Source: Original Site Post

  • What’s Your Radical View?

    I assume that you do realize that you have not asked a question, and that you’ve advertised an opinion.

    https://www.quora.com/unanswered/Whats-your-radical-view

  • Can A Common Man With Average Intelligence Make A Significant Change In Society?

    An important and interesting question,  So I will do my best. Although you might not like the answer.

    1) Well, a common man certainly can make a positive impact on society merely by accumulating and making use of the Virtues. 

    2) Common many have made positive impact accidentally on the world by virtuous action at the right moment in time.  But that is not to say that they possessed a brilliant idea or persuasive character. It means only that as virtuous people they seized an opportunity when it came before them, even if they did not construct that opportunity themselves.

    3) The historical record suggests that most people who make a significant POSITIVE impact on society are not average. In fact, the record is almost absent of common individuals.  The people who do make a significant impact tend to be above average, largely from the middle or upper middle classes – in other words, not common. 

    4) The interesting question is whether the common man, correctly estimates that his reasons, opinions or imaginations, would produce what is a POSITIVE impact upon society.  If you imagine what a child sounds like to an adult; what a student sounds like to a professor; what a common citizen sounds like to a statesman or scholar – the result is always the same: that we are always unconscious of our incompetence. If we were aware of our incompetence we might lack the will to do anything at all. So we evolved confidence in the face of ignorance out of necessity. 

    So the question is really whether the common man has any significant value to add to society other than his assumption that he does.  On the other hand, there are many people who are not average who none the less are not omniscient, always looking for ideas to use in changing the world.

    And so, it is possible that an ordinary fellow might stumble across a good idea. But even if he did, is it possible for his idea to compete with the many many ideas, of all the individuals who are above average, and who are ALSO struggling to change the world?

    The market for ideas is no different from the market for products and services. If you cannot sell your idea, that is because no one is buying it. If no one buys it then that is evidence that it isn’t wanted. If it isn’t wanted, then by definition, it isn’t ‘good’.

    The greeks had it right you know: wisdom is found in increasing the knowledge of your own ignorance.

    https://www.quora.com/Can-a-common-man-with-average-intelligence-make-a-significant-change-in-society

  • How Could The Conflict Between Israel And Its Neighbors Be Solved To The Satisfaction Of All Parties Involved?

    History, not of just the middle east, but of the entire world,  says it cannot.

    https://www.quora.com/How-could-the-conflict-between-Israel-and-its-neighbors-be-solved-to-the-satisfaction-of-all-parties-involved

  • Why Is Human Action By Ludwig Von Mises Considered A Great Book?

    It isnt. It isn’t widely considered a great book.

    Through at least Chapter 15 it is a work of pseudoscientific philosophy, and from 15 onward is adequate.  Mises’ reputation like that of most Jewish authors has been the subject of extravagant but unworthy promotion by Jewish Anarchists and a small number of third-tier academics who attempt to sway the unsophisticated with arguments that are ideologically useful but scientifically, widely if not universally rejected.  

    The Austrian Christian movement through Hayek, has been fully integrated into classical economics, except for the open debate over the impact of various forms of monetary and fiscal policy on the business cycle.  The Austrian Jewish movement consisting of Mises and Rothbard, and to some lesser degree Hoppe, is widely considered a heresy or cult movement, and the mainstream has sought to distance itself from this rationalist and pseudoscientific fringe.

    Prolific authors with activist supporters have spread Mises work as a mainstream alternative, to a population more able to grasp simplistic arguments rather that the heavily mathematical language of economics. Furthermore, the Mises Institute has used this work of pseudoscience as a means of raising money for over three decades and failed, to to more than expand the fringe group to autistically inclined, disenchanted males – a movement which has harmed the (Protestant) Classical Liberal Libertarian movement by damaging the brand ‘libertarian’ and associating libertarianism with fringe groups rather than the anglo saxon tradition of common law, the family, and self reliance, back into our ancient history.

    Mises, like many of his contemporaries, correctly intuited that something was wrong with the direction of economic inquiry, but he, even less so than his peers in math and science, was unsuccessful in identifying it.

    And instead he resorted to elaborate verbal pseudoscientific argument, unsupported by empirical evidence, to justify his preconceptions of how economics ought to work if it worked for the benefit of investors rather than the benefit of the commons (everyone). 

    Mises is, like Rothbard and Marx, Freud and Cantor and in fact most of the Cosmopolitans, and no small number of the German Continentals, an authoritarian who will happily resort to pseudoscience and elaborate verbalisms to construct arguments that they cannot by scientific and demonstrable means.

    This is the correct interpretation of Mises: as an advocate for investors who used pseudoscience to justify his preconceptions.

    Economists don’t read Marx or Mises except as literary diversions. If you do choose to read Mises, read him as an author of cosmopolitan middle class pseudoscience the same way you read Marx as an author of lower class pseudoscience, or Strauss as an author of upper class pseudoscience.

    But we appear to be coming to the end of a century and a half of pseudoscience – thanks to science. Particularly science since 2000.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-is-Human-Action-by-Ludwig-von-Mises-considered-a-great-book

  • Why Is Human Action By Ludwig Von Mises Considered A Great Book?

    It isnt. It isn’t widely considered a great book.

    Through at least Chapter 15 it is a work of pseudoscientific philosophy, and from 15 onward is adequate.  Mises’ reputation like that of most Jewish authors has been the subject of extravagant but unworthy promotion by Jewish Anarchists and a small number of third-tier academics who attempt to sway the unsophisticated with arguments that are ideologically useful but scientifically, widely if not universally rejected.  

    The Austrian Christian movement through Hayek, has been fully integrated into classical economics, except for the open debate over the impact of various forms of monetary and fiscal policy on the business cycle.  The Austrian Jewish movement consisting of Mises and Rothbard, and to some lesser degree Hoppe, is widely considered a heresy or cult movement, and the mainstream has sought to distance itself from this rationalist and pseudoscientific fringe.

    Prolific authors with activist supporters have spread Mises work as a mainstream alternative, to a population more able to grasp simplistic arguments rather that the heavily mathematical language of economics. Furthermore, the Mises Institute has used this work of pseudoscience as a means of raising money for over three decades and failed, to to more than expand the fringe group to autistically inclined, disenchanted males – a movement which has harmed the (Protestant) Classical Liberal Libertarian movement by damaging the brand ‘libertarian’ and associating libertarianism with fringe groups rather than the anglo saxon tradition of common law, the family, and self reliance, back into our ancient history.

    Mises, like many of his contemporaries, correctly intuited that something was wrong with the direction of economic inquiry, but he, even less so than his peers in math and science, was unsuccessful in identifying it.

    And instead he resorted to elaborate verbal pseudoscientific argument, unsupported by empirical evidence, to justify his preconceptions of how economics ought to work if it worked for the benefit of investors rather than the benefit of the commons (everyone). 

    Mises is, like Rothbard and Marx, Freud and Cantor and in fact most of the Cosmopolitans, and no small number of the German Continentals, an authoritarian who will happily resort to pseudoscience and elaborate verbalisms to construct arguments that they cannot by scientific and demonstrable means.

    This is the correct interpretation of Mises: as an advocate for investors who used pseudoscience to justify his preconceptions.

    Economists don’t read Marx or Mises except as literary diversions. If you do choose to read Mises, read him as an author of cosmopolitan middle class pseudoscience the same way you read Marx as an author of lower class pseudoscience, or Strauss as an author of upper class pseudoscience.

    But we appear to be coming to the end of a century and a half of pseudoscience – thanks to science. Particularly science since 2000.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-is-Human-Action-by-Ludwig-von-Mises-considered-a-great-book

  • Knowing is an Experience, Not an Action

    [K]nowing is an experience. Constructing an existence, logical, or mathematical, proof is an action. We can demonstrate them. That is not to say that they are true, it is to say that they are proofs. If we have constructed proofs, we may err, but it is very hard to lie. And even if one does, err, we need not hold him accountable for his error. Speaking truthfully, constructing a proof, and possessing the ultimate truth are very different things. I can however speak truthfully, and I can construct an existence proof, and that is the most that I can do. I can know those things even if I cannot know if I possess the truth. So what does that do for me? I doesn’t tell me anything about whether I possess the ultimate truth, but it does allow me to speak truthfully to the best of my ability – and that is all that we can ask of anyone. Because it is all that is possible for anyone. Conversely, we must ask it of anyone who seeks to place an argument into the commons the result of which would subject others to harm.

  • Knowing is an Experience, Not an Action

    [K]nowing is an experience. Constructing an existence, logical, or mathematical, proof is an action. We can demonstrate them. That is not to say that they are true, it is to say that they are proofs. If we have constructed proofs, we may err, but it is very hard to lie. And even if one does, err, we need not hold him accountable for his error. Speaking truthfully, constructing a proof, and possessing the ultimate truth are very different things. I can however speak truthfully, and I can construct an existence proof, and that is the most that I can do. I can know those things even if I cannot know if I possess the truth. So what does that do for me? I doesn’t tell me anything about whether I possess the ultimate truth, but it does allow me to speak truthfully to the best of my ability – and that is all that we can ask of anyone. Because it is all that is possible for anyone. Conversely, we must ask it of anyone who seeks to place an argument into the commons the result of which would subject others to harm.

  • Poincaré on Cantor's Mysticism

    [P]oincaré rejected the later foundational work of Cantor, saying that

    —“There is no actual infinity, the Cantorians have forgotten that, and they have fallen into contradiction. It is true that Cantorism rendered services, but that was when it was applied to a real problem whose terms were clearly defined, and we could walk safely. Logisticians as Cantorians have forgotten. (Poincaré 1908: 212–213; 1913b: 484)”—

  • Poincaré on Cantor’s Mysticism

    [P]oincaré rejected the later foundational work of Cantor, saying that

    —“There is no actual infinity, the Cantorians have forgotten that, and they have fallen into contradiction. It is true that Cantorism rendered services, but that was when it was applied to a real problem whose terms were clearly defined, and we could walk safely. Logisticians as Cantorians have forgotten. (Poincaré 1908: 212–213; 1913b: 484)”—

  • Poincaré on Cantor's Mysticism

    [P]oincaré rejected the later foundational work of Cantor, saying that

    —“There is no actual infinity, the Cantorians have forgotten that, and they have fallen into contradiction. It is true that Cantorism rendered services, but that was when it was applied to a real problem whose terms were clearly defined, and we could walk safely. Logisticians as Cantorians have forgotten. (Poincaré 1908: 212–213; 1913b: 484)”—