I have a friend who loves Zeitgeist (and The Venus Project), as well as Michael Moore. I don't want to get into a long debate with him, so if there are any videos or online articles that rips this shit apart, please give me the links.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kf3MtjMBWx4&feature=relmfu
Sick in America, from John Stossel. Goes head to head against Moore in the later videos and makes a great case for free market healthcare.
A Critique of Anarcho-Communism and the Zeitgeist Movement | by Jörg Guido Hülsmann
Any philosophy that doesn't recognize property is automatically invalid. It is scary that my University still has chapters devoted to the Marxist argument, in political economy courses.
I think you should go with economic critique instead of ethics, because both "movements" are based on really unsound economic theories.
You may be interested in a debate I have been having with Ben McLeish of the Zeigeist Movement via blog posts.
My first post to Ben is here: http://managainstthestate.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/critique-of-firing-back-by-ben-mcleish.html. (See also my debate with another Zeitgeister, Carlos, in the comments).
My second post to Ben is here: http://managainstthestate.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/2nd-post-to-ben-mcleish.html.
In his latest post, Ben referred me to a book called The First Civilization. Here is a quote from that book, where the author describes what his life would be like in an RBE:
I would wake up in my temporary dwelling whenever I felt like it. After a healthy breakfast, I'd walk to the nearest transportation station and be whisked off to a research center. Here, I would spend the day researching biological ageing, which is a particular area of great interest for me. As the day began to grow late, I would head back home and print myself a customized water pipe. After an evening of smoking hemp and reading about theoretical physics, I would go to bed. The next day, I would travel to Machu Picchu, because I've always wanted to see it. The day after that, I might travel to the other side of the globe, and spend the next few days teaching kids about what it was like to live during the Second Dark Ages (as I'm sure our modern era will be called in the future). When I wasn't teaching, I'd spend some time learning about nanotechnology, and hopefully I would one day be able to contribute to research in that area as well. Perhaps I would spend the next few weeks jumping back and forth between labs and research topics. At some point I'd probably get bored of this, so I'd travel over to what we call India, and spend a month living in as close proximity to elephants as possible, likely with a research team. During this time, I would spend most of my days observing the elephants, and practising some musical instrument. (I'll be honest, right now I'm picturing myself riding on the back of an elephant while playing the keytar. Also, there would be hemp involved.) Eventually, I'd head back to the city and pull together some kind of band, probably making songs about my time with the elephants. Meanwhile, I would continue learning about a variety of subjects, and spend the odd day doing research whenever the mood struck me. Eventually, I would probably return to that first lab, and spend a few months dedicating as much time as possible to research. Then, I'd spend a few weeks just relaxing with friends and family, playing video games, reading, and watching old movies, before returning to the lab and continuing my research.
Government Explained 2: The Special Piece of Paper
Law without Government
In Ben's latest reply, he makes the classic error of confusing definitions (clearly marked as such in your post) for assertions. He does this many times, even though you warned of this very mistake when you said, "Definitions can never be true or false, of course; definitions are to be judged on their usefulness for communicating ideas." I've highlighted all the instances of this error in a passage from Ben's post below:
Why anarchy fails
the Second Dark Ages (as I'm sure our modern era will be called in the future).
Ahahahahahahaha!
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
You are exactly right AJ. I emailed him about that immediately after I read his response. Here is an abridged version of our subsequent email exchange:
Me:I've read your post a couple of times and I'll think about my response. But just quickly: you haven't provided a definition of money. You rejected my definition but forgot to tell me what your definition is.
Ben:I'm a little surprised that you think I haven't defined money (which I define, by the way, by its effects upon society, rather than what it says on the currency.)... [this was a long email, in which he repeated what he said his post, and still gave no definition of money]
Me:I'm sorry to harp on about this, but I still can't see an actual definition of money in there. I want something that I can substitute in for the word money every time you use it. Right now, you are making statements using the term money but I literally don't know what you have in mind when you use the term, so I can't evaluate those statements and the discussion can't move forward on this point.
Ben:Can you show me some author who has done this one-word defining you are after?
Me:Sure. Here you go: "A medium of exchange which is commonly used as such is called money." (Mises) "Money is a commodity that serves as a general medium of exchange" (Rothbard) "money, which we can formally define as “a widely accepted medium of exchange.”" (Murphy) "As the most generally saleable good in society or “the general medium of exchange,” money..." (Salerno) "Money, a commonly used medium of exchange..." (Hoppe) Those are definitions of money. Agreement on definitions of key terms is essential for effective communication.
Ben:You can happily use these definitions if it makes it easier. I think you'll have to define these as what money is proposed as by your position. I guess you'll probably have to develop it for credit/debt/investment etc (as much of the use isn't just exchange.) You will still come up against the challenges you face demonstrating that this is what money actually is, or why it's effects are what they are.
Me:This post makes me think you don't know what a definition is. If I define a batchelor as "an unmarried man", it makes no sense to say that I will "come up against challenges" demonstrating that an unmarried man is what a batchelor "actually is". If you come along and claim that "some batchelors are married" and say I will come up against challenges demonstrating that "all batchelors are unmarried", then I will simply ask you what definition of batchelor you are using, because it clearly isn't the same definition I'm using. If you tell me your definition of batchelor, we could agree to use that, and then we may actually agree that it is true that some batchelors are married. Or you must agree to you use my definition during the discussion, in which case you must agree that its false that some batchelors are married.
Ben:Here's the problem. You want to define money as a neutral form of exchange. If you do so, as you wish to, based on flat statements from economists, you then also have to account for the effects of money in the real world. I have by now given quite a few public examples of how money isn't just a medium of exchange... We can both agree, if you like, that money is a neutral medium of exchange.
We can both agree, if you like, that money is a neutral medium of exchange.
Me:I can't believe you are being so loose with words. I have provided my definition of money so many times now. I quoted five different Austrians giving the definition. Not one of them said "neutral". Not one of them said "form". If this conversation is to go anywhere, you really must stop pretending that my definition is what you want it to be, rather than what it is.
Ben:I previously agreed to use your definition.
Me:Yes, good. Please then try to stop strawmanning me by saying "neutral" is part of my definition, or that it is a "form" of exchange. It is not a form of exchange, but a medium. Whether it is neutral or not depends what you mean by neutral, of course, but if I guess your meaning of that term I would say my answer is that money is in some circumstances neutral and other circumstances not neutral. But either way it is not part of the definition.
Ben:I guess as you lay out the function of money in the Austrian worldview we will iron out how and if money acts being the medium of exchange.
Epic facepalm moment for me when he wrote that last post. I didn't bother responding. I am not sure I have the energy to continue the discussion at this point. How can you have a fruitful discussion with someone who doesn't know what a definition is?!
Common sense, rationality, and logic is probably the best critique.
“Since people are concerned that ‘X’ will not be provided, ‘X’ will naturally be provided by those who are concerned by its absence.""The sweetest of minds can harbor the harshest of men.”
http://voluntaryistreader.wordpress.org
Graham,
Wow. That is just about the starkest example I've ever seen, and I don't think that is because this affliction is uncommon, but rather because you pressed him on it so patiently. That kind of response gets to be old hat when you constantly ask people to define the key strategic terms that make or break their argument. At least this way you know where the core problem is!
This is why I find it of the utmost importance to elucidate the (would-be obvious) facts of the communication process and the role of words in it: it is an absolute prerequisite to clear thinking in general, and one that is quite often completely missing. Something like this may help to send him, but I'm not all that hopeful at this point. It looks like he has way too much of his worldview invested in not understanding what a definition is. Still, if progress is to be made, pushing on this point in a neutral context seems the fastest way to do it.
Yes, he is definitely heavily invested in his worldview. Nothing I can say will change his mind. I only debate him because he seems to have a small following and maybe I can sew some seeds of doubt among his followers. That and to satisfy my curiosity about how someone who appears to be so bright can be so truly muddled.
Talking with Zeitgeisters about money is always skirting the core disagreement, anyway. It is not just money they oppose, but all ownership, trade, laws, etc. It all springs from their denial of the existence of scarcity, which is a confusion resulting from their failure to define the term and stick to their definition. Every Zeitgeister I've talked to says (sooner or later) that nothing I say about economics or ethics matters because it simply doesn't apply to their "post-scarcity" world (see Carlos in the comments, for example).
They first define scarcity as something like "not having enough," and then they say that with 3D printing, vertical farms, etc, everybody will have "enough" of everything, so they conclude that 'there is no scarcity in the RBE'. But then comes the word-thought overwrite. They switch their definition of scarcity to mean a world where objects have multiple incompatible uses, so conflicts are possible. Using this definition they conclude that 'laws/ownership are necessary only in conditions of scarcity'. They equivocate on the word scarcity to conclude that laws/ownership are unnecessary in the RBE.
When I went through this in painful detail with Carlos in the comments (starting here), I did get him to acknowledge that RBE is not a post-scarcity world in the sense that conflicts are impossible in an RBE. He agreed with me that scarcity in that sense will always exist, and therefore rules about resource use (ownership) will always be necessary. But then when I asked him to explain how arbitration would work in the RBE and what ownership rules would exist in the RBE, he stopped replying. He came back 6 weeks later saying he'd "changed his mind" and he re-asserted that there is no scarcity in an RBE so no ownership rules are needed!
Graham Wright:I only debate him because he seems to have a small following and maybe I can sew some seeds of doubt among his followers.
If you keep politely harping on the fundamental equivocations on which their entire argument hinges, some of them will eventually become...unhinged.
Graham Wright:That and to satisfy my curiosity about how someone who appears to be so bright can be so truly muddled.
I guess we know the answer to that now. Equivocation is impossible when you have solid definitions nailed down and held to. Therefore, if equivocation is baked into the foundation of your worldview you will eventually become adept at weaseling out of any attempt to pin down or keep to definitions (and this becomes less and less conscious, if it ever was).
I think the only way to demonstrate a "systematic equivocation" (as I. Ryan has called it) to an unsympathetic audience is to do it in pictures. The memory burden when using words is simply too great. People will forget and the same ground will be covered over and over, as with Carlos. After all, the goal is to get them to see what they're doing, so the only things that matter are making it so clear that they can't possibly not see it, and preferably also doing it in a way that leaves their "ego" out of it (unless it's only for the gallery).
It's of course a bit of a hassle to think through and put together a diagram that is both clear and complete, but since equivocation (and the word-thought overwriting that enables it) follow the same kinds of patterns in every case, much of the visual conventions could be recycled each time.
There are two sides to the knife of equivocation: on the one hand it is a deadly error that destroys lives, lets intellectual wordspinners pull the wool over just about everyone in every field, and holds civilization back in myriad ways, but on the other hand almost none of these wordspinners nor their followers can ever refute these kinds of attacks (hard to even call them "attacks" when all you really do is ask for unambiguous and immobile definitions of the strategic terms). So the other side of the knife is that those who are able to see through equivocations can tear through endless swaths of bad theory in an extremely efficient manner, without really even attacking nor breaking a sweat.
The key I have found is to focus on this one thing without introducing other arguments or getting tempted into jumping ahead before the definitions are set, but also to remain tactful about it and not come off as a curmudgeon or whatever. You've been doing that very well, from what I've seen. Diagramming equivocations to make it utterly clear what is going on moves the burden off the listener/audience and onto the speaker/presenter, but you already seem very patient in your debating style, so this kind of thing might hold some interest for you.
I like that. I may use that when the time comes.
I had a go at a diagram that will bring money into it...
That puts a segment of the argument quite clearly. I think mine is too inflammatory to be useful for persuading someone directly, though it could be good for the gallery. I'd have made the trollfaces say, "CUZ OBJECTS AREN'T SCARCE!"
Another way to do it textually is to say something like:
The word scarce can have one of at least two meanings: Scarce-1: not abundant Scarce-2: having incompatible uses You're then saying, "Advanced technology will ensure that material goods are not scarce-1," right?
You're then saying, "Advanced technology will ensure that material goods are not scarce-1," right?
There are several ways to proceed from there. You could agree to always keep the terms numbered, for clarity. Or they might say that in every case they only mean scarce-1 so it isn't necessary. Either way, when they inevitably are forced to equivocate by switching from scarce-1 to scarce-2, it will be easy to identify. Another possibility is to agree to taboo the word scarce and simply talk directly about "having enough objects" and "objects having mutually incompatible uses."
However, I like the first option best. Even more elegant is to color code them:
The word scarce can have one of at least two meanings: Scarce: not abundant Scarce: having incompatible uses You're then saying, "Advanced technology will ensure that material goods are not scarce," right?
You're then saying, "Advanced technology will ensure that material goods are not scarce," right?
The advantage with this is you can then go back and color their uses of the word "scarce" to lay bare the equivocation, and of course let them clarify their meaning by re-coloring the words to try to make their argument work.
The ultimate way to reach clarity is now I think to create a prezi map of the argument.