Posted by: Dale Eastman
« on: January 24, 2022, 09:03:26 AM »Quote from: 0959 24 Jan
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Took me awhile to compose a reply. You definitely challenged me to think about my choice of words. No hurry on your reply.
➽ Dale Eastman Ok, I'm taking some time to discuss even though it means I work late tonight because I really do enjoy this conversation.
Don't make yourself late because of this discussion, or I'll have to post my comments at the end of your work week. (Once I find out what day that is.) Take your time. Even a once every other week reply is moving the discussion along. This is a measured discussion with lots of thought.
And boy oh boy, did you make me think on this one. I had to interpret and decode your analogy to get (I hope) the points you've intended to make. And of course, to select my counterpoints. So onto our discussion.
➽ You say - "Objection! Assumption. Fact of Johnny wanting to partake of the pot luck not in evidence." This is not an assumption, it's a fact in the scenario.
This is your scenario where you are asking me to assume arguendo that your facts are correct. I can not do so. Here is why:
In your 16 Dec 2021 scenario set up, you made these equates:
Johnny = Every Citizen
CC = organizing authority = government
The Pot Luck = Society. i.e. the people and all their resources, come together.
The food = The resources and benefits of being in society. i.e. Having a job, making money, owning a house, buying resources from others, enjoying the safety of police, fire, & EMS. etc.
The shed = jail
I reject your assignment of Johnny, a single entity, as being the entire group of humans.
(I reject your use of the word citizen for reasons that are at this time tangential to the discussion and of no present import.)
You purport to speak for every human in the group when you purport to speak for Johnny. I am one of those many humans. You presume to speak for me. Because I am one of the many humans in that group, I have just placed myself in your scenario. Therefore, you can not overrule my objection of you presuming to speak for me. The objection stands: Assumption. Fact of myself as one of Johnny wanting to partake of the pot luck not in evidence.
Likewise, the second objection stands: Second assumption. Fact of myself as one of Johnny wanting anything to do with CC (government) not in evidence. That you are trying to make a point of some of the humans in the group having a choice is so noted.
I am trying to work with what you presented. IMO, your scenario doesn't work very well as a metaphor to get your point across.
➽ The Pot Luck = Society. i.e. the people and all their resources, come together.
This is where your scenario fails the most. I reject your assignment of the pot luck being a society because you and I seem not agree as to what a 'society' is.
⍺ ⍺ ⍺
Any organized group of people joined together because of work, interests, etc. in common.
Company or companionship.
An organization or association of persons engaged in a common profession, activity, or interest.
The system or condition of living together as a community in such a group.
One's friends or associates.
Companionship; company.
(countable) A long-standing group of people sharing cultural aspects such as language, dress, norms of behavior and artistic forms.
(countable) The sum total of all voluntary interrelations between individuals.
(uncountable) The people of one's country or community taken as a whole.
https://www.yourdictionary.com/society
Ω Ω Ω
Society is a group of individual humans deciding to interact or not interact with other individual humans in that group. Much like you or anyone else deciding who is going to be friends with frequent interactions, or strangers with only minimal or no interaction.
I find your reference to the resources of any or all those individual humans to be of no bearing to the point I see you attempting to make.
➽ Johnny is not required, under the penalty of death to contribute.
To society.
Parsing your words:
Johnny is not required, under the penalty of death, to contribute to society.
Parsing further:
Johnny is not required, under the penalty of death, to contribute to a group of individual humans deciding to interact or not interact with other individual humans in that group. This is correct. This is not the point of contention.
➽ But Johnny does have a choice. It just means that he misses out on the pot luck if he chooses not to follow CC's rules.
But [Dale] does have a choice. It just means that [Dale] misses out on [society] if he chooses not to follow [government's] rules.
But [Dale] does have a choice. It just means that [Dale] misses out on [interactacting with other individual humans] [in that group] if he chooses not to follow [government's] rules.
I don't need to obey government's rules to be a part of a society; to be part of a group of other individual humans freely choosing who they wish to associate with or not associate with.
➽ One cannot make (useful) money or exchange resources from others, for example, without existing in a society.
Agreed. That is not my contention. My problem is with you not recognizing that a 'society' is merely a group of interacting and/or non interacting humans. Your scenario doesn't reach.
➽ Again, "harm" is not an intent, it's an action.
I understand your intended point. Your statement is not correct either. "Harm" is the result of an action.
➽ Extortion (the practice of obtaining something, especially money, through force or threats) is an action.
I so stipulate that your statement, as you have presented it, herein shortened to 'Extortion is an action', is a fact.
⍺ Extortion is the practice of obtaining benefit through coercion. WikipediaΩ
Thus I also stipulate that 'Coercion is an action.'
I am assuming that you would agree that both are actions that you want accepted as amoral minus intent.
⍺ Coercion is compelling a party to act in an involuntary manner by use of threats, including force. WikipediaΩ
➽ Actions are neither moral nor immoral without intent.
➽ Therefore, [extortion] is not immoral without more context. Specifically, in this scenario, is the extortion done with malice (the intention or desire to do evil; ill will)?
Extrapolation from your claim indicates that according to you, absent (ill) intent, extorting or coercing a human to act in an involuntary manner is not immoral.
Quote from: 1001 24 Jan
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The discussion/ argument trifurcates at this point. The divisions are (A) initiatory offensive intent, (B) protective defensive intent, and (C) equalizing retaliatory intent.
Category (C) I am still processing. I can see category (C) being moral or immoral based upon what I'm going to refer to as the details of the situation. I will just drop 'Talion Law' here. I'm actually not 100% convinced of the morality of Talion Law at this point in time. On the other hand, I do see Talion Law as being in the defensive category of compelling the harming person to not do harm.
I agree with you in regard to category (B).
'Coercion'; 'compelling a party to act in an involuntary manner'; compelling an attacker to involuntarily end their attack; compelling an attacker to involuntarily end their attempt to initiate harm is moral. Self-defense as always moral.
I do NOT agree with you in regard to category (A).
An initiatory offensive attack; an initiatory offensive 'compelling a party to act in an involuntary manner' is always a harm. Deliberately doing harm to another is never a moral act. Refusing to make another whole after inadvertently doing them harm is immoral.
➽ In the case of the Government (as a collective entity, not as an individual). The answer is No, the purpose of the extortion is not malicious, and therefore not immoral.
For the moment I will not challenge your use of the reified term 'government'.
⍺ Reification (also known as concretism, hypostatization, or the fallacy of misplaced concreteness) is a fallacy of ambiguity, when an abstraction (abstract belief or hypothetical construct) is treated as if it were a concrete real event or physical entity.[1][2] In other words, it is the error of treating something that is not concrete, such as an idea, as a concrete thing. A common case of reification is the confusion of a model with reality: "the map is not the territory".
Reification is part of normal usage of natural language (just like metonymy for instance), as well as of literature, where a reified abstraction is intended as a figure of speech, and actually understood as such. But the use of reification in logical reasoning or rhetoric is misleading and usually regarded as a fallacy.[3] WikipediaΩ
I will indirectly challenge your reasoning for why the answer 'No' is incorrect by way of reductio ad absurdum.
In the case of the [Mafia] (as a collective entity, not as an individual). The answer is No, the purpose of the extortion is not malicious, and therefore not immoral.
"The purpose of the extortion is not malicious;" the purpose of the extortion is to gain operating funds for the entity doing the extorting.
Logically, Both are exactly the same. You will claim they are not. I'm sure the discussion will then focus on how the government (allegedly) gets a right to rule and control (that the mafia does not). So anticipating this direction I point out: There is no divine right of kings; there is no divine right of the collective; there is no divine right of the majority; there is no divine right of government.
Now I will challenge your use of the reified term 'government'. Government as a concept is no different than Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny. Government is not a collective entity. Government is a fictitious entity, an artificial person recognized by law. It is not human, it doesn't bleed, it doesn't die.
Government is merely men and women. This is an indisputable fact. This is proven by the simple fact that government can do nothing itself. It needs men and women to act for it. If every single man or woman that works for government in whatever capacity, be it an elected or appointed officer, agent, or employee went home on Friday and simply did not return to work Monday, their government would have ceased to exist that Friday.
The fact that government is merely a group of humans is a fact that proves that government is not some supernatural entity, demigod, or any other magical creature.
It is 'ASSUMED' that these mere humans have some sort of 'authority' over other humans because of their 'official' positions; because of their holding of some government office.
By 'authority' I specifically mean 'a right to govern'; 'a right to rule'; 'a right to control'.
The self-evident truth of all humans being created with equal rights means that all humans are created with an equal lack of ownership (and ownership rights) of other humans; all humans are created with an equal lack of rights to govern, rule, or control other humans that would be concurrent with ownership.
A simple and incontrovertible point of logic is one can not delegate (give away to another) an authority (a right to rule) one does not have. No human can give an authority (a right to rule), that they don't have, to any reified construct. I am assuming that you are going to deny this point. If so, I have a bunch of Socratic questions for you to drill down on why you don't agree.
Getting back to your claim... You assume the action of the collective is not malicious. The collective doesn't act. Individuals alleged to represent the collective do. By extension, you assume the action of the individual alleged to represent the collective is not acting malicious intent. Whether your assumption is correct or not is moot.
Contrary to your claim that absent malicious intent an action is not immoral: An act intentionally done, that causes harm, is immoral. Concurrent with the lack of rights to govern, rule, or control is the lack of a right to initiate harm.
➽ In a society, all concepts have 2 kinds of interpretation. The interpretation of the individual, and the interpretation of the group.
UNI-NOTWE is the logic error in your assumption. You and I are not we.
You and I would be a group of two. Absent my specific consent, you presume to speak for me when you presume to speak for this group. Likewise, if there are 8 others in the group that have not given you specific consent to speak for them, you presume to speak for 9 humans when you presume to speak for the group. This group interpretation you claim exists doesn't unless all 10 humans in the group interpret things exactly the same way. Which means absent that specific consent, you are presuming to interpret things for 9 humans.