Neither 'can' nor 'ought' seem good enough to me here. Is one a follower of a philosophy that exists and has defined principles? If so one adheres to it presumably. Or is one creating a philosophy. If so one can adjust it to fit whatever situation you are in. My SAS major is a Libertarian. I do not fully understand what this means. Does he have a course of action to follow to be true to his belief? Following on from that: is establishing a well ordered society also a necessary Libertarian action or simply a virtuous thing to do (+ all that sex to look forward too)?
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Dear Leon,
Can I apologise to you, Trevor, Garth, Colin, Ivo thathey have taken the time to write detailed rebuttals of what I wrote and might rightly expect me to answer each of the points they made. As I said I never committed myself to write into the debates so having dipped my toes in the water I can see that my fear of my little spare time disappearing altogether was well founded. That is not to say that I have not read what is said, nor that I, like you, have budged an inch in my position.
But Lleon you seem to have arrived at the conclusion that I am a dyed in the wool Socialist espousing a Socialist states as the solution to the world problems. I wrote becasue I am unhappy with Libertarianism - at its core value - not be told of the known faults of Socialism.
To the desert island. Libertarianism as I understand it is a philosophy that attempts to set a set of rules to set man free. It has principles that say what each person’s rights are, attempts to delineate rules that govern the interactions of people in terms of those rights and should conflicts arise resolve them in as simple as way as possible by independent assessment of those rules. I will ignore for the moment why one needs such a philosophy. Now it seems curious to me that a philosophy so grounded in the individual has nothing to say of one’s obligations to other individuals. In my reduction ad absurdum it seems to me Libertianism requires nothing of the SAS major, he is OBLIGATED to do nothing for the other man. Indeed if pressed by his fellow desert islander he has every right to ultimately defend himself. Well, you may say we are not talking personal morality here. What the Major does is a matter of his conscience. Well it seems Trevor is happy with this. Others though objected to this view of Libertarianism as selfish. I am not sure any have removed that objection, since, I would hope, they find it disquieting and does not represent the person they see themselves as. As I clarified I am not saying they personally are selfish but that they adhere to a philosphy that is, though they may not recognise it.
Well too bad say I because any philosophy of the individual that does not have obligations as well as rights is immoral - rather than amoral. It is a philosophy ideal for the selfish and solipsistic. That is why I said that laws, taxes, governments are indeed a good thing – virtuous. They are an (unfortunate) necessity required where moral certainties are no longer shared. I would repeat that perhaps Libertarians see their philosophy as necessary because of all the abuses that governments and other authorities perpetrate but that is to substitute an unequivocal wrong for a good often badly administered. |
Well yes libertarians do hold that the Major is not obligated, has no duties (other than to leave others be if they so want). In that sense libertarianism is selfish. It would have been helpful if you had said you found the idea of no obligations to help disquieting. That way we wouldn't have got sidetracked on other meanings of the word 'selfish'.
But let us all avoid compressing complex issues into banal nostrums, aided by catchy
rythmns. Many fail to achieve their aims because they are given the information they want to hear, not what they need. |
Dear Garth
Oh for the days of the Union Castle line when my reply would be off Cherbourg heading south and I could sit back and wait the northbound mail.
You ask me (or Major ‘Me’) would my actions on this island would differ depending on whether my companion was Hitler or a say that impractical professor. This is the problem. You are asking me about my personal morality not the ‘political’ philosophy I abide by. The desert island was a very simple reduction and what I fully meant was in my original posting. But let’s scale up the island to a hundred shipwrecked; a widow, an orphan, a boatbuilder, an astronomer and so on. As I see it the disadvantaged are at the mercy of the individual moralities of the others. The Libertarian philosophy by which the island is run becomes simply Darwinian. The widow if unskilled is in trouble if she is old and arthritic, probably safe if young and beautiful. This is the problem I see with Libertarianism: rights but not obligations. I want to be on an island where the widow and orphan can know they will be cared for; not subject to the ‘selfish’ whims of the Libertarians – or more correctly the lottery of each person’s morality. Are you just treating this as a numerical problem? If we can say (economically?) that proving communal solutions to obligations is inefficient then we don’t provide them or that we amend them to try to be more efficient – the bread and butter of government (I wish anyway). ?
By the way I saw two other problems with the philosophy which I can repeat again: the disconnection from history; and the selective use of rights granted by government and the disdain of others (from which you gain no benefit). However I do feel I have said what I can and have expressed a view. I was not trying to promote a better alternative to Libertarianism. That’s a separate issue – though maybe I should have avoided the discursive mention of Marx. If anyone wants to know what I think is the best of societies then I would look to Norway (helped as it is by huge oil income – but not wasted as per UK for example).
From:
li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Garth Zietsman
Sent: 04 September 2009 12:44
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Libsa] Re: selfishness
and the man on the desert island
Well yes libertarians do hold that the Major is not obligated, has no duties (other than to leave others be if they so want). In that sense libertarianism is selfish. It would have been helpful if you had said you found the idea of no obligations to help disquieting. That way we wouldn't have got sidetracked on other meanings of the word 'selfish'.
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05:51:00
You ask me (or Major ‘Me’) would my actions on this island would differ depending on whether my companion was Hitler or a say that impractical professor. This is the problem. You are asking me about my personal morality not the ‘political’ philosophy I abide by. The desert island was a very simple reduction and what I fully meant was in my original posting. But let’s scale up the island to a hundred shipwrecked; a widow, an orphan, a boatbuilder, an astronomer and so on. As I see it the disadvantaged are at the mercy of the individual moralities of the others. The Libertarian philosophy by which the island is run becomes simply Darwinian.
The widow if unskilled is in trouble if she is old and arthritic, probably safe if young and beautiful. This is the problem I see with Libertarianism: rights but not obligations.
I want to be on an island where the widow and orphan can know they will be cared for; not subject to the ‘selfish’ whims of the Libertarians – or more correctly the lottery of each person’s morality. Are you just treating this as a numerical problem? If we can say (economically?) that proving communal solutions to obligations is inefficient then we don’t provide them or that we amend them to try to be more efficient – the bread and butter of government (I wish anyway). ?
By the way I saw two other problems with the philosophy which I can repeat again: the disconnection from history; and the selective use of rights granted by government and the disdain of others (from which you gain no benefit).
However I do feel I have said what I can and have expressed a view. I was not trying to promote a better alternative to Libertarianism. That’s a separate issue – though maybe I should have avoided the discursive mention of Marx. If anyone wants to know what I think is the best of societies then I would look to Norway (helped as it is by huge oil income – but not wasted as per UK for example).
From:
li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Garth Zietsman
Sent: 06 September 2009 06:55
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Libsa] Re: selfishness
and the man on the desert island
You ask me (or Major ‘Me’) would my actions on this island would differ depending on whether my companion was Hitler or a say that impractical professor. This is the problem. You are asking me about my personal morality not the ‘political’ philosophy I abide by. The desert island was a very simple reduction and what I fully meant was in my original posting. But let’s scale up the island to a hundred shipwrecked; a widow, an orphan, a boatbuilder, an astronomer and so on. As I see it the disadvantaged are at the mercy of the individual moralities of the others. The Libertarian philosophy by which the island is run becomes simply Darwinian.
Garth: It could Michael (like it could with any other philosophy) but it isn't very likely. The law of comparitive advantage would operate properly in a libertarian society and it says you will always have something of value to trade and without welfare you are much more motivated to find it. A free economy (which is open and cooperative) is much more productive than collective economy (which is a command economy). It follows that there will be more to go around and someone will deal with you. If you truly cannot I think it very likely that libertarians would be charitable.
I do not see this at all I’m afraid. The spread of soup kitchens even now in some states of the USA, even to those in work, suggests that we you have a temporal problem here. How quickly the benefits you envisage (even if real) appear would suggest that the widow would have to be very creative in her search for something of value to trade if she were to survive.
The widow if unskilled is in trouble if she is old and arthritic, probably safe if young and beautiful. This is the problem I see with Libertarianism: rights but not obligations.
Garth: I think its more correct to see libertarians believing that if the means, or process, is 100% just and ethical, the outcome must also be just and ethical. If every step in the process involves free and informed choice, and therefore is always win-win i.e. each party is always left better off or no worse off in their own terms, then the outcome at any point must be win-win and completely just. Libertarians therefore believe inequality in a free market (even if massive) cannot be wrong if the processes always leaves people getting better off than they were (in their own judgement nogal) or never getting worse off through the fault of another.
To mean the moral means justify the end - particularly as you seem to define it in terms of economic inefficiency? The widow I spoke of is free but has no choice as you define it. And even if she had to depend on the personal morality of each Libertarian I suspect she would receive scant attention for some time while they honed their collaterized debt obligations and coconut futures contracts.
I want to be on an island where the widow and orphan can know they will be cared for; not subject to the ‘selfish’ whims of the Libertarians – or more correctly the lottery of each person’s morality. Are you just treating this as a numerical problem? If we can say (economically?) that proving communal solutions to obligations is inefficient then we don’t provide them or that we amend them to try to be more efficient – the bread and butter of government (I wish anyway). ?
Garth: Libertarians also point out that under their system those at the bottom would do much better than they do under any other system. Firstly free markets are maximally productive and secondly there is no evidence that they become less equal than other systems over time. So the welfare growth rate of worst off will improve fastest in a libertarian society. I am a libertarian in part because I the above argument convinced me that the best thing I could do for the poor was give them a libertarian society. In other words if you feel you have obligations to the poor and you care about helping them effectively then paradoxically reason would lead you to libertarianism and the dropping of obligations.
I hope we’re not in the area of ‘trickle down benefits’ so beloved of Mrs Thatcher. At the end of her experiment not only had the wealth gulf increased but the level of absolute poverty in this country had also escalated. I predict a riot as the song says. If only she had. Not that rioting is a justified reaction to a growing wealth gap, as the Romanovs would concur.
By the way I saw two other problems with the philosophy which I can repeat again: the disconnection from history; and the selective use of rights granted by government and the disdain of others (from which you gain no benefit).
Garth: I don't believe you are correct here. Libertarians would deny that liberty is a gift of government. They would say it is a state of nature before government. That governments across history have come to limit our liberty less than before doesn't mean that liberty is a gift of government. When one government returns 10% of our taxes than a previous government it doesn't mean it gave us anything, it simply means they stole 10% less. Libertarians are convinced that everyone would be considerably better off if government got out of the way - better off because freedom is in itself valuable and because freedom is more productive of other values like material welfare.
I think as Stephen realised we are more talking property here as a gift of government. Hence my Zimbabwe example. Where do you derive your property rights from? Where do I? Where do Ulster protestants? There are competing freedoms at work everywhere once you include history. I do not see you’re ‘freedom’ as a reality just a peculiarity of this time and space.
However I do feel I have said what I can and have expressed a view. I was not trying to promote a better alternative to Libertarianism. That’s a separate issue – though maybe I should have avoided the discursive mention of Marx. If anyone wants to know what I think is the best of societies then I would look to Norway (helped as it is by huge oil income – but not wasted as per UK for example).
Garth: Are you aware that the Scandanavian countries are in many respects closer to libertarianism than most others? Other than high taxes and transfers the governments are not very regulatory and interfere with economic and social life very little. Many countries that have low taxes and no welfare system tend to be highly authoritarian and vigorously interfere and loot where they can - are as far away from libertarianism as they could be.
May I regretfully decline this debate? For me it was a throwaway line of possible interest. When my temporal constraints change, then…….. Sorry.
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05:51:00
I’m sorry but that is a Darwinian, or Dawkian anyway, explanation of good works. As I wrote elsewhere it is or can be a love of the act and to hell with the economic ends. Mugabe said the white farmers had no property rights. Rhodes was not there to argue the case I’m afraid. But his memorials still stand. Look on my works ye mighty and be afraid. Indeed.
From:
li...@googlegroups.com [mailto:li...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Stephen vJ
Sent: 06 September 2009 09:32
To: li...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Libsa] Re: selfishness
and the man on the desert island
Michael wrote;
Well my credibility may be shreaded by somehow misquoting Ozimandias. Really I would just Wiki Stephen Dawkins and his two books, 'the God Delusion' and 'the Selfish Gene'. What is wrong with Darwin is exemplified by my 100 person desert island where there is a disagreement as to how beneficial Libertarinism would be both in the short term and long term to the disadvantaged. I think I'm right that Darwin spoke about natural selection whereas 'survival of the fittest' was someone else's phrase. But I am using Darwinian as a shorthand for the latter concept, which is pretty commonplace I'd think.
I don't decry economics; it is a broad church. Pick whom you like really to support your views or form them. I would think that J K Galbraith or Keynes might not be the most respected economist amongst Libertarians but they are economists. Where economists retreat into mathematics to explain things I'm afraid I do not have the expertise to assess their 'sums' but the critics of such an approach are manifold.
I am not my namesake, of whom I kinow nothing. --- On Mon, 7/9/09, sjaar...@absamail.co.za <sjaar...@absamail.co.za> wrote: |
----- Original Message -----From: M ODOWD
I hope had established elsewhere that what I find wanting in the philosophy should not be seen to say anything about the character of anyone who calls themselves libertarian. My objection may not even be to what the philosophy does say but to what it does not address. But I'm going over old ground here.
I see another search for a Nirvana, or at least an ideal society honed in discussions, routed in certain axioms, strengthened by examination of the faults of all the alternative, failed paradises. But it will not work for me because of its natural attraction to selfishness. Heaven help anyone who has to deal with the fellow travellers that you would attract. Each person may act with compassion to the needy but their philosophy does not require it. I have been told that benefits will anyway inevitably accrue to the unfortunate from the economic dynamism of Libertarianism. My evidence suggest the reverse.
Well evolution can be looked at genetically and over the aeons of time. But when the lion kills the antelope it is often suggested that it makes antelopes better equipped to survive by leaving a pool of stronger animals. The other antelopes may or may not agree on this benefit. But the lion is likely to use these long terms benefits as the moral justification for his action when the cruelty is pointed out. And yes it is a metaphor, I'm not speaking about the natural history of carnivores.
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.I see another search for a Nirvana, or at least an ideal society honed in discussions, routed in certain axioms, strengthened by examination of the faults of all the alternative, failed paradises. But it will not work for me because of its natural attraction to selfishness. Heaven help anyone who has to deal with the fellow travellers that you would attract. Each person may act with compassion to the needy but their philosophy does not require it. I have been told that benefits will anyway inevitably accrue to the unfortunate from the economic dynamism of Libertarianism. My evidence suggest the reverse.
Dear Garth
Well rather like the heat death of the universe my arguments become reduced over time to rather over-simplified versions of what was said. I did try to point out originally that most visions of a better world stemmed for centuries from an ethical viewpoint and then post-enlightenment still incorporated ethics. Which is quite different from saying they were religious views (though admittedly they were almost synonymous for a huge length of time). I would not accept that I am treating as synonymous the 'sad' with the ‘unethical’ since the latter is almost always the former but not vice versa. But that may indeed be a Darwinian response. Would you concede that a Libertarian state/ commune / community could quite possibly contain people who follow your rules (let us say formed around the consent axioms so much discussed) but whose morality you find quite unpleasant – say in that they do not render help to the disadvantaged or in your view exploit those disadvantages. But they would only be subject to general (rather than personal) opprobrium or ‘trial’ if they came into conflict with the libertarian ground rules. This seems to be exceptional for a political philosophy and a great weakness, as I said. But do we agree this is true or am I incorrect here? But I concede by all means that other philosophies /politics contain entirely terrible people often unsanctioned despite what one might expect. As to free market/libertarian economics being shown to maximise the general good over time (again am I right) well economics is as I said not a hard science no matter how it tries. That is why elections and debates are so inconclusive: everyone can muster economic ‘facts’ to support their view. It seems from the information I read about welfare reform under Bush that the less draconian the offer made by a state the better was the long term outcome for the welfare beneficiaries and the state. So those states that offered a social investment approach - behaviour modification strategies, education, training followed by modest sanctions to those who did not find work ultimately got more people off welfare and living
comfortably than the states who made any job at any cost an immediate requirement or welfare payments ceased. All this did was transfer problems from the state to charities. The problems sometimes went off book but still existed. Incidentally I think I’m right that the welfare beneficiaries targeted where in a large percentage unmarried mothers. My historical disconnection issue runs forward in time as well as back. |
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Daer Colin
Yes I fully accept that your little old lady is as safe as any individual cares to make her and this has nothing to do with the society in which she lives or the beliefs of the people who aid her. She also has no interest the political beliefs of her helper measuring their worth simply on how helpful they were.
But my little old lady lives on her own and is malnourished. She too may be subject to all that is said above. Fortunately she lives in a non-libertarian community and knows it has set up a 'meals on wheels service' or similar paid for out of general taxation and is happy not to be at the whim of personal acts of charity. She knows she will be fed because that is enshirned in the state's laws.
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--- On Wed, 9/9/09, Colin Bower <princeal...@gmail.com> wrote: |
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Dear Garth
Well rather like the heat death of the universe my arguments become reduced over time to rather over-simplified versions of what was said. I did try to point out originally that most visions of a better world stemmed for centuries from an ethical viewpoint and then post-enlightenment still incorporated ethics. Which is quite different from saying they were religious views (though admittedly they were almost synonymous for a huge length of time). I would not accept that I am treating as synonymous the 'sad' with the ‘unethical’ since the latter is almost always the former but not vice versa. But that may indeed be a Darwinian response.
Would you concede that a Libertarian state/ commune / community could quite possibly contain people who follow your rules (let us say formed around the consent axioms so much discussed) but whose morality you find quite unpleasant – say in that they do not render help to the disadvantaged or in your view exploit those disadvantages. But they would only be subject to general (rather than personal) opprobrium or ‘trial’ if they came into conflict with the libertarian ground rules.
As to free market/libertarian economics being shown to maximise the general good over time (again am I right) well economics is as I said not a hard science no matter how it tries. That is why elections and debates are so inconclusive: everyone can muster economic ‘facts’ to support their view. It seems from the information I read about welfare reform under Bush that the less draconian the offer made by a state the better was the long term outcome for the welfare beneficiaries and the state. So those states that offered a social investment approach - behaviour modification strategies, education, training followed by modest sanctions to those who did not find work ultimately got more people off welfare and living comfortably than the states who made any job at any cost an immediate requirement or welfare payments ceased. All this did was transfer problems from the state to charities. The problems sometimes went off book but still existed. Incidentally I think I’m right that the welfare beneficiaries targeted where in a large percentage unmarried mothers. My historical disconnection issue runs forward in time as well as back.
Hello Michael
Your views are extraordinarily interesting.
For the ease of further discussions and to prevent the discussion points sliding passed it each other it would be helpful if you would do the following quiz and let us know the results of your position.
http://www.theadvocates.org/quizp/index.html
Looking forward to further exceptional exchange of ideas and thoughts.
Janette
----- Original Message -----From: Garth Zietsman
Sent: Wednesday, September 09, 2009 7:33 PMSubject: [Libsa] Re: selfishness and the man on the desert island