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Author Topic: Has the 'Bitcoin Experiment' changed your political or economic views at all?  (Read 13766 times)
cunicula
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December 11, 2012, 07:35:25 PM
 #141

I regard anyone who would presume to decide for others what is moral and immoral as a theologian.
Did you mean to say "philosopher" or are you saying there can be no morality without religion?
Yes to no objective morality without religion.
Stefan Molyneux would like to have a word with you.
I would not like to have a word with him. He is a piece of shit. Dostoyevsky would like to have a word with you.
If you reject a philosophy simply because it disagrees with your beliefs, and not based on its merits, How does that make you better than a theologian?
I don't think it has any merits other than those accorded to it by my feelings. I don't see how it could.

I recognize and accept that your feelings about morality may differ. That makes me better than a theologian.
myrkul
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December 11, 2012, 08:19:35 PM
 #142

I regard anyone who would presume to decide for others what is moral and immoral as a theologian.
Did you mean to say "philosopher" or are you saying there can be no morality without religion?
Yes to no objective morality without religion.
Stefan Molyneux would like to have a word with you.
I would not like to have a word with him. He is a piece of shit. Dostoyevsky would like to have a word with you.
If you reject a philosophy simply because it disagrees with your beliefs, and not based on its merits, How does that make you better than a theologian?
I don't think it has any merits other than those accorded to it by my feelings. I don't see how it could.
Your logical fallacy is...

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Rudd-O
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December 11, 2012, 08:57:42 PM
 #143

It has confirmed to me that humans don't need governments any more. The internet allows the collaboration of private individuals across all segments of society, geography, nationality, who can successfully work together to solve massive and complex problems. Linux is the huge example where private individuals developed massively robust software in a collective manner. A human is a human, the internet is a "nation" of humans. Open Source, Wikipedia, bitcoin, these are the beginnings.

Well said.
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December 11, 2012, 08:58:38 PM
 #144

I regard anyone who would presume to decide for others what is moral and immoral as a theologian.
Did you mean to say "philosopher" or are you saying there can be no morality without religion?
Yes to no objective morality without religion.
Stefan Molyneux would like to have a word with you.

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.
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December 11, 2012, 09:02:51 PM
 #145

I regard anyone who would presume to decide for others what is moral and immoral as a theologian.
Did you mean to say "philosopher" or are you saying there can be no morality without religion?
Yes to no objective morality without religion.
Stefan Molyneux would like to have a word with you.
I would not like to have a word with him. He is a piece of shit. Dostoyevsky would like to have a word with you.
If you reject a philosophy simply because it disagrees with your beliefs, and not based on its merits, How does that make you better than a theologian?

cunticula IS a theologian (of the statist variety), who just happens to like yelling "theoogians!" to anyone who doesn't share his own theology.  It's entirely unsurprising that he would attack Stef -- Stef has made a number of arguments that essentially prove cunticula is a sociopath.  He can't actually respond to the arguments, so he switches to personal attacks.  That's what a sociopath would do, to avoid being unmasked.
johnyj
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December 14, 2012, 11:39:50 PM
 #146

This could be the most dangerous experiment in human history, maybe human itself will be destroyed by this experiment

There have been many bubbles in human history, but with any other bubbles, central bank can always reduce the money supply to cool down the crazyness (and crash will become unavoidable). This bubble however, could develop itself into a blackhole and suck all the values in the world into it, and no one in the world can control this monster

With traditional bubbles, when most of the people have get hold of the inflated asset, the game is almost over. There is an exist for any kind of investment strategy. But for a currency, no one will get satisfied, everyone want a little bit more, the investment is endless

myrkul
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December 14, 2012, 11:44:39 PM
 #147

This could be the most dangerous experiment in human history, maybe human itself will be destroyed by this experiment

LOLWUT?

Yup. Cryptocurrency is the end foretold by the Mayan prophecies.

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rebuilder
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December 14, 2012, 11:58:42 PM
 #148

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.

I'd argue there's a bias towards equating "morality" with "good". I, too, can't see any way to have morality without a supreme authority. This doesn't mean there's no right and wrong, the responsibility for deciding what is what is simply left to the individual.

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myrkul
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December 15, 2012, 12:27:53 AM
 #149

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.

I'd argue there's a bias towards equating "morality" with "good". I, too, can't see any way to have morality without a supreme authority. This doesn't mean there's no right and wrong, the responsibility for deciding what is what is simply left to the individual.

Not necessarily. It's perfectly possible to live morally without asking yourself, "Would God want me to do this to them?" All you have to do is change that question to "Would I want them to do this to me?" If the answer is no, don't do it.

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johnyj
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December 15, 2012, 01:58:36 AM
 #150

I remember watching a russia film <pyramid> a while ago, people exchange everything they have to get a special kind of bond since the return is doubled every week or two

lonelyminer (Peter Šurda)
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December 15, 2012, 08:11:41 PM
 #151

Hmmm... value-free huh? Well that would be an improvement, but I am not sure that most Austrians would agree with you.
You just confirm how clueless you are about Austrian Economics.
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December 16, 2012, 02:49:55 AM
 #152

Gold won't develop into such a bubble, since people can not easily exchange anything with gold (they have to identify the quality of the gold bar they get, they have to physically transfer the metal etc...), they can only use money to inflate the gold price, and the money supply is controlled by central bank


cunicula
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December 16, 2012, 02:57:11 AM
 #153

You just confirm how clueless you are about Austrian Economics.

You failed to explain how the quote below is 'value-free'? Does anyone else think this quote is 'value-free'? Or is this quote a misrepresentation of Austrian economics? 
Austrian’s core is two-fold; it is based upon a set of philosophical axioms that don’t need to be empirically tested. (By definition you don’t need to test a philosophical axiom!)  The heart of the Austrian’s philosophy is that humans should enter in voluntary relationships; that the institutionalisation of aggressive violence is always bad; no-matter the said ‘productive’ outcomes of such a policy.  It is not a question if a society would be more or less economically efficient with such policies.  All policies that require aggressive violence are not even considered as available (said moral) options.
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December 16, 2012, 05:12:35 AM
 #154

Gold won't develop into such a bubble, since people can not easily exchange anything with gold (they have to identify the quality of the gold bar they get, they have to physically transfer the metal etc...), they can only use money to inflate the gold price, and the money supply is controlled by central bank

Heat about the slew of gold-backed securities? Can't they turn into a bubble?
lonelyminer (Peter Šurda)
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December 16, 2012, 01:17:09 PM
 #155

You failed to explain how the quote below is 'value-free'?
Why should I address what da2ce7 says? I don't know who (s)he is or if (s)he published anything. But based on a first look, the post just seems like several things mixed together.

I recommend you check out the wiki entries on Praxeology and Catallactics. Austrians adhere to the subjective theory of value and reject interpersonal utility comparison.
coder_guy
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December 17, 2012, 04:52:37 AM
 #156

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.

I'd argue there's a bias towards equating "morality" with "good". I, too, can't see any way to have morality without a supreme authority. This doesn't mean there's no right and wrong, the responsibility for deciding what is what is simply left to the individual.

Not necessarily. It's perfectly possible to live morally without asking yourself, "Would God want me to do this to them?" All you have to do is change that question to "Would I want them to do this to me?" If the answer is no, don't do it.

-> I want to rape girl.
-> Would I want them to do this to me?
-> Yup.

k.

(Just for the sake of argument).
myrkul
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December 17, 2012, 04:59:18 AM
 #157

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.

I'd argue there's a bias towards equating "morality" with "good". I, too, can't see any way to have morality without a supreme authority. This doesn't mean there's no right and wrong, the responsibility for deciding what is what is simply left to the individual.

Not necessarily. It's perfectly possible to live morally without asking yourself, "Would God want me to do this to them?" All you have to do is change that question to "Would I want them to do this to me?" If the answer is no, don't do it.

-> I want to rape girl.
-> Would I want them to do this to me?
-> Yup.

k.

(Just for the sake of argument).
You enjoy being forcibly penetrated?

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coder_guy
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December 17, 2012, 05:16:33 AM
 #158

Your view of morality didn't state anything about girls randomly growing those things.

Anyway, hey, I'm sure that's some guy's fetish.
foggyb
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December 17, 2012, 05:53:58 AM
 #159

Very true.  In fact, religious morality is the exact opposite of objective -- it is arbitrary, full of magical exceptions, and not based at all on relevant material fact.  Once again, cunticula has it exactly the other way around.  Does not surprise me.

I'd argue there's a bias towards equating "morality" with "good". I, too, can't see any way to have morality without a supreme authority. This doesn't mean there's no right and wrong, the responsibility for deciding what is what is simply left to the individual.

Not necessarily. It's perfectly possible to live morally without asking yourself, "Would God want me to do this to them?" All you have to do is change that question to "Would I want them to do this to me?" If the answer is no, don't do it.

No myrkul. The question is to ask is, "Would I be capable of rational thought without a supreme creator enabling my ability to do so?".

Your question is illogical. God (if you believe he exists or not) cannot be God if you are able to act independently of him. A "one true supreme creator" isn't something we could label and put in a box. Is he all-supreme or not? If not, then he isn't God.

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myrkul
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December 17, 2012, 05:55:29 AM
 #160

Your view of morality didn't state anything about girls randomly growing those things.
I didn't say she'd use a penis.
Safe for Work
NSFW (Don't say you weren't warned)

You, however, did say you would like to forcibly penetrate her.
You further said:
-> Would I want them to do this to me?
-> Yup.

Therefore, you stated that you would like to be forcibly penetrated. If this is not so, then you might want to retract your statement.

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