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I want to see Rothbardians defend a puppy getting its ears and tail hacked off

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banned:
There was no indication of this in the article. All it said is that the dog was found some time after it was mutilated

Well, obviously the guy who started this thread received some psychic pain from the news.

banned:
Utilitarian evaluation is an action, so it too must be evaluated

No it isn't. utilitarian evaluation is a psychic process. It's based on conjecture, not evaluation. Evaluation determines whether the conjecture was correct.

banned:
There's no evidence of this. Sensory information is handled by a different part of the cerebral cortex than memory, communication

That doesn't matter. Action is determined by the pursuit of maximum pleasure. This is an economic axiom.

banned:
decision making and people who have no sensory perception of pain/temperature are not often retarded

you're neglecting psychic utility. these people may not feel physical pain, but they do feel psychic pain. And their loved ones surely have psychic value from their well being.

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Chris George:

i'm not sure what you're talking about with regards to a courageous person.

That's incorrect. I specified that I am referring to physical pleasure and pain and also psychic pleasure and pain.

Physical and psychic pleasure and pain are understood - understanding implies intellectually sensible.  So I don't know what point you are trying to make that's unique.  Telos of happiness has been intellectually discovered and discussed from Aristotle to Aquinas to various other people for centuries.  Utilitarianism is a 19th century idea that from what I gather doesn't recognize the individual (what's best for most, etc...) and has difficulty with the fairly simple concept, imo, "moral judgement", etc...  Look at my signature in this post.  Good and bad are elementary concepts that have excellent explanatory power. 

 

"I used to see a mountain as a mountain.. Thereafter.. when I saw a mountain; lo! it was not a mountain.. yet now of final tranquillity: I see a mountain just as a mountain as I used to.." - Master Yuan; molon labe

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Chris George:

banned:
There was no indication of this in the article. All it said is that the dog was found some time after it was mutilated

Well, obviously the guy who started this thread received some psychic pain from the news.

And I have psychic pain hearing Obama and Bernanke jabber about what I think are absurdities.  

 

 

"I used to see a mountain as a mountain.. Thereafter.. when I saw a mountain; lo! it was not a mountain.. yet now of final tranquillity: I see a mountain just as a mountain as I used to.." - Master Yuan; molon labe

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 6:13 PM

banned:

AJ:
"If net pleasure to myself is positive, the action is OK."

This is not how it works. It is a global ethic, not a 'subjective' one.

OK, well then I can say with many other posters now that utilitarianism (in that form) is silly and possibly dangerous.

I guess I'm more asking, if everyone's goal is to maximize their own pleasure (even if that is accomplished primarily by things like "getting right with God," helping others, saving the world, seeing justice done, satisfying one's sense of empathy, etc.), isn't it just confusing the matter to create the whole field of "ethics"? In other words, if ethics is the study of how people should act (to achieve X set of unstated purposes), what good does it do to study it (as an academic topic) if every single person can and often does have a different set of unstated purposes implied in their own set of "shoulds" that they adhere to?

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Chris George:
Well, obviously the guy who started this thread received some psychic pain from the news.

The entire notion of property rights allows him to address his psychic pain by ordering his environment to diminish and remove it.

If you find something evil that wobbles, push it. - Gary North

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 7:05 PM

wilderness:
Utilitarianism is a 19th century idea that from what I gather doesn't recognize the individual (what's best for most, etc...) and has difficulty with the fairly simple concept, imo, "moral judgement", etc...  Look at my signature in this post.  Good and bad are elementary concepts that have excellent explanatory power. 

I like your sig, but it doesn't explain why that conception of right and wrong is useful. I am nearly convinced that the whole concept of ethics (as an academic subject) just originated as some sort of semantic misunderstanding. As someone recently said, "It's hard to agree on anything when the whole premise you're debating on is a mistake." I suspect that "ethics" just originally referred to those reasons for or against an action that had more to do with "moral" senses, which seem to refer primarily to our senses of empathy and justice, plus religious considerations for the religious. In a word, the "psychic" aspects of decision-making.

Somehow the fact that those senses, religious considerations and other psychic aspects are mysterious confused people into thinking that it wasn't just the reasons that were mysterious, but also the very concept of ethics itself. But after all is said and done, people really do just do what they believe will maximize their own happiness, however intimately those actions may be intertwined with helping others.

Not to go off on a tangent, but I am sure some readers have misgivings about the idea that each action humans take is simply our best rational attempt to maximize our own pleasure. People help others only to benefit themselves - to get rewards through trade or reciprocation, and/or to get the satisfaction of knowing they helped someone else (or other psychic rewards).

Think what a terrible world it would be if helping others didn't feel good! If seeing others grow and learn did not warm your heart!

The idea of a truly "selfless" action is a contradiction, and this mythical "selfless acter" would be - by definition - a cold-hearted automaton. The selfless man must - by definition - feel no joy in his heart when he rescues a stranger from certain death. The selfless woman must - by definition! - feel no twinge of empathy when witnessing the brutal beating of a stranger's child.

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 7:12 PM

liberty student:

Chris George:
Well, obviously the guy who started this thread received some psychic pain from the news.

The entire notion of property rights allows him to address his psychic pain by ordering his environment to diminish and remove it.

This is exactly the form of response I think is most efficient in answering people like the OP. (A response that directly addresses the purpose served by adopting one system or another.)

It is only now, with this stated, that the OP is forced to confront the real issue: Will his needs be better served under Rothbard's system or not? If not, why? 

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Juan replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 7:17 PM
This is exactly the form of response I think is most efficient in answering people like the OP. (A response that directly addresses the purpose served by adopting one system or another.)
Not really. What the OP wants is control over his fellows. Invoking 'animal rights' or whatever is just a distraction on his part. I'll point for the third time that the OP has nothing against 'murdering' dogs. He used the ear-cutting episode as an excuse.

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Juan replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 7:19 PM
Will his needs be better served under Rothbard's system or not? If not, why?
What needs ? The need to control his fellows ? Of course not. Libertarianism doesn't allow that - though utilitarianism may.

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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AJ:

wilderness:
Utilitarianism is a 19th century idea that from what I gather doesn't recognize the individual (what's best for most, etc...) and has difficulty with the fairly simple concept, imo, "moral judgement", etc...  Look at my signature in this post.  Good and bad are elementary concepts that have excellent explanatory power. 

I like your sig, but it doesn't explain why that conception of right and wrong is useful.

Prosperity isn't useful?  Allowing a person to live isn't useful?  Liberty isn't useful?  If you are going to get into injust usefulness for one over another, then that isn't ethical.

AJ:

Somehow the fact that those senses, religious considerations and other psychic aspects are mysterious confused people into thinking that it wasn't just the reasons that were mysterious, but also the very concept of ethics itself. But after all is said and done, people really do just do what they believe will maximize their own happiness, however intimately those actions may be intertwined with helping others.

And to maximize ones own happiness is good aka pursuit of happiness.  Natural rights allows each person under the law an equal (justice) foundation to pursue their happiness.

AJ:

Not to go off on a tangent, but I am sure some readers have misgivings about the idea that each action humans take is simply our best rational attempt to maximize our own pleasure. People help others only to benefit themselves - to get rewards through trade or reciprocation, and/or to get the satisfaction of knowing they helped someone else (or other psychic rewards).

You're not saying anything unique.  Not sure where the disagreement is.

AJ:

Think what a terrible world it would be if helping others didn't feel good! If seeing others grow and learn did not warm your heart!

The idea of a truly "selfless" action is a contradiction, and this mythical "selfless acter" would be - by definition - a cold-hearted automaton. The selfless man must - by definition - feel no joy in his heart when he rescues a stranger from certain death. The selfless woman must - by definition! - feel no twinge of empathy when witnessing the brutal beating of a stranger's child.

As you said this last part was a little tangent of yours...  I'm not saying a bad tangent, but a side point for tangential purposes.

"I used to see a mountain as a mountain.. Thereafter.. when I saw a mountain; lo! it was not a mountain.. yet now of final tranquillity: I see a mountain just as a mountain as I used to.." - Master Yuan; molon labe

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 8:00 PM

Juan:
Will his needs be better served under Rothbard's system or not? If not, why?
What needs ? The needs to control his fellows ? Of course not. Libertarianism doesn't allow that - though utilitarianism may.

If you are correct about his desire for control, then you're definitely right - he should just run for office in our present system. Libertarianism won't help him gain control over people.

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Juan replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 8:04 PM
Well, I made a guess of sorts about his needs/motives - What do you think are his needs though ?

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 8:30 PM

wilderness:

AJ:
I like your sig, but it doesn't explain why that conception of right and wrong is useful.

Prosperity isn't useful?  Allowing a person to live isn't useful?  Liberty isn't useful?

I agree with the spirit of your questions. What I am saying is that different people may choose to adopt the conception of right and wrong in your sig for different reasons, and I am attempting to make the case that people would accomplish more in debate if they were more explicit about their core reasons for advocating their respective moral stances.

Because, I suppose, the original idea of a "moral" was that it was a sentiment presumably shared by most of the people in a given fairly homogeneous social group. I suspect the concept emerged as a shorthand because there was a set of reasons shared by most folk that could simply be summarized for convenience as, "You know, you should do that," and in that homogeneous context everyone knew what reasons you were implying.

But now, especially in debating subtle topics in a global forum, that shorthand no longer functions as well, because it implies mutual agreement on a set of moral precepts. Now, unwieldy as it may be, I think we frequently must make our intended concepts' raison d'être explicit if we expect to win others to our way of thinking, or to be maximally amenable to being shown a better way.

wilderness:
And to maximize ones own happiness is good aka pursuit of happiness.  Natural rights allows each person under the law an equal (justice) foundation to pursue their happiness.

Yeah, that's phrasing natural rights in a way that encourages meaningful debate, because then someone can say they agree or disagree by looking at whether natural rights are or aren't the best system for allowing people to pursue happiness.

wilderness:

AJ:

Not to go off on a tangent, but I am sure some readers have misgivings about the idea that each action humans take is simply our best rational attempt to maximize our own pleasure. People help others only to benefit themselves - to get rewards through trade or reciprocation, and/or to get the satisfaction of knowing they helped someone else (or other psychic rewards).

You're not saying anything unique.  Not sure where the disagreement is.

No disagreement with you. I wrote that for readers that may have misgivings about that notion (I figured at least a few other people will read this and didn't want to waste space with two posts).

wilderness:

As you said this last part was a little tangent of yours...

Yeah, it's not directed at you unless you found anything contentious in there. I just assumed some people reading might disagree.

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 8:42 PM

Juan:
Well, I made a guess of sorts about his needs/motives - What do you think are his needs though ?

I personally have noticed that people tend to make statements that seem outrageous when trying to defend moral ideas in debates, but I don't think we can judge them too harshly for those statements in that context unless they are experts in the field, or unless they say something totally, unmistakably insane. They are after all trying to express themselves in unfamiliar philosophical territory, so they are bound to misspeak and make blanket statements when they really mean something more precise. I think we all agree a lot more than our debates would indicate. The OP may have a desire for controlling others, but I say innocent until proven guilty. Just my opinion.

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banned replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 8:43 PM

Wilmot of Rochester:
The news article points out that the evidence is increasingly supporting the idea that some animals other than human beings do indeed possess sentience. 

I never contested this. If you follow the conversation here's what you said:

"After all, a creature built with nothing more than instinct would not be particularly well suited to survive in the course of natural selection."

This is a supposition, not a proof. It's not a valid demonstration of rational choice within non-homo sapiens.

"Not according to Wolfgang Kohler..."

Well, according to me, and according to the scientific method, it is.

"Considering Kohler was one of the first pioneers in animal psychology, it's funny you say this."

If Köhler believed that because it is concievable for instinctual creatures to not adapt well within a naturally selective environment, creatures must be sentient, and such a supposition was 'verifiably' true by its own virtue, he would be wrong [...]

"Oh OK"

And now you're interjecting evidence, when you started off saying that a hypotheses was not a supposition and did demonstrate its premise.

Wilmot of Rochester:
As far as a valid proof, proof is virtually impossible, but reasonable people tend to classify something as proven when the evidence is mostly supportive of one side or the other. 

I appologize, I should have used the word "demonstration", as the scientific method only falsifies.

Wilmot of Rochester:
No, you resorted to semantics as the wikipedia article does - though outside of that it seems mostly correct.

It is semantic in the sense that you are making a category mistake in ascribing empathy with a value, when it is regarded within it's category as a process within the realm of cognition. If you meant empathic concern, you should have used that term, just like I don't use banana as a synonym with rationality, because it just doesn't make sense. This is not an argument over meaning meaning, you are making claims that would not be valid with the meaning you're using.

If you are using empathy and 'animal charity' interchangeably, it's no use trying to convince you that you're misusing the word, and giving it properties it cannot have under your definition. I'm going to retract what I said said about 'empathy' 'animal charity' being necessary to social-humanity because it quite obviously isn't under your definition, nor is it cognitive, it is merely representative of a value.

Wilmot of Rochester:
Most people define empathy as being synonymous with empathic concern and compassion.

Hardly. This is just evasion.

Wilmot of Rochester:
I'm using the term as defined by most people - people that don't seem to have a vested interest in defining it otherwise, people like you. 

If you would like, I can post up the conventional definitions of empathy (from various other dictionaries), but:

Merriam-Webster:

1: the imaginative projection of a subjective state into an object so that the object appears to be infused with it

2: the action of understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another of either the past or present without having the feelings, thoughts, and experience fully communicated in an objectively explicit manner

Nowhere do I see the equivocation with empathy and empathetic concern. It seems pretty clear it's defined as a process. So 'people like me' likely include most every dictionary company in existence.

Wilmot of Rochester:
Yes I was.

No, you weren't. There is a clear distinction between a value and a process. It's not that hard to understand.

Wilmot of Rochester:
Again, the use of the Nazi card here just does not fit.  You used it incorrectly. I was ascribing empathy as being a necessary part of human nature that most people should have and that those who do not are people that almost everyone else does not care to see live.

You were ascribing a value as being necessary for those that wished to live, or others wanted to live. Antisemitism is a value. People who did not adopt that value lost favor with the Third Reich. This is pretty black and white, what's so hard to understand?

Wilmot of Rochester:
Again you insist on saying equivocation when empathy is the ability to see the side of others - to feel their pain and emotions. It has nothing to do with valuative or not valuative. 

Precisely my point, though the ability is to abstractly observe things outside the ego. There is no known way of objectively taking part in another person's consciousness.

The kindness to animals you insist on is not empathy, it is a value.

Wilmot of Rochester:
Honestly, I don't know why you continue to defend people that beat and torture animals and then call me the Nazi.

I'm not, and I didn't. I'm questioning your idea that it's impermissible to torture animals but not euthanize or eat them and I made a hyperbolic analogy.

Wilmot of Rochester:
Though I think I know another person who might do the same in a debate if the subject were brought up... It just makes you wonder who else is really on the internet.

Cool story bro.

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AJ:

wilderness:

AJ:
I like your sig, but it doesn't explain why that conception of right and wrong is useful.

Prosperity isn't useful?  Allowing a person to live isn't useful?  Liberty isn't useful?

I agree with the spirit of your questions. What I am saying is that different people may choose to adopt the conception of right and wrong in your sig for different reasons, and I am attempting to make the case that people would accomplish more in debate if they were more explicit about their core reasons for advocating their respective moral stances.

Well, my sig was put on at that point when an influx of misjudgement about what good and bad even mean happened in the forum.  My sig. is outdated.  It was only for a specific point at one time here.

AJ:

Because, I suppose, the original idea of a "moral" was that it was a sentiment presumably shared by most of the people in a given fairly homogeneous social group. I suspect the concept emerged as a shorthand because there was a set of reasons shared by most folk that could simply be summarized for convenience as, "You know, you should do that," and in that homogeneous context everyone knew what reasons you were implying.

Morals is a principle of good or bad.  What that even might mean for any particular instance varies but since morality is abstracted about any particular instance is why it is an intellectual principle aka a universal principle.  Not that anybody might want to talk in terms of good or bad, but there is a judgment that happens in each person's actions from what kind of statement a person wants to make with their clothes, to what kind of healthy lifestyle they desire to experience, and/or if they want to not give a person a chance to pursue their happiness or not.  Since what is moral is personal, unless we are talking about natural rights, then a near infinite number of moral wiggle room is available.

AJ:

wilderness:

As you said this last part was a little tangent of yours...

Yeah, it's not directed at you unless you found anything contentious in there. I just assumed some people reading might disagree.

I edited my last post to include, 'not a bad tangent, merely a tangent', only to repeat what you, yourself labeled those series of sentences.Smile

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wilderness:
And I have psychic pain hearing Obama and Bernanke jabber about what I think are absurdities.  

as do i, there words however are not nearly as harmful as their actions. they should be in jail for their actions.

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banned replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 9:05 PM

Chris George:
Well, obviously the guy who started this thread received some psychic pain from the news.

Utilitarian calculus applies only to percievable consequences. Obviously the guy didn't percieve he was going to get caught, else he wouldn't have done it (unless he likes jail).

Chris George:
No it isn't. utilitarian evaluation is a psychic process. It's based on conjecture, not evaluation. Evaluation determines whether the conjecture was correct.

Well, a process is a series of actions.

By evaluation, I am not referring to evaluating the action based on it's consequences. I am referring to evaluating the action within utilitarian calculus.

Chris George:
That doesn't matter. Action is determined by the pursuit of maximum pleasure. This is an economic axiom.

Actually, action is determined by marginal utility, which is not conventionally synonymous with "maximum pleasure".

Chris George:
you're neglecting psychic utility. these people may not feel physical pain, but they do feel psychic pain. And their loved ones surely have psychic value from their well being.

Perhaps. But not necessarily. Some people cannot experience depressive emotions, and some people are hermits.

 

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AJ replied on Fri, Jul 24 2009 9:06 PM

wilderness:
Well, my sig was put on at that point when an influx of misjudgement about what good and bad even mean happened in the forum.  My sig. is outdated.  It was only for a specific point at one time here.

I'd like to see Rothbard's full context on that one. I haven't read his conception of ethics yet (getting around to it), but that quote in your sig did surprise me.

wilderness:

AJ:

Because, I suppose, the original idea of a "moral" was that it was a sentiment presumably shared by most of the people in a given fairly homogeneous social group. I suspect the concept emerged as a shorthand because there was a set of reasons shared by most folk that could simply be summarized for convenience as, "You know, you should do that," and in that homogeneous context everyone knew what reasons you were implying.

Morals is a principle of good or bad.  What that even might mean for any particular instance varies but since morality is abstracted about any particular instance is why it is an intellectual principle aka a universal principle.  Not that anybody might want to talk in terms of good or bad, but there is a judgment that happens in each person's actions from what kind of statement a person wants to make with their clothes, to what kind of healthy lifestyle they desire to experience, and/or if they want to not give a person a chance to pursue their happiness or not.  Since what is moral is personal, unless we are talking about natural rights, then a near infinite number of moral wiggle room is available.

Yeah, I think we're agreeing here.

As for natural rights, they seem most clearly to me to be that very limited set of rights that most(?) people can agree must be defended in order to satisfy some fairly universal moral sense in our psyches, as well as to ensure a peaceful and wealthy society, and a few other time-tested reasons. They are so self-evident that they are called "natural" (even though some people remain blinded to them). I take no exception to the notions of right to life, liberty, and property, but think each person would do well to make the intended benefits of enforcing these rights clear, or else no one can argue as to whether that particular conception of rights is the best for achieving those particular benefits. Since someone else may look to rights to provide a different set of benefits that aligns more closely with what they think will maximize their happiness.

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AJ, thanks for saying some of the things I wanted to say but didn't feel like spending the time to write. Although, you appear to be stating an amoralist perspective. There is of course a possibility of some action being inherently wrong by decree of God or whatever. The distinction between ethics and morality is spurious as well. The question is "is there really inherently wrong actions/thoughts? and if so what determines the wrongness of an action? Its outcome (utilitarianism)? Its intent (Deontology)? Or the content of the character of the actor (Virtue ethics)? I content that if the "means" were the determinate feature of morality, then we would never be able to figure out what was moral and it would be impossible to be moral and therefore it can't be moral. Ends/results are the only way of figuring out right and wrong (that is if there is such a thing as right and wrong).

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