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Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:04 pm
by Immanuel Can
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 7:51 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 5:05 pmToo funny, I have to say. And horribly transparent. Why not just give up the ad homs, and deal with the subjects we were actually discussing?
The key to understanding Immanuel Can as a religious fundamentalist, as a religious fanatic, and as I zealot,...
:lol: There it is again!

You're leaking like an incontinent puppy, AJ; you just can't help yourself. :lol:

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:05 pm
by Immanuel Can
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:00 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 5:05 pm And you know it. You're not that naive. So come on, AJ...maybe you should pull yourself together and get back on subject. The truth is, nobody's buying the dance routine. Not even you.And you know it. You're not that naive. So come on, AJ...maybe you should pull yourself together and get back on subject. The truth is, nobody's buying the dance routine. Not even you.
What I *know* is what I say, and what I say contradicts your assertion here.
Then, I guess I gave you more credit than you say you deserve.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:08 pm
by henry quirk
Gary: "I don't "own" myself no more than I don't "own" myself."

Gary, you are your first, best property.

"To "own" is to have usage rights to something outside of ourselves."

Quit thinkin' legalisms.

"I don't "use" myself"

Really? Then how are you typin'?

"using myself...would be unethical toward the person I "use".

You belong to you. You may use yourself poorly but you are yours to use.

"I cannot be free from the consequences of what I do."

Did I post sumthin' that would have you think I advocate for irresponsibility or license? I haven't. So why state the obvious, to me, of all people?

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:02 pm
by Alexis Jacobi
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:05 pm Then, I guess I gave you more credit than you say you deserve.
Whether you give me credit or not is irrelevant to me. You can retract any credit that you have ever given or add all that you care to, and it will not change my assertion nor the sound foundation on which it is based: your views are grounded not in reason, not in what is communicable to your peers through clear exposition on this or any other forum, but in a specific type of religious fanaticism. That is a *think in itself* and it is completely valid to refer to it, to label it, and to talk about it.

One must first see this about you, and then try to understand how your fanaticism functions. To do that is non-different than, for example, disassembling the structure of belief of a fanatical Muslim fundamentalist or any number of such fundamentalisms. Oddly, I would assume that you'd be capable of doing that. But when it comes to your own beliefs you are immune to self-introspection. There, your zealousness and your fanaticism kick in and erect varied impenetrable defenses.

We could pick from a range of fundamental and hyper-zealous belief-systems that have such strong defenses. Even for example that of the committed communist.

The thing about you is that you are both intelligent and widely read. Your fundamentalist beliefs are couched in what I have come to understand as an elaborate front. And as I previously said you present yourself as one who can be reasoned with and indeed as one who welcomes it. In numerous areas -- and more often adjacent areas that are not directly related to your fundamentalist beliefs -- you reason quite well. Your contributions are valuable. One can trust you.

But in my observation and exchanges with you on the topic of Christianity and religion generally, you are completely closed. Not mostly or largely closed, completely closed.

And your fundamentalism is expressed in, as I outlined, a Biblical literalism which, I submit, cannot be sustained in our modernity.

So insofar as you are 100% committed to your fundamentalist and fanatical beliefs, it is exactly to that degree that the proper term for you is not an insulting term like *idiot* or *asshole* -- those are ad hominem -- but the fair terms used to describe your orientation which is psychological, ideological and religious. A nexus of elements that work together. It enables a *structure* to stand.

It is necessary that you be clearly seen, explained and understood.

But that is as far as I am concerned just a first step. You will resist all of this until the end of time and I understand this. But this is a public philosophy forum and everything that I say is proper to such a forum and the topic (fanatical fundamentalism) is also fair game.

However, as far as I am concerned there is a following step. And I talk about this when I talk about my take on metaphysics. That which the story alludes to.

That you are stuck in fundamentalist fanaticism is not a tremendous concern for me. I believe I will be able to carry on quite nicely when I begin Part Two.

Part One is here.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:05 pm
by iambiguous
henry quirk wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 7:59 pm Gary: "Therefore, in order to have a right to property some sort of limits would need to be stipulated so that some don't take over the reigns of society by virtue of owning the most property."

The only reason you have the uber-rich is becuz they bought legislation. Take away the State and there can be no uber-property owners.

Here's sumthin' I posted a while back...

By definition: Capitalism is only about 'capital', so it's natural for the Capitalist to see himself protected by the Big Stick, hence he works to see regs minimized on himself and maximized on his competition. The Capitalist always has an eye open for bringing every penny into 'his' coffers (not his competitor's and sure as shit not his customer's or employee's). Capitalism is an exercise that promotes intrusive, irresponsible, playin' the favorites, muckin' with the culture, rule by the powerful.

By definition: Free Enterprse is only about the trading individual as he transacts with other trading individuals. The Big Stick is excluded ('cept mebbee as final arbiter of dispute) so it's natural for the Free Enterpriser to be cautious and moderate (he has no safety net to catch him or teat to nourish in bad times). 'Too big to fail' is alien to the Free Enterpriser cuz the reality of failure looms (the wolf is always at the door). Free Enterprise promotes less intrusive, responsible, largely silent, neutral, proxy-hood.

*

In my case: while defintions and whatnot come from dictionaries and whatnot, my experience of the difference between Free Enterprise and Capitalism is first hand.

As I say: I self-employ, and I do so in a gray area sphere (information). I find it, convey it, wash my hands of it. What I do is largely unregulated ('cept by 'legit' private investigators who are always lookin' to call down the fire on someone they think is takin' their business). Mine is truly a 'free' enterprise. I have no formal regulators to oversee me, no safety net, no teat. If I don't work, or if I work but fail, there's no line for me to stand in to get a check. If I'm screwed over by a client, the current iteration of the courts is of little use to me.

Having worked 9 to 5, with all the benefits and all the strictures, serving multiple overseers, ain't no way in Heaven or Hell I'd ever give up the autonomy I have now for the 'security' I had then.

As I reckon things: Free Enterprise, with all it's dangers and neck-breakin', life-wreckin' possibilities, is superior to State Capitalism with it's abattoir-like confinements and 'regulations'. Only thing State Capitalism is better than is State Socialism (and not by much).

Free enterprise, for the record, is synonomous with 'free (open, unregulated) market' (something Capitalists discourage [which makes them different from commies how?]).

*

Bonus Material (included cuz I like it)

It was said [by someone, I don't recall who]...

"Yeah, this is why I've evolved into more of a pragmatist. To become such an individualist that you oppose government assisting in the liberation of others makes no sense to me. Government exists, if you want good governance you have to engage with it. Libertarianism has become a way to convince people not to engage with their government assuring government which does not represent their interests."

My translation...

Yeah, this is why I've evolved into a slave. To be a free man and oppose being turned into a resource for others makes me scared. Governors exist. And, since we all want to be on the governors' good side we should do as told. Libertarianism is 'bad' because it reminds people the governors are employees and governors don't like that. Libertarianism is 'wrong' because it highlghts the natural tension between those who govern and those governed, a tension governors very much want to eliminate so as to better 'govern' (rule).

...summed up as...

I've accepted my lot, which is to be bent over. Libertarians, with all their shennanigans, endanger my lube supply.

-----

a state capitalism (what 'murica has right now) encourages accumulation of wealth in increasingly fewer hands...it's a means by which wealthy folks can buy a measure of favor and insulation from the gov in the form of legislation...it's a less than stellar choice of an economy for free men

though imperfect, it's an open system: anyone can climb the ladder...anyone, at anytime...if bein' rich is your goal, there's no damn reason you can't be...it will not be easy...you'll forsake many comforts and pleasures...it is what it is

*

a state communism (what so many want 'murica to embrace, and which includes all the subsets [social democracy, socialism, etc.]) promises a chicken in every pot (one scrawny bird, one rusty pot), and a roof over every head (a tar paper roof over submissive [or bloody] heads)...you'll have equality (with the lowest among you), safety (eyes & ears, watchin', listenin'; jackboots to stomp wrong-doers (be careful that ain't you), and a central committee to benevolently oversee you (and keep you in line)

it's a closed system...advancement comes only as your value in keepin' the machine runnin' is proven...your wants, your needs, your goals, your dreams: sorry, brother, there is no your, there's only our, so drop the y, reject the I, and embrace the party (the one, the only)

*

your salvation, should you choose to pursue it, is not to be found in the state capitalism (by far, not the worst thing to saddle yourself with) or the state communism (a pretty damn awful thing by any measure)...no, only free enterprise can save you, and that means self-employin'...no man is meant to work in perpetuity for another...the apprentice becomes a master, the student becomes the teacher, the child becomes a parent

I'm sub-normal yet I successfully self-employ: me and mine have shelter (actual slate shingles), food (all kinds of good eatin'), safety (we're a gun-ownin' family), and various comforts & pleasures...most important: we're free

if I can do it: there's no reason any of you ought to be on the dole or workin' the 9 to 5

best thing of all: free enterprise works everywhere, all the time...even in the midst of a well-established state communism (what do you think gray & black markets are?)

so: stop bellyachin' and get to work.

-----

And this, from my 'article of the day' thread (severely in need of up-datin')...

Barter Trade, Not Capitalism

ARE ANARCHISTS PRO OR ANTI capitalism? Many anarchists dogmatically claim an anarchist cannot be pro capitalism simply because capitalism is oppressive--and anarchism is based on socialist ideals. The anarchist society necessarily needs to be “free from capitalist oppression.” Other anarchists claim an anarchist society, based solely on voluntary action of free people (individually or collectively) cannot be anything but capitalist. There seems to be an unbridgeable gap here.

As anarchists often and correctly note, barter trade is inoffensive and it is ethical. Someone believing in natural rights (or any other kind of rights too) would say barter trade does not violate rights and is thus ethical. Some simply state that since barter trade is in full voluntary and does not include any kind of coercive measures it is ethical and just. This is a fully anarchist point of view, all anarchists should be able to support this.

Now, why is barter trade not the same as a market? Imagine two people, let’s say a baker and a fisherman, get together every now and then to voluntarily exchange things. The baker obviously values fish higher than the bread he needs to give up to get it, and the fisherman obviously values the bread higher than the fish he “pays” for it. It is very simple, if either one of them would believe it was not just--and that they were not better (or as good) off as before--they would not voluntarily agree to the exchange. This is how many libertarian or anarcho-capitalist anarchists define the market--voluntary exchanges for one’s own benefit, which means every exchange is for all partaking actors’ benefit.

Imagine there are more people in this society, for instance a wagon maker. Now, this is going to get troublesome since one wagon takes a lot of time and skill to produce, and the wagon maker cannot produce more than a few wagons each year. And, since the baker and fisherman know they cannot make a wagon unless not baking or fishing for a long while, they will agree to exchange a large quantity of bread or fish for a wagon (if they need it). Of course, working for a couple of months making a wagon, and then getting perhaps one thousand loaves of bread or many hundreds of fish is not an attractive exchange. Bread gets bad after a while, and fish will rot. Also, the wagon maker needs something to eat while making the wagon he is about to sell.

It is the same the other way around too: bread and fish will go bad as the baker or fisherman is trying to save enough bread or fish to buy a wagon. So the wagon-maker would have a wagon which he wishes to exchange for fish or bread, and the baker and fisherman would have their bread and fish while being interested in trading it for a wagon. But the exchange would never happen, since bread and fish easily goes bad when saved. So what would happen in this little society?

It is obvious the three people would come to an agreement since it is in their mutual interest to make this exchange. Maybe they agree on paying the wagon maker a couple of loaves of bread or some fish every day for a couple of months, and will in return get the wagon when it is finished. This means they have avoided the problem with bread or fish getting bad, and they all benefit from this scheme since nobody needs to keep a lot of bread/fish while awaiting the right quantity. There is nothing wrong with this, right? They are still into barter trade, but have agreed on paying for the thing of greater value in smaller portions. With this solution, they have through voluntary action invented the contract, since they have an agreement for exchange even thought the exchange is not immediate. The agreement therefore causes an ongoing interdependence throughout the time of the contract, but it is still barter and it is still 100 % voluntary.

Also, they have invented a financial instrument since there is value in the contract. The value arises simply because the baker and fisherman offer their products before they get anything in return (which is the basis for this contract), and will as time goes by have a bigger claim to the property (wagon) of the wagon maker. And, of course, the wagon maker will be in debt as the baker and fisherman pays him bread and fish while he has not yet given them anything. The difference is the current value of the contract, since--in this case--the baker and fisherman relies on the contract to get value in the future.

It is still barter, so there is no conflict and it is not offensive; it is still as ethical as we agree barter is. We are still relying totally on voluntary exchange for the mutual benefit of whomever is involved (in this case: the baker, the fisherman, and the wagon maker).

Now, maybe there is a storm and the fisherman’s boat is thrown ashore and sinks to the bottom of the sea. The fisherman cannot get any more fish (or he cannot get the quantity he expected) and would need to get a new boat. According to the contract he will have to continue paying a number of fish every day to the wagon maker even though the wagon maker in real terms is in debt to the fisherman. What can he do?

He can of course go to the wagon maker and ask him to release him from his obligation stated in the contract through cancelling it. Maybe the wagon maker will agree to this, but it would mean he has to pay the fisherman back the number of fish he has already paid. But the wagon maker has probably already started working on the fisherman’s wagon, which means he has really “paid” a part of the value of the contract even though it is not yet realized for the fisherman. Maybe he cannot afford to let the fisherman get his fish back because he ate them all and cannot trade for new ones. Now we have a problem.

Either the wagon maker could give the fisherman whatever he has achieved in making the wagon, perhaps a wheel and a blueprint (which are not really of value to the fisherman, who cannot continue the work), or he can simply demand the fisherman continues giving him fish as was already agreed. Or, he could offer to make yet another agreement saying perhaps that the contract is off and that the fisherman will have a few fish back, but that he will keep 10 fish because he now cannot get food the following days. Since he expected to get fish every day while working on the wagon he now demands some of his costs are covered by the fisherman--this is not hard to imagine.

As we can see, the contract is here a financial instrument since there is value in the expected completion of whatever is stated in the contract. The agreement in itself means a promise to make a future payment, thus the contract is simply an agreement to make such an exchange as we have covered above--but it is not immediate.

The contract is to some extent also to be considered as speculation, since the fisherman promises to give the wagon maker a number of fish every day--but while signing the contract he does not have the fish. He simply expects to have the fish when he is supposed to deliver it to the wagon maker. He believes he will be able to catch fish every day to give to the wagon maker, so he takes this chance. But there is, as we can see, a certain amount of risk involved.

The wagon maker and the fisherman most likely think this is quite troublesome, exchanging fish for wagons. The difference in value is too great, thereby causing a lot of problems. Of course, the value they identify in fish and wagons is totally subject to their wants and desires. There is no real (or rather: objective) value in the wagon nor in the fish. To the wagon maker the wagon is worth approximately the time and effort it takes him to produce the wagon, to the fisherman the wagon is worth as much as it lightens his burden or what he expects to gain in whatever he would like to use it for. The same is true with the fish: the fisherman values the fish to the time and effort he puts in catching the fish, while the wagon maker values the fish according to his needs or desires.

The values of the things is thus not objective, it is subjective and individual. What happens when these two people get together to exchange a wagon for a number of fish is the establishment of market value of both the fish and the wagon. The market value in this case is simply whatever is agreed between seller and buyer, e.g. a wagon is worth 1,000 fish and a fish is worth 1/1,000 wagon. There is nothing strange about this, it is simply a voluntary agreement to exchange products and the values of the products are established by the parties involved in the exchange.

Since the wagon maker also makes a deal with the baker, there is also a market value of bread (relative to wagons) established. Perhaps the wagon is sold for 1,500 loaves of bread (the value of one wagon) meaning the bread is valued to 1/1,500 wagon. So we have established the market value of wagons, fish and bread. This does not mean the value is always the same, the market value is set only for the instance in which the single agreement is made. In this instance fish seems to have the value of 1.5 loaves of bread, but we do not know this until the baker and fisherman agree to exchange their products. (Simple Austrian economics, very rational and very intelligible.) The so-called “market value” the State uses for taxation and the multitude of government programs with subsidies or whatever is simply a scam.

Competition
The same is true if there are multiple actors in the marketplace (the market is simply the abstraction of all voluntary exchanges). If there are 1,000 bakers, 1,000 fisherman, and 1,000 wagon makers the market value is set in exactly the same way--in each individual transaction or exchange. But what is now added is the choice of whom to make the exchange with. If there are two fishermen in our example the value of fish would probably be lower since there are more fish available in exchange for roughly the same number of loaves of bread or wagons. Competition is introduced, which in this example increases the volume of fish available in exchange for bread or wagons.

This does not mean the fishermen will do anything to get as many fish as possible in order to buy all wagons and bread on the market. No, every exchange is still the result of voluntary action from both the “seller” and the “buyer,” thus the baker will exchange his bread for fish with the fisherman of his choice. Of course, the number of fish he can get is an important factor, but so is how the baker feels about the fisherman and his products, trust, friendship, politeness etc. Maybe the baker prefers fish caught using float and not nets, or he wishes the fish to be killed painlessly and treated in a good way, or he feels sorry for a poorer fisherman, or whatever. All these factors are of course important, since the choice to trade bread is only the baker’s.

As a matter of fact, since the baker has the option of with whom to exchange, the fishermen will have to outbid each other--the one offering the best deal for the baker (on the baker’s terms) will probably get the bread thus selling his fish. And of course, price is an important factor, but it is not at all the only one. The baker chooses which factors he wishes to consider, and chooses freely with whom to trade. So competition between the fishermen is for the trust of the baker, on the baker’s terms. In competition, the customer is king and the sellers will have to accept his terms.

This is of course not true in today’s society, where the state has a large number of rules on how to make exchanges, how to produce things, how to tell people about them (advertising), how to offer them, and a lot of other things. Such rules of course upsets the “market,” since it is no longer up to the fishermen to agree to the baker’s terms, and the baker’s terms are no longer important for the exchange--only the laws are. This is what happens when coercive measures are introduced to an otherwise voluntary exchange. The laws are of greater importance since they are backed by the guns of government, the baker’s preferences are no longer a priority. All the baker can do is not to trade his bread while the government can fine, outlaw or in other ways punish the fisherman. (Actually, many governments demands the baker to take part in the exchange even if he does not like the terms.)

Money
Imagine another thing in our original example with one baker, one fisherman and one wagon maker: one day the fisherman finds a couple of very beautiful pearls in some of the clams he caught while fishing. He thinks they are very beautiful and puts them in his pockets, anxious to show them to people. Everybody agrees that these pearls are really something special, and people imagine a number of different uses for such beauties. Thus, there is a demand for the pearls. It is not created in terms of producing a demand not before existing in the minds of people, but the new information (that such pearls exist) brings new thoughts to people and lets them reconsider their priority hierarchies. Hence, some people value the pearls very highly and some don’t. It is a newly identified demand, but it is based solely on voluntary preferences. The value of pearls is exactly as with bread, fish, and wagons--it is subjective. (What is objective is that there is an identified value in the pearls--all people seem to agree on this even though they do not agree on what the value is.)

The fisherman notices there are a lot of people wanting such pearls, and thus that there is a market value. He does not know what the market value is (since it has to be established in each individual exchange) but he is sure there is a value. Thus, he tries offering the baker pearls instead of fish in exchange for bread. The baker accepts according to what we established above--he places a higher value in these pearls than in the bread exchanged for them, and the fisherman vice versa. So an exchange takes place and a market value is established for that single exchange.

Since the fisherman exchanged only half of his pearls for bread, now both the baker and the fisherman have pearls. The fisherman makes the same offer to the wagon maker, offering pearls instead of fish as payment for the wagon. The wagon maker accepts since he thinks these pearls are very rare and beautiful. His wife would love them, and since he has heard the fisherman has already gotten bread for the pearls they surely have a market value.

The pearls have hence become a general medium of exchange, since people agree to trade using pearls as bearers of value instead of the direct exchange of products. Any medium of exchange such as this is money, so in our small society everybody is suddenly using money! Why? Because everybody wants to own the pearls (they all place a certain value in owning the pearls), and they choose to use the pearls rather than fish, bread, and wagons when exchanging value for products.

Thus, the next time the wagon maker visits the baker to make an exchange for bread he does not have to go through the trouble of trying to sell the baker a wagon and settling a contract with part-payments. Instead, he brings the pearls he was paid by the fisherman, and pays the number of pearls the baker and wagon maker agree the bread is worth.

The reason they all start using the pearls instead of direct barter is that they all consider them valuable and it is much easier for all of them to trade products for pearls instead of products for products. They are easier to store and handle, and they are scarce--one cannot find large numbers of pearls everywhere. Finding pearls takes time and energy, and thus there is a cost for getting more pearls (money) into the marketplace.

Investment
Now the fisherman can simply sell fish to the others and perhaps save the few pearls he does not need to use directly to get bread and whatever he needs. So he starts leading a little cheaper life in order to save; saving being the main prerequisite for investments. What is now spontaneously invented is a money-based economy with profits--the fisherman is saving a little money from each exchange.

The profits are not coercive or violate the rights of anyone. Any exchanges are still the result of voluntary action between the buyer and seller (they are both better off!), thus a new market price is established every time people agree to make an exchange. And it is still the same as barter, even though it is indirect because everybody taking part in exchanges believes it is easier and better to use pearls.

If the fisherman can save a lot of money it means simply that his costs are far less than what people are prepared to pay for his fish (meaning they place a higher value in the fish than in the pearls they give up for it). And because of this others can easily start fishing in order to get a piece of these profits. There is a rational incentive in catching fish if the fisherman is already making profits--of course other people want to be better off just as the fisherman. So profits cause competition, which in turn cuts profits. The result of this spontaneous balance-making is simply cheaper (and better) products for the consumers.

Anyway, when the fisherman has saved enough money (pearls) he goes to another town to buy a new boat or a net in order to catch more fish so that he can save more money and perhaps buy a house or a more comfortable bed for his wife. This way he can, through saving and investing his profits, increase the supply of fish in the market and thereby supplying more food to hungry people. Since there is more fish available (in the market) people are willing to pay less. If the fisherman tries to charge the same price for the fish he will only find that people will not be able to buy all the fish and it will rot while awaiting buyers. Also, the greater profits per sold fish will create an incentive for people to compete with him. So his profits will not be stable no matter what he does (unless he goes to the government asking for “favors”).

Thus, the market price for fish goes down. The fisherman can probably still save a little money from his business, since people are better off paying less for the fish and there is a small barrier for competitors to enter the market. Buying a boat (or net) is costly, and this produces a possibility for modest profits. Of course, the fisherman can set whatever price he wishes, but setting a too high price will only mean less people will be able to buy the fish.

Also, it creates a greater incentive for other people to get a boat/net and compete. As we have seen above anyone would be able to make an equal deal with a boat maker as the baker and fisherman did before with the wagon maker--i.e. making a contract for exchange of products in order to buy a boat. If there is a big profit in catching and selling fish there is enough for a competitor to cover the costs of such an agreement with the boat maker. So the price of fish will go down either through the fisherman recognizing this fact or through the “threat” of a new actor (competitor) in the market. The threat is of course only directed to the “unnatural” profits of the fisherman, all others are better off with such competition.

Capitalism
Another great thing with this is that there may be people in such a society who have been successful fishermen for many years through which they could have saved some money (pearls). Either they can use the money for covering daily expenses (food, clothes etc) or they can boost the balance-making in the market, thus cutting profits, lowering consumer prices and stream-lining production, through investing. This is what is called capitalism.

Imagine the fisherman gets old and has quite a few pearls in his possession. A new fisherman takes his place, so there are still three actors in the market: a baker, a fisherman, and a wagon maker. The fisherman is very intelligent and finds ways of being very successful in catching fish. He lowers the price of each fish a little bit, but is still able to make a lot of money from his business. He somehow knows there is no one able to buy the boat needed to compete with him, except for the old fisherman (who has no interest in going back to catching fish).

But since the fisherman is making profits there is an incentive for others to catch fish and get part of the profit. The baker’s son sees the opportunity but has no pearls to invest in the boat necessary for such an enterprise. But he knows the old fisherman has quite a few pearls, and one day goes to him offering him a very good deal. He says he wants to buy a boat to earn pearls from catching fish, but does not have enough pearls to make the purchase. So he offers the old fisherman the deal of buying (and owning) the boat, and the baker’s son will pay him a number of pearls every month. This way he will in time pay for the boat, and gives the old fisherman an extra pearl with every payment for the trouble and use of his property.

The old fisherman thinks about it, and finds the idea very attractive. So he agrees to pay for the boat and teaches the baker’s son a few secrets on how to catch very big fish. The baker’s son enters the markets and sells his fish, of course to a slightly lower price than the other fisherman. So the fisherman will have to lower his price not to lose the customers. Thus, the price of fish goes down.

The baker’s son sells the fish to a price covering the costs of the boat, the small profit for the old fisherman, and his personal expenses. Probably the other fisherman sells his fish for about the same price, since he wants to get as much as possible for his fish, but cannot charge a higher price than the competitor (the baker’s son). So, spontaneously and voluntary there is capitalism created in the market.

Also, the old fisherman could agree to a slightly different deal. He could agree to buy the boat for the baker’s son in order to start the enterprise, but with the condition that he gets part of the profits. Perhaps they agree that the old fisherman buys the boat and the baker’s son does all the work, but they split any profits fifty-fifty. If so, they have started a corporation and own 50 % each of the stock. The corporation may hire people to professionally do necessary work, but the owners still require their money back--and maybe a little profit on top. Corporations, the stock-market etc are all inventions of voluntary exchanges and agreements between individuals. But all these things are today thoroughly corrupted by the state and its laws.

Since all these things are directly derived from the simple barter situation and no force is added it cannot be any less ethical or moral than the original situation. If you find this development ethically offensive you are not considering the actions or behavior of the people involved--you only take the results into account. If you want to guarantee a certain result or rules of conduct in a society you will have to rely on the use of force. Relying on force simply cannot be anarchist.

What has really changed between the simple barter trade and this “advanced capitalist” society is that people get cheaper fish while the baker’s son earns a living and the old fisherman gets a profit (this profit is nothing but a small payment to make it worth his while to risk his justly achieved property). Also, the boat maker has sold two more boats. I am not able to find anything offensive in this. There is no force added, and people are better off. The reason this is possible is that prices and values are subjective, therefore each transaction means economic growth--all parties involved are [subjectively] better off.

State Capitalism
What truly is offensive is the so-called market of today, where all these voluntary actions leading to competition, productivity and capitalism have been set aside by the state through coercion, force, and fraud. There is no such thing as a market like the one described above existing today--the voluntary agreements of exchange between free people have been abolished by the use of guns of government. The closest there is is what is usually called the “black” market, but the prices in the black market are much higher than they should be because of the constant threat of state repression. And most of the so-called market instruments causing balance and consumer-power through the voluntary actions of individuals are set aside by the same threat of repression.

Of course, the above example is a simplified abstraction of the marketplace. It is much more advanced than this since there are many, many more actors involved. But the basis is exactly the same. The creation of money, competition etc actually happened in about the same way as in the example. With a little coercion added by the state, of course, which corrupted the results.

So as you probably see, the market is simply people coming together voluntarily to make exchanges, and what that eventually leads to. So what is the difference between this voluntary market with capitalism and anarchism? The answer is so obvious most anarchists do not find it: there is no difference. And there is no essential difference between the simple barter trade and global corporations.

Speculation
It is true that today’s “market” is somewhat oppressive and repressive, but it is not because of the market instruments competition, money or capitalism--it is because they have been corrupted by the state. For example, in such a free market as described here there could be no such thing as the speculation in currencies happening every day these days--making money doing really nothing. The currencies of today have no real value (such as pearls or gold, which are voluntarily accepted by everyone--and need to be voluntarily accepted as means of payment in each single exchange), but are simply pieces of paper and ink backed by the guns of government. What makes people think such “money” has a value is simply because the state forces people to use it. And because there is no identifiable value, people can through simple transactions make more “money” from speculating if the value placed in the “dollar” is really corresponding to the current exchange rate for the “euro.”

With a market not intervened by the state there would be no such fiat currencies. Instead people would trade in pearls, gold or whatever (and receipts of ownership of such; or barter). With such currencies there is no way of making a profit in speculation, since the currencies are simply products as anything else.

Note to IC:

All this and he is still going to Hell, right?

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:06 pm
by Immanuel Can
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:02 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 8:05 pm Then, I guess I gave you more credit than you say you deserve.
You can retract...
Oh, no. I was merely being charitable. If you say you're oblivious to the fact that you're ad hominem, or don't even know what it means, or why it's foolish, who am I to doubt you? Anyway, you're continuing to demonstrate the sincerity of your error, so I'll take your word for it.

Carry on. I can see you're bound to do so. But you should be cautioned that a rational person will see through it in an instant.

What's glaringly obvious is that you're not dealing with the substance of our debate or addressing the message, you're wandering off into the darklands of your personal antipathy to the messenger. But what you're determined to do, you're determined to do.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:10 pm
by Immanuel Can
iambiguous wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:05 pm
Note to IC:

All this and he is still going to Hell, right?
Don't wait for me to tell you. Read the Bible for yourself, and you can formulate a conviction of your own on that subject. But look to yourself, not Henry.

As for Henry, where he is in his relationship with God is known definitely only to him and his Maker. As it is written, "Man looks on the outward appearance, but God looks on the heart." If you suppose you're capable of judging Henry's heart from whatever you think you know about him, then you're bolder than I am.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:12 pm
by Alexis Jacobi
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:06 pm But you should be cautioned that a rational person will see through it in an instant.
Very well. I invite those rational people to come forward and express themselves.

And for the sake of establishing a proper base for a specific inquiry I would like to quote ( because it is convenient to do so) the encapsulation that Will Bouwman recently offered. Here it is:
Well, in a nutshell the theory behind the Christian God is that he created the world in seven days, made Adam out of clay, breathed life into his nostril, put him in a garden where he could eat anything but the fruit of one tree, saw that Adam was lonely, put him to sleep and plucked out one of his ribs to make Eve, who was persuaded by a talking snake to eat the prohibited fruit, for which every person born since has to pay, things got so bad that God drowned the entire population of Earth, including all the animals except for Noah and his family and a breeding pair of every living creature that Noah gathered into a boat the size of a Cathedral that he built all by himself. When that didn't work God sent the Holy Spirit to knock up a virgin to bear Jesus who would be a human sacrifice to pay for Adam and Eve's disobedience, instead of us, and if we believe that, we get to spend eternity with a being who thinks others being punished for your crimes is moral. What's not to believe?
First question for the 'rational folks' -- Is this believed? Is this believable? Do you believe it?
IC writes: What's glaringly obvious is that you're not dealing with the substance of our debate or addressing the message, you're wandering off into the darklands of your personal antipathy to the messenger. But what you're determined to do, you're determined to do.
Very well. What then is the real substance of the *debate* when we examine the paragraph just quoted. Please spell it out as clearly as you wish your peers to understand your view.
you're wandering off into the darklands of your personal antipathy to the messenger.
No, there is no antipathy. You are sometimes irritating snd frustrating, but my emotions are not involved here. This is purely intellectual.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:52 pm
by Immanuel Can
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:12 pm What then is the real substance of the *debate* when we examine the paragraph just quoted.
It's what's called a "reductio" argument. It involves using language to try to reduce somebody else's view, in order to make it an object of ridicule. And as such, it's not worthy of a response...the speaker has no intention of being convinced, obviously.

But it has nothing whatsoever to do with what we were talking about. We were speaking of the syncretism between Roman paganism and nominal Christianity that produced the first stage of what we now know as the Roman Catholic institution. And you were saying you were all in favour of syncretism, as I recall.

So are you going back to that, or are you just going to wave yet another red herring, so you don't have to discuss the particulars of what Catholicism is and has done?

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 11:04 pm
by Gary Childress
In the end, there are no Christians, no pagans, no communists, no capitalists, only people. We all make mistakes. We all do some things well. And we're all going to have to leave this world at some point. If there is a God, then there is a God. If there is not, then there is not. But the world is as it is and that is not going to change until it does. In the meantime, I intend to cherish what is left of my life and try to do a little less damage to other beings than perhaps I could do if I were more reckless and frivolous. However, I can never seem to do less than I could do. I always seem to only do exactly what I do.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Fri Jun 23, 2023 11:43 pm
by Alexis Jacobi
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:52 pm It's what's called a "reductio" argument. It involves using language to try to reduce somebody else's view, in order to make it an object of ridicule. And as such, it's not worthy of a response...the speaker has no intention of being convinced, obviously.
Are you saying that when I refer to your belief — the fundaments of it (as expressed in Will’s paragraph) — that I am engaging in reduction?

Wait, are you saying that the description Will encapsulated is ‘ridiculous’? What view or description would you put forward to make it non-ridiculous and admirable?

I am doing nothing to what is your fundamental belief! I am restating what you actually believe.

If you do not believe those things, if they are not fundamental, please indicate how you would correct it.
And as such, it's not worthy of a response...
In relation to what I am now discussing — your fundamentalism — how should I phrase my understanding of your views? If not exactly in those fundamentalist terms? What’s the proper way?

Explain if you would, here among your peers.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2023 12:01 am
by promethean75
"As for Henry, where he is in his relationship with God is known definitely only to him and his Maker. As it is written, "Man looks on the outward appearance, but God looks on the heart."

indeed, and i believe when the time is right, Henry will have truck with Jesus and a new faith in the Christian doctrine. tho most deists present as the bold and independent intellectual type that's above all the religious tripe but accepts the intelligent design argument. that's fine, but when it comes dyin time i don't doubt one minute that Henry Quirk won't get right by god.

that last part should be read in the slow and deliberate retrospective intellectually cynical Matthew McConaughey voice.

Re: Christianity

Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2023 1:10 am
by Immanuel Can
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 11:43 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jun 23, 2023 10:52 pm It's what's called a "reductio" argument. It involves using language to try to reduce somebody else's view, in order to make it an object of ridicule. And as such, it's not worthy of a response...the speaker has no intention of being convinced, obviously.
Are you saying that when I refer to your belief — the fundaments of it (as expressed in Will’s paragraph) — that I am engaging in reduction?
He is, obviously.
And as such, it's not worthy of a response...
In relation to what I am now discussing...
I'm not interested. I'm only interested in what we were discussing -- before you invented this obvious deflection, in an attempt to protect the history of Catholicism as being exposed as as problematic is it is.

But I'm pretty sure you're never going to go back there...

Re: Christianity

Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2023 1:27 am
by Alexis Jacobi
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jun 24, 2023 1:10 am He is, obviously.
How would you correct the paragrsph he wrote? Can you rephrase it?

Re: Christianity

Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2023 1:31 am
by Alexis Jacobi
Immanuel Can wrote: Sat Jun 24, 2023 1:10 am But I'm pretty sure you're never going to go back there...
I may go forward to the point where European syncretism is again discussed. Presently I am interested in drilling down into your fundamentalism and religious fanaticism.

That is the topic m’boy.