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Going from the posts Njorl has made in this thread to "Njorl's philosophy" is a bit of a leap, except as a figure of speech. Your previous posts here, however, have led me to, as a rule, expect your words should be treated literally. It is, of course, possible that you have a greater experience of Njorl than I do, and have some reason (from sources other than this thread) to believe that you have a functional outline of his overall philosophy.JohnDubYa said:The binary framework is not my concoction. It exists inherently in Njorl's philosophy because he applies luck to any factor that produces achievement. The overall effect is to negate the entire achievement as a matter of luck.
And no, I do not support this notion at all. People have free will and most should be credited for their achievements. (Those that achieve due to nefarious activity or pure luck --- the lottery, for example --- should not be credited.)
This is, however, irrelevant to this discussion, which is about the implications of a specific argument, not Njorl's convictions.
The point I have been putting at issue is not what "Njorl's philosophy" might be, but whether there is a set of premises which may be derived from his initial statements that justifies taking his point concerning taxes under consideration. I have argued in favor of this. (As has, for entirely different reasons, BobG.) You have yet to indicate that any interpretation other than yours is even a meaningful possibility.
The binary framework I'm referring to is indeed yours. It is the idea that luck must play no part in human achievement, because if luck does play any part it negates all achievement. This is the statement that I have found to be implied in your previous posts, and have been asking if you explicitly support.
It is, however, not Njorl's statement. AFAICT, the strongest interpretation that is supported by Njorl's statement would be:
N1) There is significant luck involved in the acquisition of wealth.
N2) If there is enough luck involved in the acquisition of wealth, we can safely ignore how each person's wealth was accrued when considering how taxes should be apportioned.
You seem to take statement N2 as equivalent to:
J2) if any luck is involved in human achievement, that would negate all human achievement.
(Note that Njorl does not use the word "achievement".)There are a few problems here. One is that statement J2 takes the threshold from statement N2 and arbitrarily sets it to zero. Another is that J2 assumes that "acquisition of wealth" and "human achievement" can be equated in some simple fashion. It is simple enough to come up with "human achievements" (e.g. being a good parent) that have no correlation to wealth. Lastly it implies something like the idea that progressive taxation is equivalent to the denial of all human achievement -- which strikes me as being up there with full-on rejection of the social contract in plausibility. Please note: I'm not saying that J2 by itself has the above implications, I'm saying that taking J2 and N2 to be equivalent does.
You are welcome to give evidence that you don't take the two statements to be equivalent. So far, I haven't seen any.
Above you say: "I do not support this notion at all". As best I can tell, the notion you are referring to is the idea that all human achievement is determined by luck (i.e. the consequence of taking both N1 and J2 as true). Your opinion on this idea was not at issue. You've repeated it enough times in earlier posts that we're pretty clear on it.
In addition to not convincing me that you don't think that statements J2 and N2 are equivalent, you also haven't convinced me that you disagree with the essence of statement J2. While winning the lottery is a means of acquiring wealth, I doubt that it qualifies as "human achievement". And whether or not criminals should be "credited" for their achievements, says nothing about whether luck plays any role in achievement, legal or otherwise.
Here is another statement -- one which you have implied might be your replacement for N1:
J1) All human achievement derives from the exercise of free will.
Nothing you've said so far has supplied any refutation of the idea that acceptance of J1 and J2 logically implies approval of Saddam Hussein. (And, yes, I know you don't feel approval for Saddam -- I'm talking about consistency here, not your opinion.) All it would probably take is another principle to derive morals from other than free will. Regarding "free will" however, there is a decade or two of experimental evidence in neurobiology you'll have to refute in order to get me to accept that any of the received notions of "free will" still make much sense.Sadly, you have done a fair job of convincing that me that you're not reading my posts very carefully. Your responses have been repetitive, often contain loaded rhetoric, and rarely respond to anything I've actually said. What reason do I have not to believe that you are just being rigidly dogmatic and ideological? You are welcome to convince me this reading is unfair.