80-90% of the prison population would probably agree with her.
Quote from nitro:
When you are a deeply spiritual person, you cannot come to terms with the lack of compassion that is most economic thinking.
Quote from nitro:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/forum/2011-06-05-Ayn-Rand-and-Jesus-dont-mix_n.htm
I am starting to believe that the reason there is a such dichotomy in peoples thinking is that we have become so specialized, that we don't see the synthesis that is necessary to weave all our beliefs into a holistic existence that allows for harmony in all.
When you are an economist or a trader, all you see are numbers and efficiency and productivity or lack thereof. When you are a deeply spiritual person, you cannot come to terms with the lack of compassion that is most economic thinking. But all we need is a hierarchy of thinking, where we consider all theories at once.
I wrote about this somewhere in a different but still interesting way, but I can't find my own stuff on ET anymore.
Quote from Ghost of Cutten:
Does that apply to mathematics, physics, chemistry etc as well, or is economic thinking in a special diabolical category of its own?
I have no idea what this means either. You are confusing laws with morals and rights. Granted, laws can be immoral, like taxation without representation, and are eventually overturned. Also, there is usually a hierarchy, or system of organizing these principles. Usually laws follow hundreds of years of moral reflection and study of societies and human nature.Do 'deeply spiritual' people show compassion for individuals whose rights to engage in free consensual economic relations with each other are routinely violated by every society on earth? When someone wants to send men to assault me, kidnap me, and then imprison me, just because I conduct a free exchange with a willing counterparty on mutually agreed terms, I don't see how they could be described as deeply spiritual - more like deeply tyrannical, callous, and immoral.
Quote from nitro:
I don't even understand why you would even suggest this. The study of physics and chemistry is the study of lifeless inanimate objects and has nothing to do with the affairs of human beings as they relate to each other.
I have no idea what this means either. You are confusing laws with morals and rights. Granted, laws can be immoral, like taxation without representation, and are eventually overturned. Also, there is usually a hierarchy, or system of organizing these principles. Usually laws follow hundreds of years of moral reflection and study of societies and human nature.
Governments make this sort of mistake all the time, but they tend to do so to err on the side of caution. Take for example Alan Turing being traumatized by his own government for being homosexual. Things like this are often fought on philosophical and moral grounds and eventually overturned. Take as another example, prohibition. There, people also wanted "to engage in free consensual economic relations with each other", and was outlawed only to be eventually made legal to drink alcohol, and mostly removing the mob from middleman. Today we think nothing of someone enjoying a beer at a ballgame. On the other hand, society has paid a price in the form of people that cannot control themselves and end up in "Twelve step programs." All in the name of freedom. Or take prostitution, where it is legal in some states or countries around the world. But is it moral?
I think that people are constantly reevaluating their belief systems as a society, with debates going back and forth, eventually accommodating more people while protecting the rights of others. Sometimes. Other times it gets it terribly wrong, like our policies on burning of fossil fuels is terribly wrong. Not surprising, since the effects are only seen on scales for which we do not have experience.
I suspect that Ayn Rand is big with people that feel oppressed by governments. It has always been amused by people's lack of generality when they don't see why someone who is poor, would make religious leaders like Christ their icon. Same desire, different circumstances.
IN ORDER FOR YOU TO GET YOUR OWN FREEDOM, YOU MUST FIGHT FOR THE FREEDOM OF YOUR BROTHER. Seek to understand first, then to be understood.
Steve Jobs? If I were rich, I would name myselfQuote from tradingjournals:
The man who can understand the world is the man who must have three things: spiritual, rich, and not afraid of death --- rich so that his spirituality is not a way to explain his lack of material wealth to satisfy his worldly desires, and not afraid of death so that his sprituality may not be due to fear of death.
Name some people who have the above three attributes.