So A still = A, if you realize that A is equal to A AND Not A... right? Still, the idea that the cat is both alive and not alive, that light is both a particle and wave at the same time, is pretty self-contradictory to our mundane logical brains.
Still, the idea that the cat is both alive and not alive, that light is both a particle and wave at the same time, is pretty self-contradictory to our mundane logical brains.
The copenhegan interpretation of QM does not imply a negation of the identity axiom. It doesn't even imply that an object can be represented as two disjoint states. It implies that an object can exist as a superposition of two disjoint states that collapses into a singular state when a measurement is made. You should bear in mind, the superposition state is itself a ditinct state that is not equivalent to either disjoint sate.
A simple yes would have sufficed. Your anger only makes it harder for you to be agreed with. But you're wrong about light; consider the double slit experiment. It's not about it being either wave OR particle at given times. The double slit experiment shows that it is both particle AND wave, at the same time. Now, if I understand you correctly you are saying A=A1/A2, and so logically it still follows the identity axiom (A[A1/A2]=A[A1/A2].
So, I affirm (A[A1/A2]=A[A1/A2]).
Except I'm saying "life sucks because me not having things means I don't have any power nor autonomy."
I think much of cognitive neuroscience disagrees that private ownership, and its concurrent "work for pay" (or wage labor), is the best incentive. Look up RSA videos and the empathic civilization; they do a pretty good job of summing it all up. What motivates people is 1) having enough "pay" to not have to worry about pay 2) autonomy 3) reward for effort, not necessarily success. This is how it seems the most innovative firms are the most innovative.
I believe in reward for effort and constructive criticism, and as I have said earlier, I believe that everyone has something to offer. But, without ownership rights, the calculation necessary to determine the right amount of reward (to encourage growth) from the wrong amount (that would encourage sloth) is impossible. This is because if you are spending other people's wealth you have no real idea of how much effort and time it represents. I watched the video. It was very interesting, but I think they are lost in the desert here. They tested money as an incentive under very specific circumstances, and they assume that a performance failure is an incentive failure. He even calls it a crazy left-wing idea, which is hard for me to see. I think he revealed something of himself there.
at any rate, the free market will determine what kind of compensation is best at getting the best performance out of each worker.
They will, whether you want them to or not. There simply is no feasible way to stop busibodies from thinking we don't have to all live under the same umbrella. To suggest otherwise is utopian.
If you have a way to provide universal right to due process, an attorny, and at least the semblance of a fair trial, I will be all for it. I'm not against markets. I think we can do better. I just think ancap will not provide certain protections, and will revert not back to what we have now, but to a neo-feudalism; where a small group of people own basically everything, and everyone else rents from them.
Not for the sheer cruelty of it, but because they can make a few extra bucks. Is that so unreasonable; that people will screw over others if there is a net profit to be made and they lack empathy?
I believe common nomenclature would call that "efficiency." Laziness is the opposite of productive; you would not call someone productive that did far more work than necessary for simple goods. If X and Y are hunting elephants and X uses a spear while Y uses a rock... who would be the lazy one? Most people would say neither, Y is just being dumb.
I am not lying to them. I am pointing out the systemic nature of the issue, rather than the apparent personal nature of it. Big difference. For you, someone who got hooked on drugs, sold themselves into prostitution is in a fair arrangement. To me they are not. I would do whatever I could to help them realize their bottom, and get off the drugs.
however, I share your subjective disgust for prostitution, and do not appreciate the implication that a wage earner is analogous except in the broadest of senses.
So living in the states to you is a voluntary arrangement? You are under no force to stay? You can leave at any time, all you need is $200 for a passport.
I am saying, at the very least, that the "owner" should not have legally enforced monopoly power on who gets compensated how much for what.
I am saying that the good they make are of equal, if not greater, quality.
The wages they offer are more competitive for general labor, less for management and investment.
I am saying that despite any of this, or any criticism you may have; they continue to grow, thrive, and prosper... and all without government subsidies. The cooperative movement, at least the IFC (I think is the name) is. Chavez has begun to give state funding for it. But prior to that, co-ops funded themselves.
Then I retract it. And ignore my previous statment in this response. Much apologies.
What's so magical about exerting that not everybody is motivated by material/monetary gain? I would think it magical to suggest they are.
It's important for me to meditate. It's not necessary. It's important to me to help kids not become subject to addiction; it's not neccessary. I could get along fine without either of these; many people do either day.
The top" of the proverbial pile. I realize it has no top; that has not, as of yet, stopped people from trying.
I still think you think I want to force cooperative business upon everyone... have I not made it clear I want people to choose this? You have a caricature of socialists you are trying to project unto me... I assure you, I'm not the droid you're looking for. If you consider me nosy, I am fine with that; I believe what I believe. But I'm no tyrant.
in any case, I apologize for any misapprehensions and I think we agree on more than I thought we did at first.
I saw this link posted before that includes some critiques of methodological individualism:
http://171.67.193.20/entries/methodological-individualism/#6
Is there anything here in these criticisms that is relevant to my understanding of self-ownership via AE? Are there any criticisms here that Austrians would find challenging?
Ownership means control. You are given exclusive control of your body as a fact of reality. Therefore, you must already own your body.
The speech in this thread has proceeded as if the concept of ownership weren't derived intuitively from our control of our own body. It is by analogy with our innate control over our physical selves that we understand extended ownership of things that are not our body, yet still considered under our control.