Whoever takes a case to them.
6/10/2008 3:14:07 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArbitrationThat wouldn't be any different than the current system of legally binding Arbitration already used in many forms of contract dispute today. (For example, Architectural contracts as produced by the AIA mandate that any dispute go to Arbitration first.)It seems logical that the party deemed at fault would pay for the court fees.
6/10/2008 3:15:00 PM
Actually, I've just given an example of a very powerful incentive for feuds and revenge killings. I've also identified a really good reason that you're either going to pay outlandish rates or not be able to get insurance. Personally, I wouldn't feel good about being an insurance company here.This belief that everyone cares about your fair treatment makes little sense. You'd have an incentive to demand an arbitrator, but the insurance company (and every insurance company) has as much incentive to deny you that, and can probably continue to exist when you get mad and go somewhere else by being a cut-rate insurer for less discerning customers. You've also continually cited that justice in this situation is entirely dependent on being able to pay for it, rather than on any conception of rights.[Edited on June 10, 2008 at 3:20 PM. Reason : I didn't edit it yet.]
6/10/2008 3:18:39 PM
How is an insurance company that denies its clients arbitrations and refuses to pay out claims going to attract customers?
6/10/2008 3:22:55 PM
^ With a cute little Lizard as it's advertising mascot?
6/10/2008 3:23:46 PM
6/10/2008 3:45:37 PM
A restitution based justice system is organized on the principle that aggressing against the rights of another gives them a just claim to restitution that can be enforced against you. A homeless person with no family, no less than any other person, has certain rights, among them the right not to be murdered. Thus, doing so would bring into being a just claim for restitution. Since the homeless person is no longer alive to claim restitution, and there are no next of kin to do so in his stead, anyone can "homestead" the unowned claim and take first possession by doing the legwork of finding the killer and bringing them before an arbitrator.
6/10/2008 10:11:05 PM
Would this world consist mostly of gum drops or happy thoughts?
6/10/2008 10:16:06 PM
Hard-nosed realism with an ample dose of cold, hard cash.
6/10/2008 10:18:30 PM
definitely not happy thoughts, then.
6/10/2008 10:22:37 PM
It looks like it consists of gangsta-ass shit and doing what you please. Just for the sake of argument, why is someone actually going to show up to your independent arbiters when charges are brought?
6/10/2008 11:10:03 PM
6/11/2008 3:37:40 AM
6/11/2008 10:39:59 AM
this is all assuming humans are rational beings.which is not true.
6/11/2008 11:39:10 AM
Ecchh!All of this arguing in favor of a gov't is leaving a bad taste in my mouth.
6/12/2008 12:42:53 AM
6/12/2008 10:00:04 AM
6/12/2008 10:13:29 AM
6/12/2008 10:28:43 AM
6/12/2008 10:39:49 AM
6/12/2008 8:04:51 PM
Even feudalism would be an improvement over the perverse combination of majoritarian democracy and special interest politics we have now. People think of the dark ages as a time of slavery and oppression. This is true in many respects. However, that's not the whole picture. Though society was rigidly stratified, each class had rights that the others couldn't easily violate. That's what magna carta was all about. The king's power was far from absolute. He had to succor his nobles, do them favors, grant them lands, and still had to deal with their constant scheming and rebellion. If he overstepped his bounds, they can and did unite to put him back in his place. The nobles, for their part, had responsibilities to their serfs and were strictly limited in their power over them. If they got carried away, the serfs could take their grievances to the king or the church for help against their lord. The numerous free, independent cities pretty much did their own thing. Even the church was its own sovereignty, with its own lands, its own military forces and its own laws and courts.Hell, a vassel serf only had to hand over 10% of his produce to his lord. If the chains of government rested that lightly on me, I would be a damn sight better off than I am today.For an interesting discussion of the topic check out Martin van Crevald The Rise and Decline of the State or Hans Hermann Hoppe Democracy: the God that Failed.However, it's a mistake to assume that feudalism would reemerge from a market anarchy. Your absurd Dr. No scenario could be solved in any number of ways. A single assassins bullet, anti-satellite laser or kinetic kill weapons, a mercenary invasion of his island or something else entirely could put a stop to his plans real quick. It would be much easier to organize the amount of force required to stop a lone megalomaniac than it would be to successfully impose state-like controls over the entire population or a sizable subset thereof.
6/13/2008 4:34:18 AM