When you're ready to discuss philosophy, instead of trying to start a pissing contest with me, let me know.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 10:27 pmUhm, I was the one who pointed out to you that you weren't using the normal definition. And I was the one who told you that you were redefining. Until I spelled that shit out for you, you weren't smart enough to get the point you are trying to make here.Gloominary wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 9:35 pmLearn the difference between defining, and redefining, I can redefine something however I wish.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 9:30 pm
You're on a fucking philosophy site mate, if you want to be taken seriously, don't pull an obvious stunt like that and then try to pretend it's just semantics.
Otherwise, go and find people who haven't read any philosophy, and sell your sub-standard shit to someone who can't spot the flaws in your case. What you are presenting here needs a complete rethink because it isn't very good.
My redefinition of property strays significantly, but not entirely, from what the current definition is, as it should, it's a redefinition.
I refuse to let my mind and my language be bound by the conceptual limitations the system you're attempting to uphold has imposed.
So don't tell me to learn from you, that which you only know because I am nice enough to teach you.
If you wantonly redefine shit without giving a good reason why anyone should accept this new definition you are just one random guy using a word incorrectly. If you want to explain how cars, fridges and telephones are no longer property, feel free to give that a shot. I'm sure we can all really learn something of use, one way or the other, from what will obviously be classic action.
More Minarchist than Libertarian
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Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
The state is already far to minimal. It protects the rich and lets the poor run riot in despair, and do all the work.Gloominary wrote: ↑Sun Aug 20, 2017 3:28 pm Libertarians like to refer to their ideal state as minarchist, meaning government ought to minimally intervene in the economy and affairs of the people, but can a state be more minarchist than a libertarian state, without descending into complete anarchy?
I think it can, for example, I'm not sure if this is an essential component of libertarianism, but you could do away with intellectual property rights, meaning you could say open up a Starbucks, without paying tribute to Starbucks, which would mean less intervention in the economy.
You could also only protect the property of people who use it.
For example, if someone were to purchase property, but fail to use it, after a while, say one year, they would forfeit their ownership, and it wouldn't belong to anyone anymore, it'd be up for grabs.
Whoever starts living there, if anyone, to them belongs the property.
This would mean government would intervene less in the economy, because it would recognize fewer things as property.
It would also mean governments conception of property or who owns what would be more fluid.
There's all sorts of ways a state could intervene less than even libertarians are advocating, and reducing state intervention in such ways could be beneficial for society.
Libertarianism is a myth to lure the people who want to pay less tax, by the rich who already pay too little.
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Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
Mate, with the best will in the world, you wrote this sentence.
You are a long way from being up to an actual philosophical conversation.Gloominary wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 10:35 pm I refuse to let my mind and my language be bound by the conceptual limitations the system you're attempting to uphold has imposed.
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Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 10:44 pm Mate, with the best will in the world, you wrote this sentence.You are a long way from being up to an actual philosophical conversation.Gloominary wrote: ↑Tue Aug 22, 2017 10:35 pm I refuse to let my mind and my language be bound by the conceptual limitations the system you're attempting to uphold has imposed.
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Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
I like how you bumped a 20 day old thread, to only post an eye-roll emoticon. I guess you had to get your feel-goods through in having the last word of the discussion, however low in actual substance that word may have.
Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
What's the difference between Libertarianism and Anarchy?
If I occupy a building I own it. If someone does not like that, he comes over and kills me. No government enforcing of rules is involved, no taxes to pay to keep the gov as a kept person.
Frankly, I can't tell the difference whether this is a Libertarian system (minarchy) or political anarchy.
Much like 0 or zero is the minimalistest positive real number, and it is attained at not starting with any other number (anarchy: not starting with any rules) or by maximalizing the reducing of the number of numbers (minarchy: reducing the number of rules to none such).
If I occupy a building I own it. If someone does not like that, he comes over and kills me. No government enforcing of rules is involved, no taxes to pay to keep the gov as a kept person.
Frankly, I can't tell the difference whether this is a Libertarian system (minarchy) or political anarchy.
Much like 0 or zero is the minimalistest positive real number, and it is attained at not starting with any other number (anarchy: not starting with any rules) or by maximalizing the reducing of the number of numbers (minarchy: reducing the number of rules to none such).
Re: More Minarchist than Libertarian
boy, it feels good to bash the libertarian ideal. It is sweet. I feel the biological chemical responsible for inducing happiness and contentedness just swoon over my entire body when I successfully (to my standards) make another stab at stabbing the libertarian spirit.
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