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The Mill Limit... The Apex of Liberty
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AFAIK, the "apex" of liberty is anarchy.(\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
(='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
(")_(") "Starting the fire from within."
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any chance of a summary"The Christian way has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found to be hard and left untried" - GK Chesterton.
"The most obvious predicition about the future is that it will be mostly like the past" - Alain de Botton
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C0ckney: You have the right to do anything you want, except impede the rights of another to do the same. That is the Mill Limit.
Anarchy in the true sense, yes that is, but that is also a Mill Limit society
Anarchy in the traditional sense (no order) is not, because though it grants more rights, those rights are only to impede those of another. The net liberty decreases, so the idea of total rights being total liberty is something of a fallacy."I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
"You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:
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Anarchy, as defined by the authors of the concept, is precisely a society based solely on the Mill Limit concept. Any other defition of Anarchy ("Common Sense... :P")would be incorrect
I do have a problem with the capitalism clause in your document, but you are probably at least mostly correct... In my opinion, private property in a Mill Limit society would be limited to those things which are immidiately useful to a person (even if useful means me old teddy bear that I have an emotional bond to...). You can't have an emotional bond or any immidiate use for a corporation share, for example.
Also, I don't see how governments can possibly not breach the Mill Limit. The article seemed to me unclear on this point. When one person can breach the free will of another in even the least arbitrary fashion (which governments are bound to do by definition) they violate that person's Mill Limit.
But generally, grand articleBrought to you by Firelad, AKA King of the Fairies
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I'd argue the distinction between "influence" and "impedance" isn't scientifically or ontologically respectable. It's a fiction that developed, along with that of "free will" and responsibility as a useful social tool. In short these are arbitrary divisions of causes into classes for reasons that may (or may not) serve our own or the general welfare. Trying to build a theory on them, as if they were physical or metaphysical facts seems a bit odd to me.
The problem with all forms of libertarianism is that there isn't any such thing as liberty. It's a moral fiction.Only feebs vote.
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Firelad: Wouldn't Anarchy involve having no government (or at least, not a government as we would see it). The Mill Limit would still make some things illegal, things that break the Mill Limit. Whereas wouldn't anarchy be a lack of laws too? I could be wrong in that, in which case it could be a ML society.
MRT: Yes, it's a pipe dream, but it is possible for a society more educationally advanced than ours, in the sense that it would have to be a society that listens to reason, and is logical. Thus it wouldn't work if you were to impliment it today.
Edit: Elijah is a friend of mine, and I helped a little on the essay, so that's why it might seem like I'm answering for him, in some sense.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
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Mill's principle is roughly, "we ought to be able to do what we like, as long as it doesn't harm others."
The problem is that what counts as harm is left underdetermined, so that it's possible to have a fairly totalitarian system on these grounds.Only feebs vote.
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It is, which is why elijah took it further. I am undecided, but that is why he broke it down into impedance and influence. Direct impedance breaks the Mill Limit, influence does not. This leads to some problems, IMHO, such as harassment and verbal abuse, which would be legal, but that's a matter of opinion. Calling it the 'Mill Limit' is mostly true, it came from his ideas (why oh why did I buy him that ) but it is not strictly limited to that.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
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You state that: “In a totalitarian state, the people are oppressed and subjugated…” true enough, but a totalitarian dictatorship personifies the extremes of dictatorial governments. Democracy does not necessarily constitute liberty, similarly so despotism does not necessarily constitute a lack thereof.
Humanity is a diverse force, and yet this diversity is cut short by a state that has breached the Mill limit. This reduces people to the status of "workers" in every sense of the word, but mainly as small cogs in very large machine.
Please provide some evidence that a state which breaches the Mill limit reduces the status of humans to mere ‘workers in every sense of the word’.
Thus it follows that innovation is practically non-existent, which damages the economy.
Thus it follows? I hardly think so. You have no established that states which limit freedoms and liberties in any way reduce the diversity of people, nor does it necessarily follow innovation would be practically non-existent in such a state. Let us for the sake of argument consider a meritocratic authoritarian state where only those deemed the most qualified rule; in such as society you would have great progress given that persons of talent would be encouraged to excel, and would also be given the rule of such a society. Thus in a meritocratic authoritarian state you have progress and innovation without liberty for the masses. As for lack of progress and innovation damaging an economy I cannot comment on it given that I lack knowledge in such areas; though I suspect your assumptions do have some merit. Nevertheless you have not established that there would be a lack of progress in all societies that breach the Mill limit; you’re jumping ahead of yourself.
This oppression, and poor economy will put the state on a very unstable platform, as a frustrated population is more likely to rise up and fight for themselves.
Actually history shows that the worse the people tend to be off, the less likely the chances of rebellion become. Consider for a moment the fact that if you do not have enough food to put on the table, your first concerns would be to live, liberty would not be on the forefront of your mind. This assertion also has support form historical events, take into consideration the fact that most revolutions in the past (i.e. French Revolution, Communist Revolution, etc.) occurred after the conditions of the people improved. In the case of the French Revolution specifically, the quality of life and standard of living of most of the lower classes had been rising steadily for decades prior to the revolution; the revolution also created the new bourgeois class of wealthy capitalists. Simply put the worse people are off the less likely they will rebel, and the less likely their rebellion would be effective.
I will respond to the rest of the essay when I have the time, for now I must leave.You can only curse me to eternal damnation for so long!
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Originally posted by Voltaire
You state that: “In a totalitarian state, the people are oppressed and subjugated…” true enough, but a totalitarian dictatorship personifies the extremes of dictatorial governments. Democracy does not necessarily constitute liberty, similarly so despotism does not necessarily constitute a lack thereof.
Originally posted by Voltaire
Humanity is a diverse force, and yet this diversity is cut short by a state that has breached the Mill limit. This reduces people to the status of "workers" in every sense of the word, but mainly as small cogs in very large machine.
Please provide some evidence that a state which breaches the Mill limit reduces the status of humans to mere ‘workers in every sense of the word’.
Originally posted by Voltaire
Thus it follows that innovation is practically non-existent, which damages the economy.
Thus it follows? I hardly think so. You have no established that states which limit freedoms and liberties in any way reduce the diversity of people, nor does it necessarily follow innovation would be practically non-existent in such a state. Let us for the sake of argument consider a meritocratic authoritarian state where only those deemed the most qualified rule; in such as society you would have great progress given that persons of talent would be encouraged to excel, and would also be given the rule of such a society. Thus in a meritocratic authoritarian state you have progress and innovation without liberty for the masses. As for lack of progress and innovation damaging an economy I cannot comment on it given that I lack knowledge in such areas; though I suspect your assumptions do have some merit. Nevertheless you have not established that there would be a lack of progress in all societies that breach the Mill limit; you’re jumping ahead of yourself.
Originally posted by Voltaire
This oppression, and poor economy will put the state on a very unstable platform, as a frustrated population is more likely to rise up and fight for themselves.
Actually history shows that the worse the people tend to be off, the less likely the chances of rebellion become. Consider for a moment the fact that if you do not have enough food to put on the table, your first concerns would be to live, liberty would not be on the forefront of your mind. This assertion also has support form historical events, take into consideration the fact that most revolutions in the past (i.e. French Revolution, Communist Revolution, etc.) occurred after the conditions of the people improved. In the case of the French Revolution specifically, the quality of life and standard of living of most of the lower classes had been rising steadily for decades prior to the revolution; the revolution also created the new bourgeois class of wealthy capitalists. Simply put the worse people are off the less likely they will rebel, and the less likely their rebellion would be effective.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
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...what Drogue said . jk, I do actually know what I'm talking about (so they tell me).
Most of the issues here are down to misinterpretations, however it is my fault if I, as the author am the only one who sees that. I will clear up the ambiguities and broken reasoning, the article I posted up was very preliminary, I had only just completed it, so I need to clearify and rewrite much of it. Thanks for the pointers!
I intend the essay to form a part of a larger text, and if I was a software engineer, I would call this "beta testing", ironing out the bugs in my argument.
The Mill Limit still holds, however, my grammar does not!
Two very good points I must answer are from Agathon:
"The problem is that what counts as harm is left underdetermined, so that it's possible to have a fairly totalitarian system on these grounds."
That is indeed true, however, it is out of the scope of that text to define what harm is. Mathematically speaking, I have provided the equation, but assigning numbers to the variables is a wholly different task (I love analogies, you can tell I started as a poet )
Common sense (the agregation of prejudices that it is) would seem to suggest that harm is something physical, like a punch on the nose. Drogue would argue that harm extends to mental harm, but I in fact argue that mental harm, short of physically passing high voltage through ones cerebral cortex, is merely a matter of interpretation by the harmee. This is of course a grey area, and needing of further work, but I do not pretend that the Mill Limit, for now and foreseeably, will be anything other than ambiguous (the equation, not the variables).
That is part of its charm as a concept I believe. We are 4-dimension creatures, living in a 5-dimensional universe (ignoring string/superstring theory), and are subjective. The best we can achieve is a pseudo-objective in a set context (thats another story, dont start Drogue!), so there is nothing set in stone here.
On that note, with regards to your second point;
" The problem with all forms of libertarianism is that there isn't any such thing as liberty. It's a moral fiction"
one could say that you're making a pseudo-objective, a subjective in a wider context. As an idealist, I believe that perception of existence is solely in the mind, and that can be extended to ideas. There is no such thing as liberty, just as there is no such thing as good, bad, morality, dark, light, or indeed any other abstract or concrete noun you care to name.
As a person, I feel liberty, I know it as my freedom to do and be, x,y,z in a sociological framework. That exists only for human society on planet Earth, which is at the small end of the scale of "big pictures".
In that sense, I can suggest that the Mill Limit is a pseudo-objective in that context, but if you talk about "humanity" in general, then it is a subjective moral fiction. If I, in return, talk about "the solar system", humanity then appears subjective, fictional and irrelevant, to which you can respond by talking about the galaxy (you get the idea).
Needless to say, this argument can be applied to anything, but in the context of human society, it is of little use. The Mill Limit is politics, not metaphysics."I work in IT so I'd be buggered without a computer" - Words of wisdom from Provost Harrison
"You can be wrong AND jewish" - Wiglaf :love:
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Originally posted by elijah
I love analogies
Originally posted by elijah
You can tell I started as a poet
Originally posted by elijah
Drogue would argue that harm extends to mental harm
[QUOTE] Originally posted by elijah
There is no such thing as liberty, just as there is no such thing as good, bad, morality, dark, light, or indeed any other abstract or concrete noun you care to name.
Or indeed the fact that we call such a thing a noun.
Originally posted by elijah
The Mill Limit is politics, not metaphysics.Smile
For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
But he would think of something
"Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker
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Originally posted by elijah
As a person, I feel liberty, I know it as my freedom to do and be, x,y,z in a sociological framework. That exists only for human society on planet Earth, which is at the small end of the scale of "big pictures".
My own objection is that there's a good case to be made for the idea that liberty is merely a culturally inculcated idea since it doesn't correspond to anything in canonical science and doesn't seem to be a well defined notion, unless you simply mean "being able do what I want" which isn't saying much.Only feebs vote.
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