Source: Facebook

  • NOBILITY —“If you had any knowledge of the noble things of life, you would ref

    NOBILITY

    —“If you had any knowledge of the noble things of life, you would refrain from coveting others’ possessions; but for me to die for Greece is better than to be the sole ruler over the people of my race.”—Leonidas

    The purpose of aristocracy is for all, to deny any and all, power and authority over any and all.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 09:48:00 UTC

  • ALTERNATIVES TO PROPERTARIANISM —“I’m interested in application and other meth

    ALTERNATIVES TO PROPERTARIANISM

    —“I’m interested in application and other methods that purport to arrive at ‘legitimate’ conclusions that are either orthogonal or nearly synonymous but methodically separate from propertarianism. For example, Popper may have advocated CR but there is plenty left to be said about psychoanalysis or metaphysics or philosophy of mind that is not derived through its application…..Propertarianism may be one tool but how many tools are in the box? And how many boxes are there?”—

    Curt Doolittle

    I don’t deal with “legitimate” in other than legal terms, because I don’t know what that means in other than legal terms. Instead I deal with moral necessity. MEANING can be achieved through whatever devices we can creatively invent and apply. But I am not solving a problem of meaning (it is infinitely recursive) I am solving a problem of ethics, law, and politics: using language that must be rationally calculable (not open to loading and framing) independent of meaning. And as such, expressly NOT one of meaning. In Propertarianism I operate with the principle that cooperation requires prevention of parasitism, and that every theft (involuntary transfer) is a lost opportunity for exchange (production). As far as I know this the only universally ethical statement because ethics must be reducible to cooperation to have any logical content (meaning). This is not rationalism but science, since this is what we demonstrate no matter how primitive or advanced the society. We just prohibit more or less parasitism, and use more or less government depending upon our level of parasitism.

    So as far as I know cooperation can be represented by a formal grammar, which is an increase in the precision of the formal grammar of institutions. And all moral and immoral operations can be stated in this grammar. (This is what I suspect Mises was trying to get at.)

    But that doesn’t tell us anything other than how to make contracts and resolve conflicts. It doesn’t help us understand that women and men value states of affairs differently, and that they react positively and negatively (with joy or sorrow) to different states of affairs. And that we make compromises for in pursuit of a Nash equilibrium in everything we do, leaving all of us more satisfied than any other possible condition, while less satisfied that the condition we aspire to.

    It is the reality of this equilibrium that causes us our disappointments, and the fact that the genetic lottery aggressively makes you a loser as you vary negatively from the norm.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 09:08:00 UTC

  • (worth repeating)(edited)

    (worth repeating)(edited)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 06:10:00 UTC

  • So why would you be afraid of arguing the truthfulness of your public speech in

    So why would you be afraid of arguing the truthfulness of your public speech in a court of your peers, if your public speech was truthful?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 04:23:00 UTC

  • ( Just bought peaches and plums at the stand outside. Fruit in Ukraine just tast

    ( Just bought peaches and plums at the stand outside. Fruit in Ukraine just tastes amazing. As long as you don’t have to earn a living here, living here is awesome. 🙂 )


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 03:53:00 UTC

  • “A man likes her body. A woman likes his brain. Everybody f__k’s what they like

    —“A man likes her body. A woman likes his brain. Everybody f__k’s what they like most.”— Ukrainian Proverb.

    Like everything else here, its painfully true. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 03:51:00 UTC

  • “”In answer to the Argives, who were disputing with the Spartans in regard to th

    —“”In answer to the Argives, who were disputing with the Spartans in regard to the boundaries of their land and said that they had the better of the case, Lysander drew his sword and said, “He who is master of this talks best about boundaries of land.”— Eli Harman


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 03:24:00 UTC

  • (brilliant) —“People deal with people they don’t trust because they’ve been ta

    (brilliant)

    —“People deal with people they don’t trust because they’ve been taught that rejecting the untrustworthy is a greater sin against society than being a liar”— Karl Brooks


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 02:27:00 UTC

  • Rabbi Lapin, standing in my back yard, after dinner, said: “There are good peopl

    Rabbi Lapin, standing in my back yard, after dinner, said: “There are good people and bad people everywhere: good jews and bad jews, good christians and bad christians. It’s not whether they are jews or christians, but whether they are good people or bad people.”

    As in every conversation I have had with him, it affected me profoundly.

    There are a lot of bad people. I don’t worry about good people.

    One can judge a class by its members, but one cannot judge an individual by his class.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 02:26:00 UTC

  • CENTRAL ARGUMENT: WESTERN TRUTH VS PLATONIC TRUTH (the central argument)( profou

    CENTRAL ARGUMENT: WESTERN TRUTH VS PLATONIC TRUTH

    (the central argument)( profound)

    On this topic, ‘truth’, my central argument…

    1) … is that giving witness to one’s observations, is testable by reproduction of a set of operational definitions. That operational definitions produce the equivalent of names, not descriptions. Such names are insulated from deception, distraction, loading, framing and overloading. Theories are not. While we cannot demonstrate the absolute parsimony of a theory (that we know of), we can demonstrate that we truthfully conveyed our observations. In other words, we can testify truthfully to an ordered set of facts, even if we cannot testify truthfully to parsimony of a theory.

    2) … that physical science is a narrow and special case of human activity, and popper was defining truth for that special case – a definition which is not applicable outside of the special case, and even inside the special case, he made questionable use of the term in order to retain its moral loading for purely social reasons. Justifiable social reasons, but social reasons none the less.

    3) ….that it is possible to state instead that all outputs of scientific investigation are true, if they are truthfully represented – where ‘scientific investigation” refers to the use of the scientific method, regardless of field of inquiry. But that we seek the most parsimonious statement of a theory, and we can never know that we have obtained it, we can only develop consensus that we cannot cause it to fail. This is, as far as I know, the best non-platonic description of truth available. Everything else is a linguistic contrivance for one purpose or another – possibly to obscure ignorance, and possibly to load ideas with moral motivation. Scientists load their contrivance of truth, and mathematicians load their contrivance of numbers, limits, and a dozen other things – most of which obscure linguistic ‘cheats’ to give authority to that which is necessary for the construction of general rules. (ie: the problem of arbitrary precision).

    4) … that popper did no investigation into science or the history of science prior to making his argument, and that as yet, we do not have a systematic account of the history of science. However, what history we do have, both distant and recent, is that science operates as I have suggested: by criticism upon failure via overextension. The reason being that it is economically inefficient (expensive) to pursue criticism rather than to extend a theory to its point of failure then criticize it. And as far as we know, this is how science works, and must work, because it is how all human endeavors must work. Because while a small number of scientists may seek the ‘truth’ whatever a platonist means, what scientists try to do is solve problems – ie: to manufacture recipes for useful cognition.

    5) … that popper’s advice was merely moral given that the scale of inquiry in all human fields had surpassed that of human scale, where tests are subjectively verifiable. (I think this is an important insight because it occurred in all fields.) Einstein for example, operationalized observations (relative simultaneity for example) over very great distances approaching the speed of light using Lorenz transformations. And as Bridgman demonstrated, the reason Einstein’s work was novel was because prior generations had NOT been operationalizing statements ,and as such, more than a generation and perhaps two were lost to failure of what should have been an obvious solution. (See the problem of length, which I tend to refer to often as the best example.) I addressed this in a previous post, and what popper did was give us good advice, and while he made an argument that appears logical, like most rational arguments, unsupported by data, it is not clear he was correct, and in fact, it appears that he was not. The question is not a rational but empirical one.

    6) … and I am not terribly interested in criticizing popper, any more than criticizing any other philosopher I admire, since popper unlike Misesian Pseudoscience, or Rothbardian Immoral Verbalisms, was engaged in a moral attempt both in politics and in science, and perhaps in science as a vehicle for politics, to prevent the pseudoscientific use of science – particularly by fascist and communists, to use the findings of science as a replacement for divine authority by which to command man. What popper did, particularly with his platonism, was to remove the ability for the findings of science to be used as justification for the removal of human choice. Popper, Mises, and Hayek were responsible for undermining pseudoscientific authoritarianism. Of the three popper is perhaps less articulate (possibly to obscure his objective), but certainly not wrong, so to speak. While mises’ appeal to authoritarianism (which is part and parcel of jewish culture) was entirely pseudoscientific, by claiming that economics was deductive rather than empirical, and justifying it under apriorism, instead of as I’ve stated, understanding that he was merely trying to apply operationalism to economic activity, which would merely demonstrate that Keynesian economics was immoral, not unscientific.

    But Popper, Mises, Hayek, Bridgman and Brouwer, did not find a solution to restoring the western aristocratic conditions for public speech.

    They too were a lost in platonism a bit. Bridgman and Brouwer did understand that something was wrong, and were very close,b ut they could not make the moral argument. We have had a century now of attacks by verbal contrivance and we can demonstrate the destruction of our civilization by way of it. So the moral argument is no longer one of undemonstrated results. WE have the results. And we have a generation of men, myself included, trying to repair it.

    One must speak truthfully, because no other truth is knowable. Intellectual products that are brought to market must be warrantied just as are all other products that are brought to market, and the warranty that you can provide is operational definitions (recipes, experience), not theories (psychologism, projections). And if you are not willing to stand behind your product then you should not bring it to market. Because you have no right to subject others to harm.

    Intellectuals produce ideas (myself included), that is our product. We are paid in measly terms most of the time, for our product, but that is what we do. But it is no different from hot coffee or dangerous ladders, or defective gas tanks.

    And given that one particularly prolific group of people has created marxism, socialism, postmodernism, libertine-libertarianism, and neoconservatism, it is about time we stopped allowing them to ship lousy products into society.

    And rather than regulate them by government, the common law and universal standing will allow punishment of those who bring bad products to market.

    OBSCURITY

    I am entirely capable (as above) of writing clearly, but it is tedious when most logical connections appear to be obvious to the informed person. I will cop out to being lazy, particularly when I have no idea whether the others involved in the debate will be worthwhile. But it’s not that I can’t drill down to necessary arguments. OK? It’s just a lot more work than incrementally testing an idea and making sure that others follow the breadcrumbs….

    CLOSING

    I am pretty sure the above analysis is correct. It’s going to be very hard to demonstrate otherwise: that popper used a pragmatic theory of truth, just like all of us do. But there is only one possible extant truth, and that is testimony. All else is but moral rule, not logical necessity. OK? That’s just how it is. Period, end of story.

    And yes it’s not worth your time (or mine) to continue if we must resort to color by numbers. The central argument is either advanced or not. Otherwise it’s just a waste of time. But thank you for your help, as always.

    Curt Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2014-07-28 02:22:00 UTC