Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Pug wrote:

Never quite understood inferior genes...are you saying why do we defend their right to live?
That is the point of the thread. What gives you the right to life? Everything else is a special case.

Pug wrote:

Point of view allows fuzzy math to a four year old, so their belief is justified.  To the teacher, not true.  If the four year old attempts to rebel, the teacher sends them to the principal.  Societal friction in action - the stronger system wins.  But, if the four year old believes it, it's true (to him)
Just because the four year old believes it does not mean the belief is justified.

If they misunderstand five for four that is one thing, there is solid justification with an error in terms. To pull a "belief" out of no where because the four year old wishes it to be so is no justification.
Marlo Stanfield
online poker tax cheating
+122|5448

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

What gives you the right to life?
As an Individual, I give myself the right to life as well as the right to deny said right to others as I please.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Marlo Stanfield wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

What gives you the right to life?
As an Individual, I give myself the right to life as well as the right to deny said right to others as I please.
An example of a point of view with no justification.
Marlo Stanfield
online poker tax cheating
+122|5448
It was a joke about objectivism...
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85
I caught it, I was amused, but I still couldn't pass up the chance to make a point to Pug.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6828|Texas - Bigger than France

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Pug wrote:

Never quite understood inferior genes...are you saying why do we defend their right to live?
That is the point of the thread. What gives you the right to life? Everything else is a special case.

Pug wrote:

Point of view allows fuzzy math to a four year old, so their belief is justified.  To the teacher, not true.  If the four year old attempts to rebel, the teacher sends them to the principal.  Societal friction in action - the stronger system wins.  But, if the four year old believes it, it's true (to him)
Just because the four year old believes it does not mean the belief is justified.

If they misunderstand five for four that is one thing, there is solid justification with an error in terms. To pull a "belief" out of no where because the four year old wishes it to be so is no justification.
Isn't the point of the thread about justifying an action in terms of whether someone has the right to life?

I'm saying feeling LIKE you are justified in enough of a justification, even if you are the only one who thinks you're right.  And of course, "error" is defined by your point of view.

As far as inferior genes, I'm assuming you mean...

...are you saying inferior genes makes your life worth less within a society, and therefore why do we defend them/let live, etc? 

Shall I point out folks with inferior genes that made society better to prove that in actuality they play a role?  Therefore, the role made be diminished in some way but there is still a role...and therefore society finds "use" from everything?  Or at least the hope for use?

Or maybe we are overthinking it a little too much:
https://site.despair.com/images/dpage/mistakes03.jpg

Funny, but true no?

And no re: Mairo's quote, "deny the right to others as I please".  Pleasing yourself would be a justification no?  So bad example actually.

Anything that you rationalize includes a justification.  The absence of rationale equates to instinct alone.  The examples you posted so far are not a reflex, but rationalizing between potential choices.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Pug wrote:

Isn't the point of the thread about justifying an action in terms of whether someone has the right to life?
Converse. The thread is about justifying whether someone has the right to life in terms of an action. Examining the logical conclusion of possible justifications to understand if that is truly the justification we use in the real world.

Pug wrote:

I'm saying feeling LIKE you are justified in enough of a justification, even if you are the only one who thinks you're right.  And of course, "error" is defined by your point of view.
It's enough for you but it's not a justification.

Since we're having so much issue with the word:

justification - a reason, fact, circumstance, or explanation that justifies or defends

Pug wrote:

As far as inferior genes, I'm assuming you mean...

...are you saying inferior genes makes your life worth less within a society, and therefore why do we defend them/let live, etc? 

Shall I point out folks with inferior genes that made society better to prove that in actuality they play a role?  Therefore, the role made be diminished in some way but there is still a role...and therefore society finds "use" from everything?  Or at least the hope for use?
If we justify the right to life by the sanctity of the species, then why do we permit such genetic phenomena. You only answer the challenge if you think the aforementioned reason is why we value life.

Pug wrote:

And no re: Mairo's quote, "deny the right to others as I please".  Pleasing yourself would be a justification no?  So bad example actually.

Anything that you rationalize includes a justification.  The absence of rationale equates to instinct alone.  The examples you posted so far are not a reflex, but rationalizing between potential choices.
It's only a justification if you give a reason for it. He gave no reason.

"Cheese is awesome" is only a point of view, it has no justification. "Cheese is awesome because I like to eat it" is a point of view and a justification.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6691|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:


Yeah but that implies that there is value to human life. If human life didn't have value, then we wouldn't be risking our reputation at all. No one would care.
It's mutual interest.  We each have a self-preservation interest, so we generally like to avoid war.  Avoiding war is easier if certain rules are set against murder and such.

Also, we do value life quite a bit when it's someone we know and love.  So I suppose that value in and of itself is one based almost purely on emotion.
So why do people fight and die for the right to life or even less, and why is it a crime to kill people that have nobody?
Some people place their own lives as being worth less than that of society's (or their family's), and it's a crime to kill those without families, because of the earlier point about self-preservation.  Allowing any form of murder must be done very carefully and with strict situational factors, so that the door isn't opened to just killing people for the hell of it.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:


It's mutual interest.  We each have a self-preservation interest, so we generally like to avoid war.  Avoiding war is easier if certain rules are set against murder and such.

Also, we do value life quite a bit when it's someone we know and love.  So I suppose that value in and of itself is one based almost purely on emotion.
So why do people fight and die for the right to life or even less, and why is it a crime to kill people that have nobody?
Some people place their own lives as being worth less than that of society's (or their family's), and it's a crime to kill those without families, because of the earlier point about self-preservation.  Allowing any form of murder must be done very carefully and with strict situational factors, so that the door isn't opened to just killing people for the hell of it.
Which point about self-preservation?
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6691|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:


So why do people fight and die for the right to life or even less, and why is it a crime to kill people that have nobody?
Some people place their own lives as being worth less than that of society's (or their family's), and it's a crime to kill those without families, because of the earlier point about self-preservation.  Allowing any form of murder must be done very carefully and with strict situational factors, so that the door isn't opened to just killing people for the hell of it.
Which point about self-preservation?
What I had said earlier is that people agree to a general right to life to justify laws to prevent them from killing each other.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:


Some people place their own lives as being worth less than that of society's (or their family's), and it's a crime to kill those without families, because of the earlier point about self-preservation.  Allowing any form of murder must be done very carefully and with strict situational factors, so that the door isn't opened to just killing people for the hell of it.
Which point about self-preservation?
What I had said earlier is that people agree to a general right to life to justify laws to prevent them from killing each other.
Yet many people are still willing to die in war?

I don't see how you can really say that people value society over themselves, but still maintain that there is really a "right" to life. Not only in the sense that society may dictate that someone should be killed for the overall good as in capital punishment.

It seems to me the right only holds so long as one serves the best interests of society. A very one-sided contract.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6828|Texas - Bigger than France

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Pug wrote:

Isn't the point of the thread about justifying an action in terms of whether someone has the right to life?
Converse. The thread is about justifying whether someone has the right to life in terms of an action. Examining the logical conclusion of possible justifications to understand if that is truly the justification we use in the real world.

Pug wrote:

I'm saying feeling LIKE you are justified in enough of a justification, even if you are the only one who thinks you're right.  And of course, "error" is defined by your point of view.
It's enough for you but it's not a justification.

Since we're having so much issue with the word:

justification - a reason, fact, circumstance, or explanation that justifies or defends
There's plenty of situations when people act on what they believe to be the truth, but are in fact totally in error.  At the exact moment when they decide to act upon that truth, it becomes the justification for their actions.  Now, afterwards, people might say you made the wrong decision because your judgement was incorrect...but you decide a course of action based on the information available, you ARE justified at the time you make your decision.  Armchair quarterbacking afterwards is bullshit.  Why?  Because more information is available, including the outcome of an incorrect action.  It doesn't mean at the time you made the decision it wasn't justified.  It just wasn't the correct choice.

What makes it correct?  Well depends on several factors, including want factors need to be fulfilled to be correct.  Meaning, everything within the process as well as the result will be tainted by differing opinions.

FM wrote:

Pug wrote:

As far as inferior genes, I'm assuming you mean...

...are you saying inferior genes makes your life worth less within a society, and therefore why do we defend them/let live, etc? 

Shall I point out folks with inferior genes that made society better to prove that in actuality they play a role?  Therefore, the role made be diminished in some way but there is still a role...and therefore society finds "use" from everything?  Or at least the hope for use?
If we justify the right to life by the sanctity of the species, then why do we permit such genetic phenomena. You only answer the challenge if you think the aforementioned reason is why we value life.
Well, you answered that within your own point.  IF we justify the right to life by the sanctity of the species, we have to include the entire species.  Meaning every individual's contribution is weighed, not just those who don't have a genetic "aberration".

You are implying that mutants are not part of society.  Stephen Hawking contributed a little, no?  So wouldn't that increase the chances of folks protecting the mutants?

I'm using "mutants" because I'm tired, had a beer or two, and am too lazy to think harder, so forgive me.

FM wrote:

Pug wrote:

And no re: Mairo's quote, "deny the right to others as I please".  Pleasing yourself would be a justification no?  So bad example actually.

Anything that you rationalize includes a justification.  The absence of rationale equates to instinct alone.  The examples you posted so far are not a reflex, but rationalizing between potential choices.
It's only a justification if you give a reason for it. He gave no reason.

"Cheese is awesome" is only a point of view, it has no justification. "Cheese is awesome because I like to eat it" is a point of view and a justification.
Mario did give a reason - pleasing himself.  I'm not sure how it pleases him, but it does...  You want him to be more specific.  Like the thrill, the power or whatever, again Master Yoda, I don't need to dig further than that.  You do.


You are arguing there is nothing that goes into deciding a course of action, well more specifically, you are saying actions themselves cannot be justified.  I find most actions come about because of logically choosing between alternatives.  Most specifically, inferring options from earlier experiences.  So when the decision is made, the PERSON feels they are justified in their action.  It doesn't matter AT THAT MOMENT whether it's correct or not, it's they've justified their own decision.

You act as though people are approaching every decision without any sort of clue what they've done in the past.

I'll give you a basic example: every day I wake up and I feel my stomach hurting.  I know it's because I'm hungry, because every day I've had that feeling.  I decide to get a biscuit.

Your logic is such that I would never recognize that I was hungry, like prior experience would have no bearing on how I would solve the problem of my stomach hurting.  But randomly I choose a biscuit and...holy shit what just happened...my stomach doesn't hurt anymore.  Well, until lunch...then I'll randomly select a hamburger.

It's not random, it's ingrained.  Why is it ingrained?  Because it's a learned behavior.

Same goes with your examples.  There's a "justification" for everything.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6828|Texas - Bigger than France

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Yet many people are still willing to die in war?

I don't see how you can really say that people value society over themselves, but still maintain that there is really a "right" to life. Not only in the sense that society may dictate that someone should be killed for the overall good as in capital punishment.

It seems to me the right only holds so long as one serves the best interests of society. A very one-sided contract.
Because what is implied but not stated, is that if your society does not exist, then you will not exist either.

Aka, if you do not defend, your society will be no more.

Therefore, it is self preservation.

Last edited by Pug (2010-04-10 19:24:38)

Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Pug wrote:

There's plenty of situations when people act on what they believe to be the truth, but are in fact totally in error.  At the exact moment when they decide to act upon that truth, it becomes the justification for their actions.  Now, afterwards, people might say you made the wrong decision because your judgement was incorrect...but you decide a course of action based on the information available, you ARE justified at the time you make your decision.  Armchair quarterbacking afterwards is bullshit.  Why?  Because more information is available, including the outcome of an incorrect action.  It doesn't mean at the time you made the decision it wasn't justified.  It just wasn't the correct choice.

What makes it correct?  Well depends on several factors, including want factors need to be fulfilled to be correct.  Meaning, everything within the process as well as the result will be tainted by differing opinions.
Yes, I know. I offered several justifications, many of which I strongly disagree with and could probably do a solid job of refuting. They are all justifications, I want people to pick one (or some) so we can talk about them. But I do need you to pick a justification, not a point of view, else we can't talk about the implications of the justification.

Pug wrote:

Well, you answered that within your own point.  IF we justify the right to life by the sanctity of the species, we have to include the entire species.  Meaning every individual's contribution is weighed, not just those who don't have a genetic "aberration".

You are implying that mutants are not part of society.  Stephen Hawking contributed a little, no?  So wouldn't that increase the chances of folks protecting the mutants?
"Sanctity of the species" meant essentially a clear gene pool. I used sanctity to an almost religious reverence to the human race, which would put a high value on ideal specimens. That is to say the right to life is justified by the maintenance of the human race - taken to it's extreme but logical conclusion, that includes making the best humans possible. No one person can contribute enough to outweigh their insidious genetic faults, considering the current size of the population.

Really considering the size of the population it seems a bit ridiculous to say the right to life is currently justified by the necessity of every person to our overall existence. Perhaps at some point in time that might have been an extremely valid justification, but not at this point in time. Our numbers make us very expendable in this sense.

Pug wrote:

Mario did give a reason - pleasing himself.  I'm not sure how it pleases him, but it does...  You want him to be more specific.  Like the thrill, the power or whatever, again Master Yoda, I don't need to dig further than that.  You do.

You are arguing there is nothing that goes into deciding a course of action, well more specifically, you are saying actions themselves cannot be justified.  I find most actions come about because of logically choosing between alternatives.  Most specifically, inferring options from earlier experiences.  So when the decision is made, the PERSON feels they are justified in their action.  It doesn't matter AT THAT MOMENT whether it's correct or not, it's they've justified their own decision.

You act as though people are approaching every decision without any sort of clue what they've done in the past.

I'll give you a basic example: every day I wake up and I feel my stomach hurting.  I know it's because I'm hungry, because every day I've had that feeling.  I decide to get a biscuit.

Your logic is such that I would never recognize that I was hungry, like prior experience would have no bearing on how I would solve the problem of my stomach hurting.  But randomly I choose a biscuit and...holy shit what just happened...my stomach doesn't hurt anymore.  Well, until lunch...then I'll randomly select a hamburger.

It's not random, it's ingrained.  Why is it ingrained?  Because it's a learned behavior.

Same goes with your examples.  There's a "justification" for everything.
This is not at all what I'm saying...there is a justification for everything but it is often not stated and very rarely obvious except in the most trivial of cases.

Obviously instinct directs most of our decision making, and the justification for our most basic natural actions are clear. I take a piss because my bladder is full, if I don't piss when my bladder is full then it bursts and I die. That is what your hunger example resembles.

To justify a more complex decision however requires a defense of the reason. People do stupid things all the time with no justification. For a complex action to have a justification it must be preceded by rational thought, not any random string of mental images strung together. Our animal mind justifies all the easy stuff for us. It is very easy to make simple decisions in abstract situations that have no justification.

Ask the four year old what 206/8 is. He'll probably pick 6, because that's his favorite number. He picked a number, but there was no reason for picking that number. Saying that because 6 is his favorite number is a reason is ridiculous.

Pug wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Yet many people are still willing to die in war?

I don't see how you can really say that people value society over themselves, but still maintain that there is really a "right" to life. Not only in the sense that society may dictate that someone should be killed for the overall good as in capital punishment.

It seems to me the right only holds so long as one serves the best interests of society. A very one-sided contract.
Because what is implied but not stated, is that if your society does not exist, then you will not exist either.

Aka, if you do not defend, your society will be no more.

Therefore, it is self preservation.
Not true. Society crumbling means the death of society, not of self. Anarchy is a valid state of being, particularly considering that essentially all other societies would crumble for the same reason yours did. If for whatever reason right to life was deemed obsolete, either there was a very stupid generation or there was some revelation that should be equally applicable across all societies, as we are not all that different. Self-preservation is not the only and really not even the main reason for social contract, that's why posing the question about right to life and social contract in the first place is (I think) interesting.

The purpose of social contract is to defend your possessions. It's not hard to subsist in anarchy, but it is difficult to build wealth. If you band together to protect wealth then of course involved in that is the protection of life - it makes no sense to say you can't take someone's stuff unless you kill him, then you can loot his house. Perhaps that is the root cause for the right to life - protection of private property. Of course that is irrelevant in political theories that hold no private property, and certainly turns a lot of anti-materialism thinking on its head. Your life is valuable because you own objects of value.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6828|Texas - Bigger than France
ok, i think you're digging too deep, but i'll attempt to address some of those questions within those rules
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6691|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:


Which point about self-preservation?
What I had said earlier is that people agree to a general right to life to justify laws to prevent them from killing each other.
Yet many people are still willing to die in war?

I don't see how you can really say that people value society over themselves, but still maintain that there is really a "right" to life. Not only in the sense that society may dictate that someone should be killed for the overall good as in capital punishment.

It seems to me the right only holds so long as one serves the best interests of society. A very one-sided contract.
Well, in practice, that's kind of how it works in reality.  Some societies are more that way than others, but the general principle is the same.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85
I wonder how a lot of people would feel if the terms of the contract were made explicitly clear.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6691|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I wonder how a lot of people would feel if the terms of the contract were made explicitly clear.
True, it would understandably make some people paranoid...

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