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Ask An Objectivist

Isn't there also a subtext which asserts rationality leads to better outcomes?

I used to think that must be so, but I don't anymore. I think there's even evidence from game theory that acting crazy (or even just committing to random actions) can bestow an advantage, since your opponent is then unable to predict your "play."

Perhaps Objectivism is shackled in the same way that economics was with the "rational actor" model. Very useful for modeling economic theories, but not so good at modeling what real humans do.


Not even that.

It is an unpleasant philosophy that happens to bear little relationship to how the world works.

ETA: Even if everyone behaved according to the precepts of objectivism - society would still be dysfunctional as the narrow self-interest in such a system would include holding everyone else to ransom for everything that you have property rights over.
 
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It seems according to what Dinwar has posted that people acting rationally is a fundamental principle of objectivism and that an objectivist society can only work if people act rationally.

So no more martyrs then? Bonus. :cool:
 
ETA: Even if everyone behaved according to the precepts of objectivism - society would still be dysfunctional as the narrow self-interest in such a system would include holding everyone else to ransom for everything that you have property rights over.

Resulting in a class of financial royalty last seen in the middle ages.
 
It seems according to what Dinwar has posted that people acting rationally is a fundamental principle of objectivism and that an objectivist society can only work if people act rationally.

The way I understand it, the principle is that the Objectivist acts rationally, and takes the world and the people in it as he finds them.

And obviously it's true of every society that it will only work if (enough) people act rationally. I thought this thread is about what "rationally" means, according to an Objectivist.
 
A fair question. The thing is, the concept of rights being paramount and inviolable define what rights are--as does the fact that all humans have them. If something violates the rights of another, it is not a right. How can it be? It contradicts its own definition.

Rights are defined and enforced by humans. They are not present without people to invent them. They are also frequently violated. Otherwise you'd have no reason to define them since they would amount to laws of physics.

From a broad perspective, it means that a person's life is their primary concern. I am not obliged to make anyone else's life better; my main concern is MY life.

That's fine but ignores the "social" part of "social species."

This is why I don't like ideologues. They tend to focus on a single idea and construct their entire worldview on it. The world in general, and the world of men in particular is more complex and nuanced than that. You usually have at least two sides to every issue, and they are both right and wrong simultaneously.
 
Then one of them isn't a right. A right is something inherent.

Inherent to what ? Who gives you that right ? If the answer is "no one", then where does it come from ?

Knowing your stance on other topics I find these statements from you puzzling. It seems that you write "right" but you mean "ability".

Yes, sink mold has freedom of speech, freedom of association, and freedom of religion. We don't give a damn and scrub it off anyway.

Doesn't seem like much of a right, then.
 
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Bioshock's criticism of Objectivism was that when the chips were down no one, not even the Ayn Rand stunt double, stuck to the philosophy.

That's why ideology fails: it loses to reality.

Isn't there also a subtext which asserts rationality leads to better outcomes?

Ah, but not to the perception of better outcomes, which is the whole problem here, and that I mentioned above.
 
the Endangered Species Act has killed more endangered animals than pretty much anything else

I know it is off-topic, but this was the one flaw in logic I saw from the OP.

The Endangered Species Act happened. You cannot, logically, say it "killed more endangered animals than anything else," without knowing what would have happened had it not been passed. Perhaps it actually saved more animals than would otherwise have been the case? The world may never know.
 
Nihilianth said:
The Endangered Species Act happened. You cannot, logically, say it "killed more endangered animals than anything else," without knowing what would have happened had it not been passed.
Nonsense. Anyone with half a brain could figure it out. "Shoot, shovel, and shut up" isn't some complex system devised to outwit the law; it's a brute-force attempt to do so, one that is obvious.

Here's the issue: in order for the ESA to be applicable, someone has to report a listed species. If no one reports it, no one can enforce the law. Thus, the obvious solution is for people to ensure that no one reports endangered speceis. The law creates an inicentive to kill endangered species.

[ETA: Also, what I intended--which is obvious given the context--is that the ESA killed more endangered species than pretty much anything else that kills endangered species.]

Belz... said:
Rights are defined and enforced by humans.
Enforced? Yes. Defined? Only in the sense that we articulate the concept. The concept itself exists whether we wish to acknowledge it or not.

They are also frequently violated. Otherwise you'd have no reason to define them since they would amount to laws of physics.
The first sentence is true--which is why (yet again) I am not an anarchist. The proper role of government, in an Objectivist society, is to protect rights. If rights could never be violated, there'd be no need for government.

The second is nonsense. We define laws of physics, after all, so your example refutes itself. Furthermore, you are applying non-Objectivist epistemology to Objectivist ethics. In Objectivist epistemology, a definition is necessary to state one understands a concept. Some concepts, such as "up", can be extremely vague; I personally have spent no small amount of time defining the term, but that's because of a long-standing joke between me and an uncle. Most people could define the term well enough to use it every day. Rights, however, in as much as they form the foundation for human interaction and for all rational law, require a tad more rigorous definition.

That's fine but ignores the "social" part of "social species."
Not at all. Rights are the "social" part of "social species". Social--NOT collonial.

Yes because, whatever your beliefs are, they are correct and only people who agree with it "get it". Or not ?
No, of course not. I had been thinking about these ideas for a long time, and could defend them well before I read Rand. My point was merely that Rand didn't convince me of any of the fundamentals. A few concepts were new to me, such as the sanction of the victim and her ideas on how concepts form (I had no strong opinions on that at the time, and basically ignored it until I realized how closely alined with the scientific process they were).

That said, if someone criticizes Objectivism because it fails some criteria established in opposition to Objectivism (not intentionally, but still), I would say that no, they don't understand it. It's akin to saying that Catholicism is false because it violates some text in the Koran. A philosophy, to be true, must be internally consistent and consistent with the outside world. It need not be consistent with other philosophies. So, for example, your criticism that the rights need to be defined, therefore they are human constructs is not a valid criticism of Objectivism and betrays a certain lack of knowledge about the philosophy--because it contradicts a foundational principle of Objectivism (specifically, of its epistemology).

jimbob said:
Even if everyone behaved according to the precepts of objectivism - society would still be dysfunctional as the narrow self-interest in such a system would include holding everyone else to ransom for everything that you have property rights over.
This criticism is so irrational and violates so many aspects of Objectivism it can only be stated by someone who knows nothing on the topic. "...nor ask any man to live for mine" is right in the oath all the people in the Gulch took. To ignore something the author herself defines as one of the most important aspects of the philosophy is to ignore the philosophy.

Here's the thing: Living in a society is, under normal conditions, GOOD. It helps everyone to live in a society. When other people prosper, it makes my life easier. Therefore I want other people to do well. What possible good would it do me to have a bunch of money and no one to trade with? What possible good would it do to have a whole lot of land but no one to sell crops to? The concept is insane. Am I going to trade what I have for less than its value to me? Of course not; I'm not a sacrificial animal. But neither am I a butcher intent on "getting mine" and damn the cost. I want other people to be able to do great things in their careers--or even modest things--because each time it happens it makes MY career easier.

The problem with your interpretation of Objectivism is that you view self-interest as a narrow range. This is not the way the philosophy works. Self-interest is a long-term concept. What you are describing is ultimately self-destructive. It may help you out for a little while, but in the end it'll come back and bite you, hard. The kind of predatory selfishness you describe is short-sighted in the extreme.

Finally, I love how you smuggled in "ransom" in your description. The only possible interpretation is that you don't view property rights as absolute--were we to accept your description of events, we would have to start with the premise that property is collective, and that ownership as such is somehow a violation of rights. This is not the Objectivist view. If you own something and do not wish to sell it to me, I may be extremely unhappy, even to the point of finding ways to economically ruin you--but in the end, I will respect your right to say "No" to a sale. It's YOUR stuff; I have NO right to it, PERIOD. If you want to sell it to someone else just to spite me, have fun. I may object to it, but I have NO say in what you do with it. Thus, it is impossible for someone to hold their own property for ransom under Objectivism; they can refuse to sell it, they can hoard it, they can destroy it if they wish, but they cannot hold it for ransom because the term "ransom" is inapplicable to one's own property.

Would an Objectivist society be nice? I'm no Utopian; I know it wouldn't be all sunshine and lollypops and unicorns. What it would be is just. And between the two, I would much rather take my chances with the latter.
 
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Nonsense. Anyone with half a brain could figure it out. "Shoot, shovel, and shut up" isn't some complex system devised to outwit the law; it's a brute-force attempt to do so, one that is obvious.

Here's the issue: in order for the ESA to be applicable, someone has to report a listed species. If no one reports it, no one can enforce the law. Thus, the obvious solution is for people to ensure that no one reports endangered speceis. The law creates an inicentive to kill endangered species.

[ETA: Also, what I intended--which is obvious given the context--is that the ESA killed more endangered species than pretty much anything else that kills endangered species.]
You'll have to explain that a little better. What is the incentive created that wasn't there before the ESA?
 
You'll have to explain that a little better. What is the incentive created that wasn't there before the ESA?

In the UK, various persecuted birds of prey have had thie populations recover somewhat since persecution (by gamekeepers) has been made illegal. On some estates the populations aren't recovering - and often there is evidence of illegal persecution.

However, the legislation has helped the populations increase.
 
Enforced? Yes. Defined? Only in the sense that we articulate the concept. The concept itself exists whether we wish to acknowledge it or not.

Are rights real things, like staplers, or gravity?

If they are, how do we know which rights are real and which are just made up?

If they are not, then what makes your category of rights better than any other? Couldn't the hard-line Stalinist just as easily agree that the role of the government is to enforce rights, with the caveat that you don't have the right to stay out of the gulags for criticizing Premier Stalin?
 
Enforced? Yes. Defined? Only in the sense that we articulate the concept. The concept itself exists whether we wish to acknowledge it or not.

How does the concept of rights exist outside of humans?

What you are describing is ultimately self-destructive. It may help you out for a little while, but in the end it'll come back and bite you, hard. The kind of predatory selfishness you describe is short-sighted in the extreme.

This seems to be a very accurate description of much human behaviour.
 
“Since man’s knowledge,” explains Ayn Rand, “is gained and held in conceptual form, the validity of man’s knowledge depends on the validity of concepts. But concepts are abstractions or universals, and everything that man perceives is particular, concrete. What is the relationship between abstractions and concretes? To what precisely do concepts refer in reality?”
http://aynrandlexicon.com/ayn-rand-works/introduction-to-objectivist-epistemology.html
So what concrete kind of perceiving does the concept right depend on?
 
When I read Rand, my reaction was "Finally, someone else gets it!"
When I read Atlas Shrugged, my reaction was, "How could anyone be so ignorant of science and technology and yet base their entire plot on it?" A small excerpt from the relevant part of the book.

"Those men, long ago, tried to invent a motor that would draw static electricity from the atmosphere, convert it and create its own power as it went along. They couldn't do it. They gave it up." She pointed at the broken shape. "But there it is."

"It's the greatest revolution in power motors since the internal-combustion engine—greater than that! It wipes everything out—and makes everything possible. Do you see what I see? A brand-new locomotive half the size of a single Diesel unit, and with ten times the power. A self-generator, working on a few drops of fuel, with no limits to its energy. The cleanest, swiftest, cheapest means of motion ever devised."


Rand could just as easily have written a story based on magic, fairy dust. The fact that she uses pseudo-technology to built her plot gives her no special credibility. In short, her ideas are laughable. Asking Rand to build an alternative world is like asking a three year old to build a microwave oven. "Going Galt" has the same sense of reality as saying that you are going to start a flying pony ranch.

(the Endangered Species Act has killed more endangered animals than pretty much anything else).
When I read this I have to wonder where you got your information from. Off the top of my head, the extinct species in North America are:
Labrador Duck
Carolina Parakeet
Passenger Pigeon
Ivory billed woodpecker

These all went extinct before the Endangered Species Act. Can you name any that have gone extinct since its creation?
 
When I read Atlas Shrugged, my reaction was, "How could anyone be so ignorant of science and technology and yet base their entire plot on it?" A small excerpt from the relevant part of the book.

"Those men, long ago, tried to invent a motor that would draw static electricity from the atmosphere, convert it and create its own power as it went along. They couldn't do it. They gave it up." She pointed at the broken shape. "But there it is."

"It's the greatest revolution in power motors since the internal-combustion engine—greater than that! It wipes everything out—and makes everything possible. Do you see what I see? A brand-new locomotive half the size of a single Diesel unit, and with ten times the power. A self-generator, working on a few drops of fuel, with no limits to its energy. The cleanest, swiftest, cheapest means of motion ever devised."


Rand could just as easily have written a story based on magic, fairy dust. The fact that she uses pseudo-technology to built her plot gives her no special credibility. In short, her ideas are laughable. Asking Rand to build an alternative world is like asking a three year old to build a microwave oven. "Going Galt" has the same sense of reality as saying that you are going to start a flying pony ranch.


When I read this I have to wonder where you got your information from. Off the top of my head, the extinct species in North America are:
Labrador Duck
Carolina Parakeet
Passenger Pigeon
Ivory billed woodpecker

These all went extinct before the Endangered Species Act. Can you name any that have gone extinct since its creation?
Smith Island Cottontail. Actually a sub-species which only lived on two small islands in Virginia.

That's about it.
 

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