I go to the doctor.
The doc and me consider my options.
Then I proceed with whatever option I've chosen.
Then I pay my bill.
Golden Rule … WikiImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2020 4:49 pm As for "The Golden Rule," I think honesty requires us to realize that it's not nearly universal (Randians, Nihilists, Libertarians, Nietzscheans, as well as every proponent of any kind of tribalism deny it), and manifestly does not summarize the totality of morality (some moral precepts from some traditions go beyond it). So I don't think it is actually "workable" for a whole lot of people, even though I would personally say it's right for me and you, provided we don't merely stop there.
Well, this is totally wrong.Walker wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 7:03 pm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Rule
According to this, the Golden Rule is common.
The Golden Rule is as much an objective statement of physics, of physical inevitability, as it is a prescription for ethical behavior.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:59 amWell, this is totally wrong.Walker wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2020 7:03 pm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Rule
According to this, the Golden Rule is common.
What's more, you can see it's wrong, if you consider any one of the examples I already gave you. The GR is nowhere near universal. Wiki's just out to lunch on that. It's ignoring the facts in order to perpetuate a common prejudice.
It's decidedly not. Not unless you imagine, somehow, that unfairness or injustice simply do not exist, and that everybody gets exactly what's coming to them, every time, and "physics" guarantees it.
Maybe. But the pedophile who destroys dozens of young lives...does he molest himself? The rapist who destroys women...does he rape himself? The embezzler who bulges his bank account with the money of others...is he stealing from himself? And the mass murderer who fills the killing fields with skulls...is his skull among them?In traffic the road rager who curses other drivers also rages against himself, or herself.
Above is only a small bit of your post which is well argued as usual and I haven't time to comment on all you wrote.The solution, of course, is remove the public funding and let these institutions, like water, find their proper level.
Your view is actually quite pessimistic, Belinda...and Henry's is, if anything, more optimistic.
Close enough:Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2020 5:14 pmYour view is actually quite pessimistic, Belinda...and Henry's is, if anything, more optimistic.
Things like Determinism and Collectivism hold out no hope for wisdom emerging from individuals. People are, in their view, stupid and sheep-like, to the point of self-endangerment, utterly incapable of realizing their own interests apart from the wisdom of the collective (Collectivism), or else hopelessly in thrall to prior forces (Determinism) and thus unpossessed of any freedom at all.
Yet for some reason, Collectivism thinks the collective of the sheep has more wisdom than the individual sheep, and Determinism thinks that it can argue about free will with entities that (by its own supposition) can have none!![]()
Now, Henry -- unless I miss my guess -- thinks that an individual has some hope. He may not always make the right choices, but at least when he's not part of a collective mob, the dangers and consequences of his own bad choices will be visited upon him, and thus provide a feedback loop that can teach him to be more wise; and the good choices he makes will similarly reward him, and teach him wisdom. But his successes and failures will not be visited by force on other people, magnified by the power of The Collective.
Henry sees people as flawed but capable of learning to handle their freedom. That's the most optimistic view a reasonable person can actually have. It's actually more pessimistic to hold that the individual simply cannot be trusted, cannot be made the arbiter of his own best interest, and must be paternalistically mass-managed by the rest of the sheep, or that he really has no freedom at all anyway.
The reason western nations "navigate the idiosyncratic agendas of individuals " is western nations underwent a scientific enlightenment which followed upon the Renaissance of Greek humanist culture. The reason, Henry, is historical. Democracy began in ancient Athens and was revived and extended in early modern and modern Europe.Not every nation in the world had an enlightenment . The USA was originally a European colony and was formed from enlightenment ideas.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2020 6:46 pm "if men did not organise themselves into reasonably permanent cooperative endeavours for moral and practical purposes, they would be both inefficient and brutal."
The question: is this organizing self-organization or tyranny?
A tyranny, a dictatorship, has the advantage when it comes to efficiency. Mostly, it requires just the simple application of the Big Stick. And tyranny is just so damn easy. Why navigate the idiosyncratic agendas of individuals when the lot can be made to wear the labels of cog or meat (citizen: legally recognized ward/resource of the State).
Not including barbarians, slaves, and women, of course...and with no rationale for ever including them. So no human rights.
"The Enlightenment" was merely a self-congratulatory term placed on themselves by the same people who were alive at the time of things like the Baconian revolution in science. These were also the French Revolution and Terror contemporaries.Not every nation in the world had an enlightenment .
It's advocated by many secularists (for example, "enlightenment" folks) and by some but not all "religious" ones, each for their own reasons. And it's practiced by everyone, even those who profess skepticism in it, every time they try to present a rational argument to "change someone else's mind." Because absent free will, no such thing is possible.Ontic Free Will is a religious dogma...