Black Rose
An unbreakable bond
Hey, this is an INTP forum. The Philosophy forum shouldn't be so lifeless.
why is life so important, does it not presume that affirmation of life is strength of will?
Hey, this is an INTP forum. The Philosophy forum shouldn't be so lifeless.
That may be the case if the argument had an alternative premise upon which it could succeed; however, its sole thrust was the fallacy and thus it was entirely unmeritorious.
This is not proven and indeed cannot be the case as the argument has clearly not ended since neither person has conceded. Thus, this is unsound.
Your rejection of the philosophy espoused in the OP does not necessarily make you stronger according to that philosophy.
What do you care for meritocracy?
There is no way that saying that your argument was unmeritorious was a "concession". This is a ridiculous use of langauge as it flies in the face of what the word "concession" means. Obviously, if I say that your argument is false, I have not conceded anything.Your concession that my argument was unmeritorious means that it is to be held above your superior argument, according to your philosophy of failure.
If you simply think your argument is superior, it also means you believe your argument must fail. The fact that you continue to argue means you believe you must fail.
Do not tell me you cannot see the inherent paradox and self destructiveness of your philosophy.
It does not, and I have not said this. Allow me to clarify.
In the eventually that my argument against your philosophy is stronger then your own, my rejection of your philosophy frees me from the burden of believing that my argument must fail.
Thus, I have shown in both outcomes, your argument being stronger or my argument being stronger that your philosophy will fail.
This goes beyond arguments. I have shown that no matter what arguments are made, your philosophy fails.
why is life so important, does it not presume that affirmation of life is strength of will?
There was no mention of meritocracy. How is this in the least bit relevant?
Unless you mean that there is some ostensible (albeit very tenuous) link to meritocracy since it shares the same root word as unmeritorious, which is just a completely spurious claim.
There is no way that saying that your argument was unmeritorious was a "concession". This is a ridiculous use of langauge as it flies in the face of what the word "concession" means. Obviously, if I say that your argument is false, I have not conceded anything.
The OP was about persons, and in relation to persons, wealth, social status and intelligence. There was nothing in it which claimed that unmeritorious arguments are superior to ones which make sense. Clearly, this is a straw-man argument. If you were to extend the concept of persons to other sentient or even merely living beings, that might be sensible. A person cannot be either "true" or "false", unlike an argument.
I have already mentioned that this manner of organising society is simply mimicking what happens in nature, writ large. I have mentioned biology. In physics, there is the concept of damping. When something goes to excess, it is brought low until the oscillation reaches the equilibrium position. In chemistry there is the concept of a dynamic equilibrium when a reaction is reversible. Applied to society this means that when the numbers and power of the strong are excessive society will benefit if they curb themselves by becoming weak. You can disagree with that but your bare assertion that it is a "philosophy of failure", sans evidence, is no stronger than my assertion that it is practicable.
If this thread can cause INTPs to re-examine why this idea is so repugnant to them (and it is clearly an emotional and not merely a logical response, with name calling, fierce denunciations etc.), at least it is something which makes people think.
You don't deserve shit.
If you are willing to doom a successful person to failure, dooming a successful argument to failure is simply a matter of consistency.
Then you are being inconsistent.
Arguments cannot be viewed in a vacuum, because they cannot exist independent of persons.
Argumentation is also a faculty of intelligence. The economic worth and therefore social status of certain people, lawyers and salesmen for instance, are based solely on their persuasive ability.
Your distinction is an arbitrary one.
If you fail a person based on his merit, then it means you despise merit. However, it seems that your own merit is exempt.
It was not an observation as I was arguing about how things ought to be able to be and not how things are.This is meaningless.
Your observation that meritocracy is similar in some ways to evolution has no bearing on its value.
Perhaps you should be taking theoretical propositions discussed on an Internet forum less personally.It is repugnant to me personally because I work very hard at what I do, and you are saying that anyone who simply lays around and gives up is deserving of more.
Anyone with a job who expects better pay for better work would find it repugnant.
From a fellow NF? Ouch. Nonetheless, I believe you deserve a good life too.I just think the OP deserves a good life regardless of his idiotic worldview and counterproductive actions.
I hate any thought of the strong flourishing. Of the capable dominating society.
Of anyone being better or deserving of more rights by virtue of being more intelligent, more confident, more whatever.
Not for a moment would I believe in equality. All of us are unequal. And that is why power is wasted on the strong.
For there is none that is so in need of power, not for controlling others but merely for their own protection, as the weak. It is the weak, the infirm, the stupid, the outcast, the ones spurned by a cruel and unforgiving society that deserve power most of all, because everyone else can do with less of it and survive.
And I am weak. Yes, this is slave morality according to Nietzsche and I am proud of it. What does it matter, that I am weak? It matters a great deal, for I am deserving, all the more, of the protection of the strong.
That if heaven sees fit to give them more, they are behaving unjustly if they do not use their power, or intellect, or strength, or whatever it is they have, for the benefit of others.
I want the weak to succeed. I want the strong to fail. I envision a society where the rich give way to the poor and the holders of power are truly the servants of the man in the street. Where a beggar, as of right, is of higher status than a head of state, and where the rich give away so much of their money to gain status by becoming poor that there is no need for taxation.
I made no claim that arguments advanced by more wealthy/socially respected/intelligent lawyers and salesmen (to use your example) should "fail" in favour of those advanced by poorer/socially disdained/stupider lawyers and salesmen.
I want the weak to succeed. I want the strong to fail. I envision a society where the rich give way to the poor and the holders of power are truly the servants of the man in the street. Where a beggar, as of right, is of higher status than a head of state, and where the rich give away so much of their money to gain status by becoming poor that there is no need for taxation.
It was not an observation as I was arguing about how things ought to be able to be and not how things are.
There was no mention made of meritocracy. That you have made continuous mention of this despite the fact that this thread is not about meritocracy (there are others which are) suggests that you are not being willing to consider the merits of a theory without filtering it through your own lens, which apparently warps every other moral theory/proposition into an argument about meritocracy.
Perhaps you should be taking theoretical propositions discussed on an Internet forum less personally.
If this thread can cause INTPs to re-examine why this idea is so repugnant to them, at least it is something which makes people think.
I don't understand how it follows that if we are unequal, then power is wasted on the strong.
All I get from the OP is that he wants the weak to succeed and the strong to fail. Only problem is then the strong become weak and vice versa and voilá recursion!
I also don't get why the weak should succeed? They aren't better or worse people, they are just weaker.
Let's not get bogged down in pesky details like this. Everyone clearly has an intuitive understanding of it.I'm interested in what you mean by power.
Why, from the strong themselves of course.Protection from who or what?
This is actually recognised as a problem by the WIPO, which is why compulsory licences for medical patents can be granted to developing countries (which I believe is right).Using it for innovation does benefit others. Nobody has a right to the creations of other people.
Individuals have self possession. If this is what you want, then lead by example.
This is a contradiction. You have to clarify.
You indirectly mention meritocracy because your philosophy is the polar opposite of meritocracy, so my usage of meritocracy is simply syntactic sugar.
I am just doing what you wanted. I cannot speak for others, so I simply use my own experience.
You also have not addressed that under your policies, failure is rewarded, leading to self destruction.
Indeed, and I think that fear of failure is a serious problem, it seems we increasingly live in a society that idolises the talented, the gifted, the flawless, and treats failure as a lasting taint to be avoided at all costs. So people don't try, they resign themselves to the safety of mediocrity and follow the path laid out for them, blaming their lack of success on not being innately predisposed to succeed.
Romans 14:14-16
I am convinced, being fully persuaded in the Lord Jesus, that nothing is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for that person it is unclean. 15 If your brother or sister is distressed because of what you eat, you are no longer acting in love. Do not by your eating destroy someone for whom Christ died. 16 Therefore do not let what you know is good be spoken of as evil.
Anything which is a living and not a dying body... will have to be an incarnate will to power, it will strive to grow, spread, seize, become predominant - not from any morality or immorality but because it is living and because life simply is will to power... 'Exploitation'... belongs to the essence of what lives, as a basic organic function; it is a consequence of the will to power, which is after all the will to life.
from Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil, s.259, Walter Kaufmann transl.
"I want the strong to fail" is not the equivalent of "I want arguments advanced by a person who is strong to fail". This is a question of identity - it is not the same entity which is identified.
As explained, an argument has a truth value independent of the person advancing it.
In any case, you have quoted the rest of the paragraph and I believe you understand what "I want the strong to fail" meant in that context.
It is no more against meritocracy than it is against any other philosophy which does not favour or at least protect persons who are weaker. This includes feudalism, democracy (if it degenerates into mob rule), communism (because it also advocates not for the weak to take over the means of production but for the strong to engineer their own failure as a class), and most forms of anarchy and libertarianism as well.
One may or may not have gained wealth and/or social status by merit. Intelligence is certainly at least partially unmerited since it is at least partially heriditary. Regardless, the philosophy in the OP does not distinguish whether you have gained your power by merit or by other means.
It is not failure which is rewarded but weakness, otherwise a statement such as "I want the weak to succeed" would not make sense.
Regardless, rewarding failure (perhaps by commending failure) or at least not condemning failure may also benefit society (never mind that Cognisant was agreeing with a post by Proxy against the OP):
I will address this point with an illustration as it has also been raised by Oblivious, although I have already stated that this is a fallacy.
Yeah. I did say this philosophy isn't entirely new. It's at least as old as Jesus Christ."It takes strength to resist the dark side. Only the weak embrace it!"
"It is more powerful than you know."
"And those who oppose it are more powerful than you'll ever be!"
―Obi-Wan Kenobi and Darth Maul
A Jedi must protect the weak and defenseless from evil.
Walfin. It would be much better if you simply started a thread on:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state
Rather then this philosophy you got here. This is exactly what you want, but then you unintentionally make all these inflammatory statements that will send even peace loving libertarians into a blood lust.
You dangled a bloody lamb in front of wolves, Walfin. With all due respect, you got what you deserved in this thread. I would suggest reading up on the issues surrounding welfare societies. You need to do this.
You should refrain from making statements like that; they are inflammatory. Likewise, I apologize if I have appeared too judgmental.
I just could not really draw the link between paying tons of taxes and failing. Those seem different things to me. A person who pays tons of taxes cannot be said to fail although he could be said to be robbed.
The opening statement is unhelpful and simply misleading.
I fully agree. Well, maybe if I pay a high enough price some libertarians might, believers in the unfettered free market that they are.Trust me on this. There is no libertarian living or dead who will endorse your OP.
Hah. I did not peg you for a believer in eugenics.
I've always believed talent only helps for the first few steps. Everything else is nothing but hard work and perseverance. Making hard work look easy is also a useful skill.
How would you differentiate weakness and people who simply wish to 'Play' the game and get the most out of the system for the least amount of work?
Would you really put a quadriplegic blind deaf mute on the land's proverbial throne? Why would you put such a person on a pedestal? Would they want that?
"Oh look at him! He's a good for nothing! Excellent show!"
Nope
Have you ever seen a government policy along the lines of:
Homeless people will be shot.
Students getting a D will be flogged.
Jobless people will be sentenced to community service.
No one condemns failure as a policy, except maybe the military. The person in question has already failed no need to rub it in.
It doesn't matter if it's a fallacy; I thought we cleared that up. The issue here is that your policies just seem self serving.
Like a pedophile who argues that the age of consent should be lowered to five. Would you honestly take any arguments made by the pedophile seriously?
Yes, an extreme example, but you get the point. Discussion should be objective, but it does not mean you should make it harder for people to be objective.
I'm interested in what you mean by power. I don't think strength, intelligence, beauty, etc can be given to anyone. So, I assume you mean power as in money and/or influence? Wouldn't money naturally go where it is most needed if left unhampered? Those who do the most good for society (including the weak) are the ones who will be rewarded with money. And as far as influence, I don't think the powerful nor the weak should have any, except the influence of their own innovations, which benefit everyone in a free market.
Let's not get bogged down in pesky details like this. Everyone clearly has an intuitive understanding of it.![]()
"It takes strength to resist the dark side. Only the weak embrace it!"
"It is more powerful than you know."
"And those who oppose it are more powerful than you'll ever be!"
―Obi-Wan Kenobi and Darth Maul
A Jedi must protect the weak and defenseless from evil.
Yeah. I did say this philosophy isn't entirely new. It's at least as old as Jesus Christ.
Oh. Right. Damn. I feel kinda stupid.Went right over your head. See how Kitty went to the trouble of highlighting those words? See how if you take the aggregate meaning, you get the Jedi defending the Sith from evil?
There is a saying that says the powerful man will lick the beggars toes clean if the beggar is blind.
This means that there is a core of goodness in man, and with effort it can usually be dug up. And the powerful will be servants. The more powerful, the stronger the need to serve, in general. Just don't be canon fodder or something similar. In that case I believe it is preferable to be served.
But would a quadriplegic blind deaf mute necessarily not want to be head of state?
This means that there is a core of goodness in man, and with effort it can usually be dug up. And the powerful will be servants. The more powerful, the stronger the need to serve, in general. Just don't be canon fodder or something similar. In that case I believe it is preferable to be served.
Great thread and discussion, I found it very interesting. I believe the OP could've saved a lot of time and avoided being bashed if you'd bothered to fully explain you philosophy as far as you'd thought. This was probably minor trolling on your part, by intentionally keeping back the cards on your hands, so you were almost asking for a bashing.
I don't see any major holes in your vision of society so far, of coarse only in theory, but how would it fuel progress? what would be the drive behind it's progression? i.e. competition in capitalism. I don't understand how just by having power people would feel or be compelled to succeed thereby gaining power and becoming strong.
You're quite right; insofar as Christianity has stood for social justice it has not quite succeeded in creating this sort of state.The implementation is close to impossible though. It would require society to have a collective conscious and to reverse it's views about what is important/worth striving for.
Wouldn't having a vegetable (sorry if the description is offensive) as the head of state effectively turn the state into a big structured veg?
I'm not sure, everybody feels guilty for not helping the weak, I'd say, but everyone loves backing a winner.This reminded me of the bystander effect. I wonder if, in addition to people being more likely to help those in need when they are in smaller numbers, and feel more responsible, there is a correlation between how powerful an individual is and how responsible they feel to help those in need.