Source: Facebook

  • Wow. FML. 😉

    Wow. FML. 😉


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-27 15:53:00 UTC

  • (PRIVATE ON TRUTH AND TESTIMONY) Archive for reference. Hmmm…. number of rando

    (PRIVATE ON TRUTH AND TESTIMONY) Archive for reference.

    Hmmm…. number of random thoughts on this paper….

    1) The mechanism that serves to help us identify similarities is not rational, but intuitive – pre-rational (System 1) that performs searches of our memories. The mechanism that we use to deduce the reason for the similarities we have intuited, is rational (System 2). Critical observations from System 2, once committed to memory, then add to System 1.

    I can’t think of anything that doesn’t follow the process of System 2 instructing(loading) System 1 “searches for patterns.” But the operation of System 1 (intuition) is invisible to us. Largely I believe, we verbally justify the instruction of intuition as the application of reason – but that is impossible as far as I know.

    2) Once we have constructed a theory through this combination of intuition(searching) and direction (reason), we then start to try to confirm this theory and falsify it. I think the major difference between individual behavior comes from whether we search for refutations, or confirmations, and how exhaustively (depth+breadth search) we attempt to refute it.

    3) Now, it’s possible to state those two paragraphs above (1+2) in language that is more precise, albeit using a lot more terminology, but as far as I know, that is what actually occurs when we hypothesize and test.

    4) In the spectrum deduction (sufficient information), induction (insufficient information), and abduction(sparse information), only deductions can be claimed to be true. That does not mean that we cannot guess – only that we cannot claim that our guesses are true. Long division works by the process of organized guessing. Repeating sequences are proof that the information is not present to produce an information without the arbitrary decision of choosing a limit to the precision of the decimal expansion. So the information to conduct division in the absence of contextual precision still faces the problem of sufficient determination of truth. This problem is also true of all statements about the dimensions of circles. But it is not true of the properties of rectangles. Without context we possess insufficient information to make a deduction without the arbitrary introduction of human choice to limit precision.

    5) —“We have just seen that universal statements cannot be justified or confirmed by observation-statements.”—

    Isn’t this just a verbalism? When we communicate we reduce reality to a set of selected symbols (words) that reduce the information content to communicable and useful form that humans can make use of. We make expressions in a context, just as we make measurements in a context. We can never make universal statements that are non-tautological for this reason. Non-tautological, True statements REQUIRE the absence of information. No? Deductive (tautological) answers are proofs. Truth requires testimony that the work done exhausts the standards of demonstration available to us. Ultimate truth is never attainable any more than an infinite limit is attainable. At the point the ultimate truth, or limit is reached, we achieve the construction of a tautology, not a testimony to the exhaustive proof of one’s statements given currently available knowledge.

    More in a bit.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-27 06:25:00 UTC

  • SCIENCE VS BELIEF – INSTITUTIONS OF LAW VS RELIGIONS AND CULTS Yeah…. I don’t

    SCIENCE VS BELIEF – INSTITUTIONS OF LAW VS RELIGIONS AND CULTS

    Yeah…. I don’t make “should” or “belief” arguments. Sorry. If you wanna make people believe something, start a religion or cult like Rothbard did. If you want to create a stateless, private or anarchic polity, then you have to eliminate rational demand for the services provided by the state. To do that requires a high trust society. And the evidence is universally in my favor that it does. So the burden on the lunatic fringe, is to demonstrate that people will rationally join a low trust polity in the absence of strong central authority that suppresses retribution for unethical, immoral and conspiratorial actions. Because human beings demonstrate that they will commit acts of violence in retribution for unethical, immoral, and conspiratorial actions, just like they will for criminal actions.

    Just how it is. 🙂


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-27 05:50:00 UTC

  • “WHAT IS YOUR STANCE ON IP?” QUESTION: “Hello Curt. What’s your stance on IP esp

    “WHAT IS YOUR STANCE ON IP?”

    QUESTION: “Hello Curt. What’s your stance on IP especially taking Kinsella’s arguments into account?” (Derogatory reference to Kinsella’s personality edited out. – Ed.) 🙂

    ANSWER:

    (Sorry, this ended up in my “Other” email for some reason. If you ‘friend’ me then I will get your emails. I didn’t see this one.)

    In the abstract I agree with the principle that easily accessible licenses for limited monopolies are not beneficial for consumers. However, that rational argument may or may not mean much in practice.

    1) IP does appear to rapidly affect business willingness to invest. So, just like property rights exclude people from commons to facilitate the willingness to take risks, IP excludes people from opportunities in order to facilitate the willingness of individuals to take risks. So empirically speaking and rationally speaking, these are trade-off questions not matters of truth and falsehood.

    2) Humans don’t like free riding and we intuitively dislike direct copying – seeing it as a case of free riding. I think the question is limited to whether you’re fooling someone or not (trademarking). So as long as you’re not violating a trademark, which is a question of ‘weights and measures’, (fraud), then I think it’s hard to argue against copying anything at all. The test is pretty empirically simple – if you can glance at something for two seconds and tell the original from the copy, then it’s not a trademark violation. If you can then it is. It’s a pretty simple test. We have proven it over and over again.

    3) For licensed monopolies, I think it is entirely moral to appeal to the ‘people’ asking for a limited monopoly to produce a good that the market cannot reliably produce. This tends kind of thing tends to be limited to very specific goods (health and medicine) or expensive original research in physical sciences, or high risk investments with high benefit to the commons (transportation and infrastructure). All that occurs is that private investment takes risk and reward, with some lottery bonus from the commons, that if they succeed they will recover their costs free of predation from others. Again, this is a purely pragmatic thing. And as long as such things are put out to ‘bid’, so that whomever wins gets the benefit, then I think it’s just a rational choice to get individuals do off book research and development on behalf of the commons in exchange for winning a lottery if they succeed.

    However I see these licenses as exceptions on the same level as laws, not grants to be easily obtained without serious discretion.

    4) My problem with the rothbardian (ghetto) ethic is that it’s advocating free riding on the work of others, and NOT a matter of competition if you did not conduct the research yourself. Competition is not free riding, since you are doing a better job of voluntarily organizing production and satisfying customers. However, benefitting from someone else’s research and development and capturing the rewards for it is simply free riding.

    Again, I see the Rothbardian ethic as simply an obscurantist set of arguments meant to justify parasitism rather than enforcing the fundamental requirement for rational cooperation: that we all contribute to production without parasitism upon others.

    Humans punish cheaters. The only way to increase the velocity of production and trade is to increase trust, and the way to increase trust is to suppress all free riding so that every individual is forced to participate in production, rather than engage in parasitism.

    Rothbardianism is simply a complex, overloaded, obscurant argument meant to justify ghetto parasitism. It is irrational to choose a stateless polity with low trust and persistent retribution over a stateful polity with low trust and high suppression of retribution. This is why people demand the state: to suppress immoral and unethical people such as rothbardians, so that a high trust society can develop.

    An anarchic or private polity will only be possible to form under a high trust society that prohibits all free riding with the exception of kin.

    Curt Doolittle

    PS: I’m sure this will generate nonsense but I’m pretty sure my argument is rock solid. Just how it is. Rothbardians need to get over it.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-27 05:34:00 UTC

  • Untitled

    http://www.randalolson.com/2014/06/25/average-iq-of-students-by-college-major-and-gender-ratio/


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-27 01:45:00 UTC

  • GENDER RELATIONS women – similar age is best. men – younger is always better. (r

    https://coffeemeetsbagel.com/blog/index.php/dating-statistics/the-biological-reason-he-is-just-not-that-into-you/SILLY : GENDER RELATIONS

    women – similar age is best.

    men – younger is always better.

    (repost)


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-26 14:13:00 UTC

  • ANTHEM 😉 (with anti-rothbardian lyrics) Lunatic fringe I know you’re out there

    http://www.songlyrics.com/red-rider/lunatic-fringe-lyrics/#dpygYzzZiO2j00wx.99ARISTOCRATIC ANTHEM 😉

    (with anti-rothbardian lyrics)

    Lunatic fringe

    I know you’re out there

    You’re hiding in the open

    And you hold your meetings

    I can hear you crawling

    We know what you’re after

    We’re wise to you this time

    We won’t let you stop our laughter

    Lunatic fringe

    In the twilight of your dreaming

    This is open season

    And you won’t get too far

    ‘Cause you gotta blame someone

    For your own confusion

    But we’re on guard this time

    Against your usual deceptions

    We can hear your desperation

    No you’re not going to go quietly

    We can hear your panic

    On the wires and the highways

    Lunatic fringe

    Can know you hear us coming

    Can you feel the resistance?

    Can you feel the thunder?


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-26 07:48:00 UTC

  • DIVERGENCE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND ART Reading Joseph Agassi’s Popper and his popula

    DIVERGENCE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND ART

    Reading Joseph Agassi’s Popper and his popular critics.

    Wonderful, insightful, lucid writing that I am envious of.

    Inspired by late chapter on intentional conflation of art and science: Feyerabend. Rorty. Etc.

    It is not necessary to eliminate fable, metaphor, analogy and poetry from political life. Its is necessary to remove advocacy and justification for theft from our institutions. If the law must, like science, bear the burden of truth, not only in its enforcement, but also in its construction, then romance, poetry, analogy, myth and metaphor, are no danger.

    Feyerabend did not understand (i think) the reason for the division between arts and science as a moral hazard. It was hard enough to escape mysticism. He did not grasp that we had not yet found truth.

    We lacked a definition of truth. With truth defined, and truth necessary and required in the construction of law, art may communicate without moral hazard. The moral hazard is gone.

    The only moral truth is voluntary transfer. All else is logical contradiction. All truth is performative. And all proof of knowledge constructive.

    The reason for 2500 years of philosophical confusion was insufficient emphasis on demonstration. Most likely because geometry was barely distinguishable from magic to the greeks.

    ( I can improve and expand upon this argument , but the gist if it is correct. )


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-26 07:28:00 UTC

  • DEMONSTRATE LOWER TRUST

    http://www.reddit.com/r/TheRedPill/comments/1xaupa/what_happens_when_you_drop_a_bunch_of_women_on_an/WOMEN DEMONSTRATE LOWER TRUST.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-26 06:21:00 UTC

  • OF HOPPE’S NEW “ENTREPRENEURS ARE MORAL HEROES” More of the same. He remains con

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/2014/06/hans-hermann-hoppe/entrepreneurs-are-moral-heroes/REVIEW OF HOPPE’S NEW “ENTREPRENEURS ARE MORAL HEROES”

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/2014/06/hans-hermann-hoppe/entrepreneurs-are-moral-heroes/

    More of the same. He remains consistent. I have a few clarifications and one criticism of a significant logical contradiction.

    —“In the most fundamental sense we are all, with each of our actions, always and invariably profit-seeking entrepreneurs.”—

    This is an imprecise analogy for the purpose of ideological conflation. We are, if an described by any analogy, advantage-seeking hunters. Entrepreneurship is merely one of the many venues for seeking advantage. The most important reproductive advantage is status. Status grants us access to associations, opportunity, discounts, rents, and mates. Under monogamy we pursue status for its own sake. Profit is a means of calculating and measuring of the use of complex resources. Humans have to be taught to seek profits. We seek advantage. We seek acquisitions. Profit is merely a means of measuring whether we have obtained advantage (acquisitions). We do not seek the measure. We seek the advantage that we are measuring.

    With this in mind, much of the rest of section I is translatable into valuable insight.

    —“It is only necessary that every good be always and at all times owned privately, i.e., controlled exclusively by some specified individual (or individual partnership or association), “—

    This is not precise enough. It should instead be correctly stated that the transaction costs of decision making, the opportunity costs in time, and the opportunity for free riding, increase with the number of decision makers. If the decision makers (owners) are not fixed in number (calculable) then a calculable (true) decision cannot be made, nor can rent seeking (free riding) be prevented, nor can profits from complex actions be rationally redistributed by apportionment. One cannot calculate ratios without denominators. As such fixed membership (shareholder listings) are necessary for the purpose of retaining calculability, and calculability is necessary for the purpose of preventing thefts (free riding, privatization of the assets of the private commons).

    So, because of these multiple factors, the degree of trust (rational ability to take risks) and therefore the velocity of production (frequency of risk taking), is determined by the ability to conduct rational calculation, and rational calculation requires fixed apportionment of ownership, and delegation of decision making.

    The individual is less valuable than the collective, however, the allocation of property rights is the only CALCULABLE means of cooperation while at the same time preventing free riding.

    With this in mind, sections II+ are tolerable.

    —“Justice”—

    Well, this is breaking down into logical contradiction.

    I think I have persuasively argued that we pay for property rights by forgoing opportunities to commit crimes, obtain unethical rewards, obtain immoral rewards, and obtain conspiratorial rewards. Each time we refrain from these things is a cost to us. We voluntarily pay this cost to pay for the norm of property rights in all its forms, including those of morals rules, rituals and conventions.

    I think, also that most of us understand these costs, and willingly pay them.

    When all of us are agrarian farmers, the relationship between our respect for rights, and our productivity is constant. But under modern industrialism, where we can no longer provide for ourselves by living off the land, some people are able to respect property rights, and therefore pay for membership in creating the voluntary structure of production, yet these people are not able to participate profitably in the work force, and obtain income from the voluntary structure ofp roduction that they create by observing property rights.

    if they are paying a membership fee, but receive no benefit for doing so it is not rational for them to continue to pay the fee once they are no longer able to obtain benefits for it.

    So if there is value in the contributions of these people to the voluntary organization of production that we call ‘capitalism’, then we must either pay them for their services in constructing the voluntary organization of production, or cease asking them to pay a membership fee (a tax in forgone opportunities or consumption) for benefits that it is impossible for them to collect.

    As such the argument for justice does not hold – it is a logical contradiction.

    As such people must have some CALCULABLE (commission) on the performance of the market which they contribute to by respecting property rights, rituals, norms, manners etc, or it is both irrational to expect them to continue to pay the costs of forgoing consumption, and it is a violation of their property rights by failing to return to them compensation in exchange for their actions.

    How they obtain those benefits is up to them. They may prefer their benefits in cash, or in commons. But it is not unjust for them to obtain those benefits. It is unjust that those benefits are involuntarily extracted, rather than contractually negotiated in exchange for their policing of themselves and others for adherence to property rights in all their forms, as well as rituals, norms habits, and traditions.

    Every forced redistribution is a lost opportunity for mutually beneficial exchange. And the problem that the state creates is the use of legislation under the presumption of a common good among relatively equal producers, rather than the negotiation of contracts between the productive and the unproductive, for their service in facilitating the voluntary organization of production which does benefit us all.

    DISINGENUITY OR ERROR?

    Recently, Critical Rationalists have criticized Hoppe as “Disingenuous”. But I won’t link to that here, just to avoid that conversation for the moment.

    I had always considered Hoppe an evangelical propagandist using absurdity for the purpose of interjecting humor into his arguments for the benefit of entertaining his students. However, his obsession with obscurantist Kantian rationalism, with Marxist emotive loading of his arguments, with ideological contextualization and framing of arguments, and with his persistent cultish hero worship, all accumulate in an unscientific body of work.

    His accomplishments, as far as I am able to tell, are limited to his use of property rights and economics to argue the full scope of ethics and politics, his theory of capitalism and socialism, his application of incentives to critique democracy, his articulation of property as necessary and sufficient (despite his reliance on the insufficiency of aggression and IVP), and most importantly of all, his transformation of government as monopoly insurer of last resort, to competing insurers incapable of formation of monopoly. These are significant contributions to political theory, political economy, and political institutions. However, his perpetual obscurantism, framing and loading severely limit his practical value, and his position as a contributor to the history of thought.

    I hope to extract the scientific from the rationally framed and loaded, and to extend his work from ideological to scientific. Because it is of extraordinary value in developing alternatives to the predatory bureaucratic state. But his dedication to his past investment in ghetto ethics, cosmopolitan obscurantism (double speak), and continental rationalism are difficult to overcome.


    Source date (UTC): 2014-06-26 05:36:00 UTC