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Post 20

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 7:14pmSanction this postReply
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This post is teaming (sic) with insults and lacks any arguments...
You're obviously confusing your post (#17) with mine. 

I insulted no one. I argued that for Objectivists to identify themselves as libertarians subverts the rational foundations of genuine liberty.

Asserting that libertarians can be Objectivists is vacuous, and beside the point.


Post 21

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 7:25pmSanction this postReply
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Thanks, Jeff  :)

Post 22

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 7:38pmSanction this postReply
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Teresa says,
Atheism isn't merely a "negative term"  for Objectivists any more than selfishness is a negative term. Rand showed that atheism is a coherent conclusion, one that can only come from a rational mind. 

Atheism is simply the belief that there is no god.  Selfishness is a principle designating who should be the beneficiary of moral values.  That is obviously a positive premise, not a negative one. 

People adopt atheism for a wide variety of reasons.  Buddhism is essentially atheistic.  The materialistic atomists of ancient Greece were atheists.  Extreme skeptics are typically atheists.  Marxists are usually atheists.  Many advocates of radical feminism are atheists.

It simply makes no sense to argue that atheism is a position that can only be reached rationally.  And this is why Rand did not view atheism as a philosophical primary. 


Post 23

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 7:49pmSanction this postReply
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Atheism is simply the belief that there is no god. 
Wrong - a-theism is the absence of a belief, not another belief.... theism is the belief, the 'a' means 'not'......


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Post 24

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 8:37pmSanction this postReply
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Dennis wrote:

> People adopt atheism for a wide variety of reasons.

Not to start an argument Dennis, but this isn't much of an observation. You can say the same thing about any group including Objectivists. Why, there aren't two people on this forum who call themselves Objectivists that seem to agree about much of anything in a broad systematic way. Poke around a bit and the differences quickly reveal themselves. And I am constantly amazed at how much variation there is in what attracted different people to Objectivism and what they find most valuable about the philosophy. So, if your observation above is a valid criticism of atheism, it applies equally to any group - except of course, Scientologists who all agree about everything! :-)

> Atheism is simply the belief that there is no god.

That might be true for some people, but it is not universally true and I wouldn't say that it applied to me. I think of my atheism as another aspect and an affirmation of my commitment to reason. When I declare myself an atheist, it means much more than simply a denial of a belief in the existence of a god. It also conveys a rejection of the acceptance of any truth, understanding or knowledge based upon faith and unsupported by verifiable fact. For me, atheism is a positive pro-reason stance, not merely a negation of something.

Yes, the moniker of Objectivist does offer a positive, systematic presentation of these positions, but it does so in a very broad manner as an all-encompassing philosophy. When it is necessary to focus more narrowly on one intellectual area, other designations can actually be more useful. For example, in a discussion focused on god and faith, it can be more effective to present oneself as an atheist than an Objectivist, just as when discussing politics, the label of libertarian can be helpful in focusing on the relevant issues rather than referring back to the entire corpus of Objectivism.

Yes, it's no fun to be lumped in with Marxist atheists or pot-smoking libertarians, but until someone figures out how to get all you other Objectivist-wannabees* to agree with all of my positions on the proper interpretation and application of this philosophy, I guess we are just stuck trying to use there labels as best as we can!

Regards,
--
Jeff


* :-) for the humor impaired!
(Edited by C. Jeffery Small on 4/06, 1:45am)


Post 25

Saturday, April 5, 2008 - 9:11pmSanction this postReply
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That might be true for some people, but it is not universally true and I wouldn't say that it applied to me. I think of my atheism as another aspect and an affirmation of my commitment to reason. When I declare myself an atheist, it means much more than simply a denial of a belief in the existence of a god. It also conveys a rejection of the acceptance of any truth, understanding or knowledge based upon faith and unsupported by verifiable fact. For me, atheism is a positive pro-reason stance, not merely a negation of something.

Exactly!


Post 26

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 9:51amSanction this postReply
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Tibor wrote: "As far as IP is concerned, my point may be summed up as that whenever someone creates something of value, one owns it. Even some values not created by one but constituting one (say, one's life or liberty) belong to one so others, in order to gain from it, must obtain one's consent. If one creates a novel, it belongs to one; same with a poem or song or game. How one will protect what one owns is a subsequent problem--just as it is with the right to one's life or liberty. The protection of these is a problem that arises only once the right is acknowledged to exist. It is furthermore clearly an intervention in one's life to have others obtain one's creations, products without one's consent, be these a home, a car, a computer, a song, a design for some device, etc. Such taking would be no less theft that any other kind of taking to which the owner hasn't agreed."

Tibor, Re your latter comment about "theft"--under the patent system as it exists now, there is NO requirement to show that you "took" anything from the creator of a given patented invention. Even if someone independently invents the same thing; even if they invented it FIRST, this is not a defense. Now, pro-IP libertarians who make arguments like yours, it seems to me, will have difficulty squaring such a system with their basis for IP (though Rand tried to). So I assume you would object to independent or prior inventors being restricted by someone else's patent for the same invention, so long as the person didn't learn about ("steal") it from the patentee, correct?

Now I think this is thoroughly reasonable. However, such a position, in my view, would undermine the patent sytsem (which I think would be a good thing). In any event, if you claim to advocate patent-like rights in inventions, yet agree with the unjustness of lack of a prior use/independent invention defense, then I am really not sure what system you advocate. It's not clear at all. So I am not sure what to agree, or disagree, with, or what criticisms to make. If every particular criticism I make is met with agreement by pro-IP libertarians -- "Oh, of course, I'm not in favor of THAT" -- then I am not sure what else to say.

As for your coment, "whenever someone creates something of value, one owns it," this is where I disagree, because this statement is too sweeping, for several reasons. First, note that all rights are considered enforceable--which means, in terms of physical force. If I sue you to stop you from using "my" invention, what that means is if I win, I can use physical force, against your physical property--e.g., an injunction preventing you from using your own physical property in a certain way, or a damages award giving me title to some of your money. So the dispute in this case is always about who can use, or own, a particular piece of physical property.

I think saying you have rights in any "thing" you create, that has "value," is problematic for other reasons. First, it seems to me that what "things" are in this sense depends on our labels and concepts. And it leads to things like reputation rights, which of course most Objectivists agree with (Tibor, I can't recall your view on this). I also do not think things "have" value; rather, some things are valued. I value my wife's love for me and my child, but does that mean I "own" this love? does anyone own it? I think some things are not ownable at all; and this question is the one skipped over by taking about owning any created thing. The question has to be asked: is the thing of the type that can be owned? IF we keep in mind the fact that any dispute alwyas boils down to tangible things, and the propriety of physical force used to defend or use a given tangible thing, it seems clear that such tangible things are what are ownable; this is what the disputes are *about*.

IF you view it like this, then you see (in my view) that arguments "I created this pattern [invention, song, poem, whatever]" are merely arguments for control of a given tangible thing. If I argue that it is legitimate for me to use force against you, to stop you from using your own trees and logs to build a log cabin on your own land, "because" I "invented" the idea of building a log cabin to live in, then I am basically arguing that I really own (or partly own) your already-owned property (land, logs, body). I am arguing that my innovation gives me a better claim to your property. And that this innovation trumps your first-use (Lockean homesteading) of these things. IN other words, all IP claims undermine the idea of homesteading unowned natural resources. It means that the person who first appropriates an unowned resource is not its real owner: he is only its temporary, limited, conditional owner: he owns it fully only until some third party thinks of some way to use his own property. I think this is perverse and non-libertarian, impractical, unworkable, confused, etc. Not surprisingly, attempting to implement such a system--by empowering a state agency, no less--leads to manifestly unjust results.

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Post 27

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 10:20amSanction this postReply
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Dwyer:

Here is Rand's justification for rights:

"The right to life is the source of all rights -- and the right to property is their only implementation. Without property rights, no other rights are possible. Since man has to sustain his life by his own effort, the man who has no right to the product of his effort has no means to sustain his life. The man who produces while others dispose of his product, is a slave." ("Man's Rights", VOS)

What's flawed and non-rigorous about that?


Well... I am not sure what a "right to life" is, any more than a right to free speech. These it seems to me are derivative of your right to your body and things you homestead.

In your linked article on intellectual property, you say that property rights are applicable only to scarce resources, on the grounds that if resources aren't scarce, then no conflicts can arise over their use, and that since intellectual property is not "scarce," there should be no property rights governing its use. Does that mean that if I produce a non-scarce resource, I have no right to it and that you can rightfully deprive me of it without my consent?


This is the whole point: if it's not scarce, no one can "deprive" you of it. As Jefferson said, it's like someone lighting their candle from yours: you still have your flame. Likewise, if you think of a way to use your property--configure it into some design or apparatus; think of a way to use it (method)--for example, a way to modify your fuel injector to get better gas mileage, then if someone else uses the same technique on their own car, it does not deprive you of your technique.

You also say, "Ayn Rand mistakenly assumes that the first to file [instead of "first-to-invent"] has priority (and then she is at pains to defend such a system)." I think Rand would agree that ideally the first to invent should have priority. The problem is, how do you establish this priority legally?


Why do you assuem Rand would agree with this? She never says this, and explicitly defends the first to file idea. Second, how would it be done? Like it's done here. There is a system in place, called "interference," to figure this out. Of course, it's based on an arcane and arbitrary set of state-invented rules about "conception," "due diligence," and "reduction to practice," but there are ways to do it. Rand was simply ignorant of it and in fact apparnetly did not even realize the US *has* a first to invent system alreayd.

"You do so through a filing process."

Well, any patent system is a filing system, I suppose--but it can be either based on first to invent, or first to file. Moreoever, some here seem to think that the essence of patent infringement, is "stealing"--which means presumably copying and using someone else's idea without their permission. Now a similar requirement is the case in copyright law--independent creation *is* a defense, there--but it's not in patent law. So it seems that most pro-IP libertarians really favor some "copyright" based system even for protecting inventions--that is, patent would collapse into copyright (Rotbhard has a similar argument). But copyright is NOT a "filing" system. You get a copyright *automatically* in created works of authorship the moment they are "fixed" in a tangible medium of expression.

I really think most libertarian advocates of IP have no idea of the way the real system works, and of the bizarre system they are defending.

Post 28

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 10:29amSanction this postReply
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Arthur:

"You seem to have a notion that there is no such a thing as the fruits of one's mental, physical or financial effort, and that they are not entitled to trade the fruits of that effort for a value."

I believe you have a right to own (control) your body, and any ownable resources that you homestead from the state of nature or acquire from a previous owner. You can do whatever you want with your body or property, except invade the borders of others' property--that is to say, except use others' property without their consent.

With these rights, you can of course engage in trade with others to obtain things you want. You can "sell" your labor, which really means, entering into a contract with an "employer" who agrees to transfer title to some of their money, IF you perform certain services. Your ownership of your body is sufficient to allow you to do this. Just as your ownership of your property is sufficient to allow you to have "free speech" or "freedom of press" rights.

"Of course there is value created from taking granite and altering it into a statue. If you bought that statue, are you just paying for the value of a hunk of unsculpted granite?"

Technically, you don't pay for value. You pay for certain rights to be transferred to you--namely,t he rights to control a particular hunk of matter. The *reason* you pay for it is you value the statue.

But so waht if you "create value" by altering granite into a statue? Either you own the granite that you are altering, or you do not. If you do, then you already owned the matter that you re-shape into something that "has more value." If you don't own the granite--say, it's someone else's; you are working under contract, or you stole the granite--then creating a statue does NOT give you ownership of it. Again: creation is neither necessary nor sufficient.

"Why do you think a sculpted piece of granite has a higher price than a hunk of unsculpted granite? Physical and mental effort was exerted in producing that finished product of a sculpted granite statue,"

Sure. There's a reason people expend labor to transform their property. So what?

"something that the sculpter is entitled to the fruits of that mental and physical exertion"

I don't know what this means. What "entitlement" is this exactly, other than the right to sell things you've transformed and improved?

Post 29

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 10:31amSanction this postReply
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Steve: "Answer: taxes and regulations are irrelevant to this discussion (unless you want to admit into the fellowship of the immoral and perverted). I'm not a patent attorney, however it appears to me that an individual or group of individuals file for a patent or copyright for the protection of their creation. The state is not granting them a monopoly. The state is recognizing their right to first use and benefit. If the state were blind to the rights of creators then there would be no use in creating. And certainly no use for a state."

I agree with your last sentence.

The state is of course blind to true individual rights, is it not? It is an enemy of rights. Who can deny this?

Post 30

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 10:38amSanction this postReply
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Ed Thompson: "Unowned scarce resources in the wild aren't homesteaded by being "found." If that were true, then American Indians (Native Americans) would own America outright. In order to homestead something, from the Objectivist point of view, you have got to mix your labor with it for a productive purpose. The purpose needn't be utilitarian (whatever is "supposed" to be good for many if not most folks), but it does need to be productive. Just like man needs to be productive -- a natural need that won't ever go away."

I don't disagree. Lockean homesteading doesn't say you just "find" something. You have to emborder it, transform it, publicly mark it as "yours". Sure. Who said otherwise? I argue this too in How We Come To Own Ourselves; Defending Argumentation Ethics.

"Stephan, could you produce a logical syllogism justifying man's rights?"

I've done my best in the articles cited, and others they link to. In my view, rights are justified by showing that the denial of rights is incompatible with the pro-peace, pro-civilization norms necessarily presupposed by any participants in discourse about this issue. This technique is similar to the way Rand argued (proving some "axioms" by showing that its denial is self-contradictory); and also her recognition that all rights are "hypothetical" since they depend on one choosing to live, which choice is itself pre-moral or a-moral. Likewise, if one does not choose to be civilized, no discussion is possible with him; Peikoff made a similar point in OPAR about how you discourse with someone determined to be irrational: you don't. In like manner, we simply have to regard uncivilized, irrational, criminal people as outlaws, as not really human. And deal with them as a technical problem. We who care about justification realize we are justified in treating them this way b/c of the logic of the entire ethical enterprise.

Post 31

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 11:04amSanction this postReply
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Dennis Hardin:

"The problem here is it just assumes any "thing" you can identify conceptually may be owned. One problem with this is that it seems to make reality depend on the way we name or conceptually identify things. If I call or understand your output as a "novel," then the "novel" is the unit. But just because this suffices for conceptual understanding of the world does not mean there is some "ontological" class of entities called "novels" that may be owned. In fact our concepts are use to refer to many phenomenon in or aspects of reality--truth, love, the-fact-that-I-woke up this morning, the age of the earth, my favorite drink. Are these things ownable just because they are "things" that can be conceptually identified? I don't think so."

Rand is very clear about the fact that an idea or concept as such cannot be legally protected until it has been given a specific physical form. It is this specific form which endows it with value because that had to be created, and property rights apply only to that material form—e.g. books, magazine articles, audiotapes, etc. This material form cannot be reproduced without permission and/or compensation.


I find this reasoning flawed for several reasons. First, as I've noted to others here, it assumes that patent is like copyright--that it goes to "copying" (reproducing) others' inventions. It does not. That is not the patent systme. It has nothing to do with knowledge, access, learning, copying: the patent right is basically absolute. Independent invention, hell, even PRIOR invention, is NOT a defense! If you reject this part of the patent system, you basically reject the patent system, just as I do, since, as any mainstream patent advocate will tell you, the system would be utterly useless and collapse, if these were defenses. So you seem basically to be thinking of some copyright-based system (a system designed to protect original works of authorship, NOT practical inventions) would extend to inventions too. I have no idea what such a system would look like, and I don't think any of its implicit advocates do either; i.e., they don't know what they are talking about, quite literally; they are not clear on what they are advocating. They object to critics of IP; yet they agree with most or many of our concrete criticisms of IP. They do not seem clear on what they are in favor of, yet seem determined to be in favor of it anyway. IF any libertarian wants to set forth an actual vision of the IP system he is in favor of, it can be discussed.

"When you ask what things are ownable, before asking who the owner is, you realize the criteria is bound up with the purpose of property rights, which is to assign owners to avoid conflict; that is, they pertain to the types of things over which there can be conflict--that is, to rivalrous (scarce) resources. Clearly not to facts or memories or recipes or patterns or information. So you never get to the question of who owns a poem. It is simply not part of the class of ownable things. Call it a thing if you like; say it "exists"; fine by me. But it's not an ownable thing."

This is a typically libertarian approach to rights, implying that the only issues involved are purely practical and dropping the context of the moral basis of rights. In Objectivism, rights are conditions of existence required by man’s nature for his proper survival. Man survives through the use of his mind, and property rights amount to a legal codification of the connection between mental effort and material values. They assure that the material products of a man’s mental efforts will be his to dispose of as he see fits—to serve his life and needs. It is a kind of contract which the creator of a novel or article or poem or invention—all of which are very much “ownable”--makes with anyone who might use it to agree to compensate him for his efforts.


A kind of contract? If I think of a way to use my property, when did I enter into any contract with others, that lets me sue them if they use their property in a similar way--esp. if they independently think of this way too??

As for dropping the moral context: I want to remind you of Rand's comment from Galt's speech: "Whatever may be open to disagreement, there is one act of evil that may not, the act that no man may commit against others and no man may sanction or forgive. So long as men desire to live together, no man may initiate--do you hear me? No man may start--the use of physical force against others."

Note how this presupposes the simplicity of, the self-evidence of, what aggression is, and why it's wrong. This is what any civilized person does. This is what it means to be civilized. We are all civilized, who discuss these matters; we all take for granted the basic civilized norms.

Man must create the values his life requires, but it would be absurd to say that he can only own those things which are entirely of his own creation. The monetary compensation he receives for his material creations can then be used in exchange for goods created or produced by other men (e.g., food products which must be grown, farmed or manufactured).

I find the idea that we "create values" to be confused. We don't create values. Valuing is a relationship--you value something, and you demonstrate this in action, as Mises noted (and as Rand recognized in her idea that value is something you ACT to gain and/or keep). We don't create values; we create things, we create wealth; we transform things into more "valuable" (i.e,. more valued) things. Sure.

Your approach is purely utilitarian: rights are to be assigned in a way that best reduces conflict. The objective requirements of human life have nothing to do with it.


I don't thinks is correct. Note Rand's inquiry is based on the implicit ethical assumptions or presuppositions of those who have chosen to live. Likewise, my argument is based on the implicit ethical presuppositions of those who have chosen to be civilized--including in particular those who debate or inquire into these issues; those who engage in argumentative justification of norms in the first place. We are all libertarians in the political sense here--we share certain views in common. What are these views? I think we all share the idea that peace and cooperation, civilization, are *good*. We choose to be civilized, just as we choose to live. Why do we make this choice? Who can say. But the choice has some implications. Those of us with a decent grasp of economics realize 98% of libertarian political views, simply by applying basic econoomics, and some logical consistency, to our presupposed basic norms of peace and cooperation. We see that most of our fellow men go astray not b/c they want to be wicked, but b/c they are confused--their advocacy of government intervention and aggression is *inconsistent with* their stated pro-civilized norms, right? don't we all here agree that our fellow men are mostly confused and inconsistent? So we try to point this out to them. We say, look, if you are really in favor of prosperity and peace, you can't favor taxes or anti-discrimination laws, since these undermine peace and prosperity. Thati s all I"m doing; it's what we all do.

NOte you do not make the same arguments to an aggressor--someone trying to club me over the head, say, or rape me: you shoot them, if you can.

"Unless we define rights from the objective moral perspective of the requirements of individual surivival, the all-powerful state will continue to grow and thrive, and libertarianism will have helped pave the way to tyranny."

I'll say thi: most Objectivists favor the state, at least a minimal state. Yet there is no minimal state in the world; and there never has been one. The ones that have been even close (and I would disagree taht the US ever was really close) all devolve into worse states, and tyranny of one type or another. So why Objectivists think a limited government is even *possible* is beyond me. In my view, it is advocacy of the state at all that helps pave the way for tyranny. Tyrants can't get away with it but for consent of the populace. I don't grant them my consent. Some Objectivists do, even if unwittingly.

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Post 32

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 11:33amSanction this postReply
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Stephan: 'The state is of course blind to true individual rights, is it not? It is an enemy of rights. Who can deny this?'

I'll deny it.

Now you sound like a libertarian. The state is not necessarily the enemy of individual rights. Government, as far as I can tell, is a just an enforcer of rules. Because of mans need for social interaction, or mans desire to interact, there much be some objective and separate agent to provide protection.

Hatred and distrust of a government is fine. Hatred and distrust of government is irrational, in my opinion.

Post 33

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 11:39amSanction this postReply
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Steve:

Stephan: 'The state is of course blind to true individual rights, is it not? It is an enemy of rights. Who can deny this?'

I'll deny it.

Now you sound like a libertarian.

Thanks.
The state is not necessarily the enemy of individual rights. Government, as far as I can tell, is a just an enforcer of rules. Because of mans need for social interaction, or mans desire to interact, there much be some objective and separate agent to provide protection.

Hatred and distrust of a government is fine. Hatred and distrust of government is irrational, in my opinion.

Well, hold on. Humor me. First, let's say not all states are necessarily bad. Isn't it enough that EVERY state in the world today is terrible? Do you disagree that this is the case? Do you agree that the US federal government, to take one state, is in the year 2008 an enemy of rights, or not? I think it is manifestly obvious that it is.

And let me ask you this. Would you agree there has never been a truly minimal/limited state, and certain never one that lasted, that didn't devolve into a rights-violating, criminal organization? And if you do agree, then how can you say it's irrational to distrust all states? Even if it is based on some flawed reason, is it really irrational? After all, it's easy to make a prima facie case out--all states are tyrannical; they have always been; all experience indicates that this is the case. Why is it "irrational" to conclude from this that all states will always be corrupt and unjust? Isn't a bit of an unfair overstatement to say this view is necessarily irrational?

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Post 34

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 12:29pmSanction this postReply
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Hatred and distrust of government is irrational,
Name ONE government that one can love and trust - NOT in theory, but in practice...


Post 35

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 12:42pmSanction this postReply
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I'm sure there are lots of local governments who've earned that response, Robert.

Post 36

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 12:59pmSanction this postReply
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Teresa: "I'm sure there are lots of local governments who've earned that response, Robert."

Such as.....?

And even if you find a local town, say, that somehow merits this response, this example is limited to a very small population, and also probably exceptional b/c many other functions of government are provided by higher levels--so that the local gov't that "merits" respect, is not a complete state. The challenge is to find ANY (full, complete) state that deserves this respect and love.

Post 37

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 1:06pmSanction this postReply
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This discussion might profit from a historical perspective.

In the state of nature, a person will defend his self and his property from others in order to preserve his life. This sort of self-defense outside the context of a state can be described as natural rights. Natural rights are a part of nature. The wolf has his den and his range, the bird his perch and his nest, the man his cave and his crops and livestock.

Most men live in some sort of society. If that society is anarchical, a strong-man will eventually arise. Anarchies evolve spontaneously into systems of protection. Look at what happens in countries such as Russia when the former state apparatus fails. For a brief period you have anarchy, and then the mob/syndicate/mafia/warlord or whatever steps in. Those warlords who best protect their own constituents' natural rights with the least burden to their constituents tend to be more successful, and time lends them legitimacy. One gets the city states of Ancient Greece or Late Mediaeval Italy or the landed gentry of England. These states arise in chaos, evolve through banditry through warlordism to legitimized authorities. Charters and traditions of liberties arise. People come to expect that their rights be protected. These rights become codified and justified through political theorizing. But the states that come to protect rights arise spontaneously before political theories explaining why the concept of rights is a good one do. Greek liberty evolved before Aristotle, Roman Law before Cicero, The Italian Renaissance before Machiavelli, the English "constitution" before Locke.

America and her liberties did not spring full-blown from the forehead of Zeus. The examples of law and liberty and their benefits were available to any familiar with the history of the last two millennia of Western history. The Founding Fathers knew their history and their philosophy back to the Romans and Greeks. They used a knowledge of natural right and the circumstance of the English tradition of liberty to justify their more perfect union. They justified themselves to the minds of men when they dissolved their old bonds.

Natural right and the instituted political right they established was long recognized. The legal right to protected intellectual property was something much newer. The Romans and the Europeans had long espoused the concept of monopoly. Columbus was granted a monopoly on trans-Atlantic trade as a reward for his opening up a new route to the Indies. The Spanish Crown would enforce this monopoly by requiring all trade from the Americas to go through the port of Cadiz.

Of course, this monopoly was unworkable. It was granted in perpetuity. It required that other sea powers such as the Netherlands, Portual and England submit. (Portugal actually did a deal with Spain, under the Pope's auspices, carving the world in two. That's why Spanish is spoken in colonies everywhere from Venezuela west to the Phillipines, while Portuguese is spoken From Brazil East through Africa, Goa in India to Macao in China.) England and the Netherlands contested this monopoly.

The idea of awarding Columbus his monopoly was overdone, but the intention was good - to incentivize risky acts of discovery.

During the middle ages, if your neighbor invented a better plow, you could look over the hedge at him tilling his field and copy his design. There was nothing that he could do to prevent this except to try to plow only at night or simply not to use his invention. The idea of offering patents came about when political thinkers saw that a limited form of monopoly granted for a limited period and backed up by political force would benefit all parties. If you knew that by inventing a better plow you could apply to the king for a patent and get a fee from those who wanted to license your idea you could invest the time in plow-research confident in the notion that your hard work would be rewarded.

In the state of nature, the idea of patents is unthinkable. One either hides one's secrets (like the formula for Coca Cola) or shares one's recipes or simply doesn't innovate. But if a state apparatus already exists, and the state can offer you a limited monopoly for a fee (you get royalties, the state gets taxes, the public gets the benefit of your invention, and free use of your idea after some period has elapsed) then all benefit and none is harmed.

We could live in a society where intellectual property is not protected. This was the case for most of history up until the last few centuries. But if the state exists, and if a system of patent and copyrights can be established on a rational and economic basis, then establishing intellectual property rights harms none and benefits all. The proof is in you medicine cabinet, on your bookshelves, and beneath your fingers as you read this post.

Ted Keer

(Edited by Ted Keer on 4/06, 1:32pm)


Post 38

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 1:15pmSanction this postReply
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Ed Thompson: "Unowned scarce resources in the wild aren't homesteaded by being "found." If that were true, then American Indians (Native Americans) would own America outright. In order to homestead something, from the Objectivist point of view, you have got to mix your labor with it for a productive purpose. The purpose needn't be utilitarian (whatever is "supposed" to be good for many if not most folks), but it does need to be productive. Just like man needs to be productive -- a natural need that won't ever go away."

There's a major misconception that the American Indians did not have a system of land rights in place at the time of the European invasion.  In fact, National Geographi recently had a major piece devoted to the farming practices of some of the tribes that the Pilgrims and their ilk contacted.  It turns out that the natives were doing very sophisticated farming which was unfortunately inconsistent with the European farming practices.  The European model was not better in terms of crop production, but it interfered with the Indian methods and ended up supplanting them by making them impossible.

Many tribes, such as the Ojibwa (Chipawa), had individual rights not just to land, but to all kinds of intellectual property.  The main thing that the Europeans had over the Indians that made the invasion possible was new communicable diseases.  Why didn't it work both ways? 

First, the traffic was mainly Europe to the Americas; the Indians did not show up in Europe in any significant numbers.  Second, the geography of the Americas poses major blocks to easy transport North to South, which is how the land is oriented to begin with.  There was virtually no communication between the Incas and Aztecs, for example, while no such isolation occurred in Eurasia, where trade routes stretched from China to Britain for thousands of years. 

Thus, a host of major diseases spread, caused plagues, and then subsided to a low level as mutant varieties combined with host immunity - eg., measles, chicken pox, the flu, etc.  The Indians had no very low immunity to these diseases and would frequently be hit with several at a time, meaning mass die-offs of over 90% of the population in a matter of a very few years in some major examples.  This did not leave enough people to occupy and defend their land, which was gobbled up, of course. 


Post 39

Sunday, April 6, 2008 - 1:29pmSanction this postReply
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Teresa: To say that Objectivism is a precondition ("necessary support") of libertarianism is like saying that rationality is a precondition of atheism, which is obviously absurd.
 
I don't think it's absurd. I think saying that makes a lot of sense. People identify with different ideologies for a reason. Those reasons don't come from nothing. It isn't what, but how that matters.
 
Atheism is a negative term which simply indicates what you do not believe. 
 
This is exactly what should be changed about the concept, in my view.
 
Obviously, Teresa, you have not hung out in atheist circles enough.  While there is a certain connotation of rationality that attaches to atheism, simply because there is no easily recognizable benefit to the belief (unless you're into social ostracizm, job discrimination, etc.) and so perhaps it could be argued that the holders only adopted it from a commitment to the truth, and because many atheists loudly proclaim title to the rational high ground - which appears superficially plausible when compared to your lumpen Christian - "the Bible says it. I believe it. That settles it.". 
 
However, many people from the formerly communist countries were brought up on atheism and have no more commitment to the truth as such than anyone else, Christian, Muslim, whatever.  And, compared to the typical atheist, the Thomistic Christian Apologetics, such as Brady Leonardos, who has posted here voluminously in the Dissent forum, are far more convincing in their commitment to rationality. 
 
That doesn't make them right, BTW.  However trying to make atheism as such into more than a simple negative belief is silly.  It doesn't map well at all to the set of people who are actual atheists and so then you would have to start saying that this or that person was not a real atheist, despite their absolute disbelief in any God...
 


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