You aren't just claiming self-ownership/NAP/anarcho-capitalism is correct, you are claiming that it is PROVABLY correct using logic.Kshartle wrote:If you believe the world is flat I and I can't convince you that it's round am I wrong? Is it flat? Come on. It might be that I can't convince you because you're not in a position to change your mind. That doesn't make me wrong. You proving the world isn't round or at least pointing out where my argument contradicts itself would.Simonjester wrote: But part of what you're trying to sell here is an objective morality that 100% of the human race will get on board with on their own, with no enforcement of any kind. So... You kinda DO have to convince everyone, or else you're automatically wrong. Like Moda said, you've laid out a really hard task for yourself.
So it's not about "convincing" us... it's about actually supplying a deductive argument in the proper format, first, and then having a reasonable discussion on 1) the truth of each premise, and 2) the conclusions you make logically, necessarily following the premise.
You can say "I'm internally convinced," or "I've spoken to God but can't prove it," or say "the consequences of anarcho-capitalism will be peace, productivity and happiness the likes of which we've never seen," and those might be discussions that we just can't move anywhere on (most political arguments from consequences are tough to prove by the very nature of the inputs involved).
But you don't... you claim it's LOGICALLY provable, as do all anarcho-capitalists.
You then refuse to lay it out as a logical structure, but go on run-on paragraphs, and it's hard to tell exactly what premises exist as proven by others, and what premises are to be self-evident. Further, conflation of terms ("responsible" vs "own"), and whether they have a normative value to them further confuses the point.
If it's provable, PROVE IT! Use an almost universally identifiable logical structure, define some terms, forget about the metaphysical stuff (do we "exist," are we really in any "control" of ourselves or is it pre-determined), and let us pick it apart.
And keep in mind, this is ALL existing BEFORE we even get to grey areas of (though I think we should leave them alone for now):
Elderly
Mentally handicapped
Kids/babies
Pollution
"Risk to others" in my behavior and whether that constitutes aggression
Pushing an onlooker out of the way to save a drowning child
Property disputes (past, present, and future)
Animals
K,
I've found something on Youtube that might be a little premature with all the other debates this has delved into with Rick, but I find that it almost PERFECTLY explains my position (though in a MUCH more articulate fashion). I know you hate links, but this guy is a philosopher and I find it very difficult to articulate my position as well as he does
I'd recommend everyone else do as well.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEkSF01NzQo
It dicusses normative vs functional logic, conflation of terms, and connections between premises and conclusions... and it does so directly dealing in the context of the deductive "provability" of self-ownership or the connection of said self-ownership to the ownership of property... exactly what I've been (trying to) say to Kshartle, though in no where near as articulate a form.
