Silhouette wrote:Serendipper wrote:You've committed at least 2 major logical fallacies on this thread: that potentiality = certainty and every venezuelan is an expert in economics by virtue of being venezuelan. Though, I'll have to consult Silhouette for the proper names.
I love how I've gained this reputation with youHowever I don't actually have any special or long-standing expertise with fallacies, I just had the patience some time ago to trawl through lists of fallacies to give me sufficient context to go back through them at later dates to find the name of a fallacy that I've identified with sufficient success. I'd like to think that this speaks for some natural abilities of mine, but probably speaks far more to the lack of effort by others
Not having a go at you by the way, you actually seem to be interested and looking into getting to the same point and probably beyond - clichés about how long it look to build Rome applied just as much to me as they will anyone else, the important thing is another cliché about it never being too late to start something.
I love this point you've made about every Venezuelan not being an expert in economics by virtue of being Venezuelan - it's very similar to scientists often being taken as authorities on all aspects of science when in reality they are most often only experts in specific fields of science.
It probably takes anyone here less than a second to think of an American who is by no means an expert in economics by virtue of being American. Why doesn't this apply to Venezuelans and Venezuela?
Hell, who is an expert in economics?
If there was such a thing, you'd think that somewhere there would exist at least one economy out there that was more robust than the mess you see all over the Western world, which is at least informally alleged to practice "the most" expertise in economics in the world, going by how economically developed it is relative to the rest of the world.
If I am to understand that the person in question is Pedro, it's quite clear that he has a significant economic bent, and honestly - even if he has attempted to educate himself economically, I see no sign from what I've read of him showing any objectivity of the kind that an economically educated person would normally be inclined to demonstrate.
"Socialists think they deserve to be not be poor, and this is why" appears to be driving implication behind this thread - and honestly a great many threads including one I've recently been wasting a lot of of my time on.
I'd even go as far as saying Bulverism is one of the sources of today's mutilated political discourse.
Capitalists tend to see competition as best for the group as a whole and Socialists tend to see cooperation as best for the group as a whole.
Serendipper wrote:I wouldn't mind a copper atom every time someone mentioned venezuela without knowing what he's talking about.
To finish on a light note, I wouldn't wish for this measure of copper because it takes about 10^5 atoms to reach the width of a human hair, and that's just a line of atoms with only the width of 1 atom. Try 10^10 times someone mentions Venezuela without knowing what they're talking about to get only a flat cross section of a human hair, and 10^15 to get a small grain of copper. That's 1 quadrillion mentions
Gloominary wrote:Can't we just discuss ideas without being insulting?
And why does everyone/thing have to be absolutely right/wrong?
Jakob wrote:Socialists arent interested in real beings.
etc.
Serendipper wrote:You're the nomenclature man who can tell me what I'm talking aboutAnd I think identifying fallacies by name is a rare expertise.
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Serendipper wrote:But then the problem is: how many know what specious means? So by educating myself, I'm making communication more difficult as most folks would probably assume specious means "silly" without looking it up.
Serendipper wrote:Oh yes, good point, I should settle for quarks of copper atoms for every mention lest my penny get too big for the universe![]()
Jakob wrote:Yes, as I see it, Capitalism is a merciful, human and natural type of mindset, which takes a lot of discipline and downright merit to uphold. Not everyone is willing to show such merit, or discipline.
Jakob wrote:And because there are now a bunch of them screaming together in a room, they start to imagine there is a rationale to it all, besides the primordial drive of envy.
Organized envy wearing the mask of rationality.
Jakob wrote:What is lacking in all Socialists is loftiness.
There are no philosophers here so no one will understand this but Ill say it anyway; this, loftiness, is how nature seduces herself to herself, how she draws out the exorbitant efforts of self overcoming that is its life essence.
Jakob wrote:A socialist prefers to be unhappy for his fellow man over being happy for his fellow man. He needs to look down, he can not bear to look at that which is more splendorous and be conscious of that fact.
Whatever lives in splendor is, per the Socialist heart which is small and cold, a sinner, a transgressor, a "the rich". Socialists can not see persons, only categories.
Silhouette wrote:It can work both ways, I reckon. Somebody like Hitchens would brazenly reel off terminology, references, quotations, and even superficially the fluency would only make him sound more convincing even though doubtless it would be better if more people knew exactly what he meant. Encouraging others to look up these things up for themselves is a good habit to instil, I think, even if it's motivated by the fear of not keeping up in future.
I still tend to be selective with the complexity of my language for the sake of accessibility, but I'll use terminology if the prosody effectively punctuates my key concepts. <--> Some casual assonance is also nice.
It also depends on your audience - clearly a "straight talking" president communicates better to the reckless and sophisticated demonstrations of understanding requisite to the role of presidency communicate better to the concerned.
Serendipper wrote:Gloominary wrote:Can't we just discuss ideas without being insulting?
And why does everyone/thing have to be absolutely right/wrong?
Because the absolutist can only defend the indefensible by insult.
What's held on faith is defended by violence. Add that to my "theists commit atrocities" argument
Gloominary wrote:Serendipper wrote:Gloominary wrote:Can't we just discuss ideas without being insulting?
And why does everyone/thing have to be absolutely right/wrong?
Because the absolutist can only defend the indefensible by insult.
What's held on faith is defended by violence. Add that to my "theists commit atrocities" argument
From my experience, every demographic is equally at fault.
Silhouette wrote:Or is the purpose of this thread only to vent by means of telling other people what they think without any wish for feedback other than confirmation?
Silhouette wrote:Silhouette wrote:Or is the purpose of this thread only to vent by means of telling other people what they think without any wish for feedback other than confirmation?
I guess my above suspicion is true.
Jakob, I'll leave you to it since you have no interest in engaging with anything I've said.
Jakob wrote:Serendipper just likes to blame other people for his own problems.
Typical socialist scummery.
He doesnt know that Mao and Stalin were both Atheists.
He knows very little when it comes to history.
Dunamis wrote:Jakob wrote:Oh, you 'chuckle' don't you? - that is exactly what the christian fundamentalist on our previos board used to bring out as a response when confronted with something he could not handle intellectually.
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Handle something "intellectually"? I have not noticed anything intellectual being presented by you. Please rephrase your "intellectual" thought which I cannot handle. As to Christian Fundamentalists, I don't much talk to them pretty much for the same reason that I don't talk to Nietzschean Fundamentalists.Your soul betrays itself; only when faced with someone who calls himself a master do you feel inclined to respond - whith 'you are not a master!'
Actually I just laugh at the unMasterly conduct. That followers of Nietzsche are prone to overstatement and over-self-estimation is not a surprise.I've yet to see you respond rationally to a single argument...
If you would like to actually present an "argument", I'd like to see what you think an argument looks like.
Dunamis wrote:Ah. I get it. What you mean by "intellectual argument" that others can't handle is any non-systematic assertion such that non-contradiction has no more bearing. By what standard this is either an "argument" or "intellectual" I don't know. But I see no "intellectual argument" on your behalf. Of course when you unleash the word "argument" so to mean anything Jakob asserts, and "intellectual" to mean anything that Jakob says, then yes, I can't handle your intellectual arguments.
Serendipper wrote:From my experience, age is correlated to propensity to insult, but it could be skewed by the fact that age is correlated to conservatism.. or perhaps vice versa.
You can test this right now today. Just go to a no-holds-barred political forum and argue in favor of a minimum wage. Note how many insults you get. Then argue against climate change. Note how many insults you get.
When I performed the said experiment, zero liberals insulted me and zero conservatives did not. Let me know if you get a different result.
So what explains this? (Besides old people being cranky) Well, conservatives can only hold beliefs on faith because all evidence is antipodal to their conclusion. There is no recourse except to insult.
Try it. I'm interested.
Jakob wrote:Silhouette, no one responded to my own inquiries.
we're programmed to eliminate business owners and turn management over to the workers.
This is my core position from when I was a kid and active in causes.
Much has been lost since then.
One thing I found out along the way is that the leaderships of Causes and Social Parties are invariably corrupt. Oxfam spends 90 percent of its contributions on Overhead, which was revealed to go buying Africans for sex.
I now think the only hope is in the fact that some people actually have more money than they could spend. This is a firm basis for a true ecologic revolution, which is all I care about really.
I fear that the only hope is that our Hedonism will save us - the will to enjoy the planet as a natural thing.
Socialism has failed, and I was part of trying very hard to protect things, to protect the Earth. Most of it is gone. I now see only potential for some lofty form of capital investments in the natural Earth as a product.
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