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  • Is self-ownership a misnomer?

    If something is owned, then by definition there is something external to it that is doing the owning. Likewise, something that is owned is by definition something external to the agent that owns it. Taking this very basic point into account, does it really make that much sense to think in terms of "self...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Tue, Sep 16 2008
    Filed under: Objectivism, Ethics, Rational Egoism, Individual Sovereignty, Natural Rights, Libertarianism, Philosophy, Human Nature
  • Sense Perception, Ethics, and Objectivism

    So I'm trying to understand the Objectivist POV on sense perception, but I'm having some trouble here. I was reading Leonard Peikoff's book about Objectivism, and in it, he stated that our sense perceptions are correct as an axiom. How can this be? If humans can have dreams and hallucinations...
    Posted to General by krazy kaju on Tue, Sep 16 2008
  • Judeo-Christian Morality vs. The Free Society

    I'd like to explain why I think that traditional judeo-christian morality does not synch up very well with the principles of liberty and does not provide a beneficial cultural framework for a free society. In many ways, I'm not going to be saying anything particularly new here, as this criticism...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Sat, Jun 21 2008
    Filed under: Objectivism, Ethics, Self-interest, Rational Egoism, Altruism, Religion, Atheism, Libertarianism, Philosophy
  • Walter Block: Wrong on Religion

    Walter Block recently wrote an article at LewRockwell.com on the topic of religion and state. He critisizes what he considers to be an irrational hatred of religion that many libertarians have apparently inherented from Ayn Rand. While he is an atheist himself, he defends the premise that religion is...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Thu, Jun 19 2008
    Filed under: Anarchism, Objectivism, Altruism, Religion, Atheism, Libertarianism, Philosophy, History, Monarchy
  • Morality, Rationality, Survival and the Law

    I was having a bit of a debate with an Objectivist and we got into some questions about morality and rationality. It related to the question of suicide, and I maintained that suicide is irrational but not immoral and that the individual has the liberty to commit such an irrational act. The Objectivist...
    Posted to Brainpolice by Brainpolice on Tue, Jun 3 2008
    Filed under: Objectivism, Ethics, Consistancy, Utilitarianism, Aesthetics, Means and Ends, Philosophy, Human Nature, Crime and Punishment
  • “Programming the 21st Century” by Thomas M Schmidt

    Open letter to Thomas M Schmidt: Your interesting article/course lecture published at http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig8/schmidt6.html titled “Programming the 21 st Century” reminded me of a philosophy course lecture I attended in 1960 at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. With no prior indication...
    Posted to History by DennisLeeWilson on Sun, May 18 2008
  • Re: The Market for Liberty

    [quote user="Brett_McS"] I don't disagree with the concept, just the choice of the word, for "anarchy" also mean "chaos" ("Political disorder and confusion" , "confusion; chaos; disorder"). It is unfortunate. [/quote] In reply, I quote from an article...
    Posted to Political Theory by DennisLeeWilson on Tue, Jan 15 2008
  • The Market for Liberty

    I recently read The Market for Liberty , Linda & Morris Tannehill's 1970 anarcho-Objectivist manifesto. I was struck by many passages. There were many ideas presented that I had not thought of previously, and this work really helped solidify my perspective of anarchism as an orderly system. As...
    Posted to Political Theory by allixpeeke on Thu, Nov 22 2007
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