need to start impaling everyone in the administration of public education on spikes until we run out of bodies. I’ve been to both the Northwest and Canada. We’re never gonna run out of spikes.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-11 11:41:00 UTC

  • BRITISH FLIGHTS OF FANCY —More than 50 percent of Britons believe that polygam

    BRITISH FLIGHTS OF FANCY

    —More than 50 percent of Britons believe that polygamy is legal in the United States; in fact, it is illegal in all 50 states. Almost one-third of Britons believe that Americans who have not paid their hospital fees or insurance premiums are not entitled to emergency medical care; in fact, such treatment must be provided by law.

    Seventy percent of Britons think the United States has done a worse job than the European Union in reducing carbon emissions since 2000; in fact, America’s rate of growth of carbon emissions has decreased by almost ten percent since 2000, while that of the EU has increased by 2.3 percent.

    Eighty percent of Britons believe that “from 1973 to 1990, the United States sold Saddam Hussein more than a quarter of his weapons.” In fact, the United States sold just 0.46 percent of Saddam’s arsenal to him; Russia, France, and China supplied 57 percent, 13 percent, and 12 percent, respectively.

    The majority of Britons believe that since the Second World War, the United States has more often sided with non-Muslims than with Muslims. In fact, in 11 out of 12 major conflicts between Muslims and non-Muslims, Muslims and secular forces, or Arabs and non-Arabs, the United States has sided with Muslims and/or Arabs.

    Indeed, a new opinion poll finds that British attitudes towards the United States are governed by ignorance of the facts on key issues such as crime, health care, and foreign policy. The survey was commissioned by America in the World, a London-based group that hopes to push back against rampant anti-Americanism in the United Kingdom by dispelling widely held myths about the United States.—-


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-11 10:52:00 UTC

  • THE FRENCH LOVE MCDONALDS!! —The French, of course, are famous for heaping sco

    THE FRENCH LOVE MCDONALDS!!

    —The French, of course, are famous for heaping scorn on American fast food. But France’s dirty little culinary secret is that one out of every two French people visit McDonald’s at least once a year. In fact, McDonald’s is so popular in France that the country is now McDonald’s second-biggest moneymaker in the world after the United States. (McDonald’s success is spreading throughout the rest of Europe, too, where sales growth is outpacing that in America. McDonald’s is now one of the biggest private-sector employers on the continent, with a workforce of some 300,000.)—


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-11 10:51:00 UTC