Pure
Fiel a Verdad
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2001
- Posts
- 15,135
one question, shang, is whether 'unpleasant' consequences are allowed as part of the rationalist argument.
to take the issue of 'low productivity', this was apparently not something that most humans minded for some eons, perhaps up to the advent of capitalism.
and even now, some people take a 'vow of poverty,' so maybe one person or a whole society being 'poor' (not many goods produced) is not a valid 'rational' consideration.
a second question concerns the scope of the murder allowance. why restrict consideration to a) total ban, or b) free for all, bloody conflict. how about: the extremely well-to-do kill, when convenient, any poor person who represents some impediment or hindrance--gets in the way of the carriage-- and whose relatives are few and weak.
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here's an interesting little piece on 'love and murder among the chimps'
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE6DE1F39F930A25750C0A96E948260
to take the issue of 'low productivity', this was apparently not something that most humans minded for some eons, perhaps up to the advent of capitalism.
and even now, some people take a 'vow of poverty,' so maybe one person or a whole society being 'poor' (not many goods produced) is not a valid 'rational' consideration.
a second question concerns the scope of the murder allowance. why restrict consideration to a) total ban, or b) free for all, bloody conflict. how about: the extremely well-to-do kill, when convenient, any poor person who represents some impediment or hindrance--gets in the way of the carriage-- and whose relatives are few and weak.
===
here's an interesting little piece on 'love and murder among the chimps'
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE6DE1F39F930A25750C0A96E948260
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