10 showed up, 14 are members so far.I'm not in support of publicly funded universities. But I am in support of getting a cheap, but very good, education in my field to make up for the years of taxes my parents have paid and that I will probably end up paying. Maybe you people don't understand. One doesn't need to be a diehard Libertarian Party follower to believe the main concepts and be interested in getting them exposed to more people. I don't consider myself Libertarian (note the capitalization). Most of the people I know who claim they are libertarian have differing opinions on a number of subjects. Shit, even if you don't agree with any libertarian views, the lesser of three evils is better than the lesser of two, no? But that's enough for me of this thread. If you're not interested, so be it. But there's no need to try and personally attack my efforts in order to draw a little negative attention to yourself. If you are interested, shoot me a PM for the next meeting info (next week).
1/25/2007 5:30:50 PM
I personally salute your efforts.
1/25/2007 5:48:36 PM
1/25/2007 6:38:06 PM
1/25/2007 9:31:08 PM
Okay, analogy time:Imagine someone who never went to medical school, saying: "I know as much as any medical doctor, and in fact, all the doctors are wrong. Here's why..."then proceed to write a bunch of non-peer reviewed books, develop a following based on a cult of personality, demand strict adherence to all facets of your teaching by your members, and throw out anyone who doesn't agree with you on every point.and you wonder why every international body of philosophy summarily dismisses her writings?
1/25/2007 9:40:39 PM
^You put that way better than I did. Thanks.
1/25/2007 9:43:41 PM
G-Cat:
1/25/2007 10:28:55 PM
^ It's subjective information about an objective thing. Nothing removes our perspective on contingent things.
1/25/2007 10:50:34 PM
^I suggest that you could bring all the personal, subjective, introspective perspective you want to the situation... but the piano is still gonna flatten you.
1/25/2007 11:00:44 PM
Of course it is.But that doesn't mean my perceptions of the piano are the piano, or that they give me objective knowledge of the piano. They don't.
1/25/2007 11:03:31 PM
A society full of people all acting in their own selfish material interests is prone to failure. In this respect, pure libertarianism is undesirable. It also ignores the reality that society has to work together for common goals and for survival.
1/25/2007 11:03:47 PM
^With very few exceptions, most everyone is working towards their own "selfish material interests."Do you think the guy making cars on a assembly line is doing it cause he wants you to have one? He's doing it to feed himself and his family and buy the stuff that makes him happy. That's the miracle of capitalism. Everyone works in their own self interest, and society is generally all the better for it. I agree with you that society has to work together for a common goal. That goal should be the collective protection of individual rights.
1/26/2007 12:10:55 AM
1/26/2007 12:13:01 AM
1/26/2007 12:52:18 AM
1/26/2007 1:06:15 AM
someone took an intro to phi class
1/26/2007 1:07:20 AM
Someone's pursuing a PhD in that field.
1/26/2007 1:09:34 AM
1/26/2007 1:11:15 PM
Oh okay so you can't name anything off of the top of your head.You don't know enough to pass judgment. vvThere are some philosophers whose positions I consider misguided, but not in the same way that Rand's are. Rand just decided one day she was smart as hell, and that all she really needed as a background was some readings in Kant, Nietzsche, and Aristotle. This is how you get a view as distorted and as historically refuted as hers.[Edited on January 26, 2007 at 2:56 PM. Reason : .]
1/26/2007 2:53:38 PM
You really want me to drop a few names that badly? Fine. Bentham, Mill, Kant, Nozick, Nagel...I don't know enough to pass judgment? What does it take to know enough? Must I spend the next 40 years reading tripe and then more tripe written in agreement or criticism? If I spend the rest of my life reading hundreds of opinions new and old, then will I be well-rounded enough to call out bullshit? I can't just now come out and say, "Person A assumes his values are self-evident and then acts like they're valid and objective. Person B does nothing but state the bleeding obvious, pretend it's extremely meaningful, and makes up words and categories. Person C is completely out of touch with reality and survives on writing long, convoluted books that try to sound intellectual..."?As for Rand, *shrug*, like I said, I don't think being well versed in others' opinions equips anyone with the ability to know rightness or reality.
1/26/2007 5:02:42 PM
1/26/2007 9:53:44 PM
^^ You're a huge idiot if you think that Bentham, Mill, and Kant can be considered contemporary. At any rate it shows that you don't know what the fuck. Nagel and Nozick I can see, though -- they're both dead, but whatever, they're fairly recent. As for saying they're TRIPE, that's a bit much.But off of that small ass list you aren't qualified worth a damn. If we're talking current analytic tradition there are tons of great examples of philosophers, many of which aren't as bad as you portray.
1/27/2007 12:00:36 AM
1/27/2007 1:08:22 AM
Who writes a work that fundamentally steps into positions that have already been refuted? It's obvious she picked a few authors to rag on (kant especially) and didn't do much of her other reading.
1/27/2007 1:12:28 AM
i dont feel like reading any of the above. but is someone trying to argue that reading 3 or 4 philosophers makes him able to "call bullshit" on the works of hundreds of men over 3000+ years of western civilization.
1/27/2007 1:23:56 AM
1/27/2007 10:28:20 AM
You think they characterized mainstream philosophy? Ahahaha oh shit, god...I can't decide whether to enlighten you or not, you could certainly look this shit up if you were so inclined. But if, after "four philosophy classes" the shit rolled off of you that bad, I'm just not sure it's worth my time.You should read some Hume, Frege, and Russell to start. That should occupy you for a little while, at least -- and you might actually like it.[Edited on January 27, 2007 at 10:47 AM. Reason : .]
1/27/2007 10:46:44 AM
1/27/2007 10:50:06 AM
Because that's not the entirety of her philosophy?Look I'm down with philosophy that places the human at the center of his own world, don't get me wrong. But self-happiness as the only moral purpose of life could be considered flawed from a variety of angles (either from the concept that happiness itself is the wrong aim of morality, or from people who think that humans are social creatures and should cooperate).The problem is that self-happiness being the moral purpose of life could be used to justify some pretty horrible shit (as long as it makes me happy).Most of my problem with Rand comes from her metaphysics. It's a weird smashing together of Locke and Aristotle, at least that's how I view it. She simply tries to step around David Hume, she has nothing compelling to say about his skepticism. Just ignores it. Meh.What you perceive is not objective reality, and not everything terminates in some sort of sense data.
1/27/2007 11:06:51 AM
If "humans are social creatures and should cooperate" then the only way for us to be individually happy is for us to cooperate. That is, unless you are wrong and sometimes we feel the need to cooperate and other times we need to be alone. The persuit of happiness will allow for all these scenarios, but the blind persuit of cooperation will not.
1/27/2007 11:21:36 AM
Well can't do much against a strawman argument. I don't think anybody's arguing for the blind pursuit of cooperation.The pursuit of happiness isn't always congruent to the pursuit of excellence, unless you vacuously redefine happiness as "acting with liberty."[Edited on January 27, 2007 at 11:30 AM. Reason : .]
1/27/2007 11:23:58 AM
1/28/2007 10:30:38 PM
1/29/2007 12:18:20 AM
Rands political philosophy stems from her metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. You can't separate the views she espoused in her philosophical nonfiction from her political ideology. Either her political philosophy and her philosophical nonfiction is adequate, or it is all inadequate. BTW, many individuals, myself included, who consider themselves students of Objectivism do not agree with or consider themselves Libertarians.I really like Shivan Bird and EarthDogg's posts. Do you guys consider yourselves Objectivists?
1/29/2007 12:52:18 AM
1/29/2007 9:00:40 AM
3/29/2007 2:36:00 PM