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Disproof of Ayn Rand 'philosophy' objectivism.

Comrade Kane

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
Nov 6, 2010
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270
Scenario is thus.
Three men Peter, Paul and Alan Greenspan are trapped within a closed system.
System has breathable air and some form of material ground but nothing else (utterly empty). System will reopen in exactly twelve months. System has no food or water.
Peter owns enough food and water to last (comfortably) three men for a whole year.
Paul and Alan Greenspan have nothing and they will die of thirst in a few days or of starvation after a few weeks or months.
Peter has to sleep sometime. If Alan and Paul sleep in shifts, one of them will always be awake, and thus they can overpower Peter in his sleep.

Ayn Rand relies on a few basic principles for her moral claims.
1. The non-initiation of force or in other words it is wrong to initiate force against another but not wrong to defend one against such.
2. Private property rights are paramount and only the legitimate owner of the property has the right to decide how to use share or otherwise dispose of said property. It would be wrong of others to steal defraud or initiate force against the owner in order to obtain the property.

In this scenario, under Randian ‘ethics’ Peter can choose to do whatever he wants with his food and water including sharing the supplies in any quantity, destroying them, keeping them all for himself – as explained above.
In this scenario, under Randian ‘ethics’ neither Paul nor Alan have any right to steal defraud or obtain by force Peters food even if Peter refuses to share (charity) even though this means Alan and Paul will both suffer and/or die because of Peter’s choice to be selfish or simply unconcerned (selfishness is a Randian virtue).

Morally, Alan and Paul should INITIATE FORCE against Peter, TAX his property, and REDISTRIBUTE his property evenly among them such that all three men survive.
Morally, even though the supplies are Peter’s private property, Alan and Paul have a claim on a fair share of Peter’s private property.

Since what is obviously, commonsensically, moral, utterly contradicts what Ayn Rand claims is moral, thus Ayn Rand is WRONG. Randian free market capitalism is based on immorality. Poor people have a legitimate moral claim on the property money and goods of those with excess (the rich). Socialism is inherently realistic and moral. Capitalism is not. Ayn Rand is not.

Imagine now if Alan Greenspan decided instead to team up with Peter instead. A two-way split is more food for the both of them than a three-way split. So now Peter and Alan Greenspan sleep in shifts (at least until Paul starves to death). This is analogous to capitalism whereby the rich buy protection to be protected from the poor who are thus cut out of the loop and the economy and left to rot and die.


PS If you rob Peter to pay Paul you will have a sore Peter; but a sore Peter and a living Paul is worth more than an indulged Peter and a dead Paul.
 
I thought this post was pretty lulzy, but I wouldn't be so bold as to call it a disproof of anything. I mean, it's not like anyone can definitively 'prove' an ethical statement anyway...it's like 'proving' that the Mona Lisa is the best work of art ever crafted.

Scenario is thus.System has breathable air and some form of material ground but nothing else (utterly empty). System will reopen in exactly twelve months. System has no food or water.
Peter owns enough food and water to last (comfortably) three men for a whole year.

Lolwut. I thought that the system had no food or water. [????????]
 
Peter would loan them the resources while charging interest. (After denying them three times, of course)

selfishness is a Randian virtue

If selfishness is his motivation, then maximizing his wealth would be the rational thing to do. Peter has a monopoly on a good with inelastic demand, by selling his goods on credit to Paul & Greenspan at a higher than (open-system/normal) market price, he will profit when the system reopens and Paul & Greenspan can pay him.
 
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I agree with you; but your argument was far from rigorous and in-depth and can't meaningfully be considered a proof. It's more a conjecture or single experimental result.

True all true but I have excuses
1. I have a short attention span and lost interest.
2. Couldnt think of a different title thread.
 
Ok... because I can't sleep I'll dig into this.

In such a confined scenario, it would be in the interest of Peter's personal security to share his food. He could be attacked by Alan and Paul which could threaten his life, or they could simply steal it all from him and not share out of revenge for his selfish behaviour. So although Peter has food security he does not have true security if he doesn't share. There is no utility to keeping more food than he needs to last the year in this situation. In survival situations, it makes much more sense to collectivize because it increases utility for everyone. If you had instead said there was only enough food for one person then that would change the situation completely.

And anyway, this situation is not totally comparable to private property. The public will always need survival goods as they are inelastic. If the rich horde them or apply unfair prices, the public will rebel and the economy would be thrown into chaos. There is no utility in the rich redistributing their wealth if their safety is not at stake and if the less fortunate still have access to survival goods.

It would be more accurate to say that basic socialism like access to food, housing (even if shitty), etc. would maximize the assets of the rich because the poor will be less likely to come after them. I mean, people revolt all over the world when food prices go up, but you don't see people revolting over televisions and computers do you? There is no incentive for the public to rebel over luxury goods, just like there is no real incentive for the rich to decrease their wealth so that the public can live closer to how they do.

Besides, Ayn Rand is an idiot. Her version of capitalism will always lead to some sort of revolution or another. Unregulated industry with sharply reduced socialism would lead to total collapse. What the U.S. is currently experiencing is an over-fed bourgeoise class, and an increasing level of unemployment which puts stress on survival. As long as the government can continue to provide welfare for subsistence, the status quo will remain. If the cuts keep happening then there will eventually be an uprising. History proves this time and time again.
 
And anyway, this situation is not totally comparable to private property. The public will always need survival goods as they are inelastic. If the rich horde them or apply unfair prices, the public will rebel and the economy would be thrown into chaos. There is no utility in the rich redistributing their wealth if their safety is not at stake and if the less fortunate still have access to survival goods.

So Africa and the poorer countries just haven't gotten the memo?
 
I was thinking more the U.S. because it has a history of popular revolt and that is the base that Ayn Rand looks at in her philosophy.

A lot of African countries went from multi-governernment, non-technological agrarian societies straight to modern fascism with very little or no democratic tradition in between.
 
A lot of African countries went from multi-governernment, non-technological agrarian societies straight to modern fascism with very little or no democratic tradition in between.

Not that these 'decisions' had strings or influences.
 
Scenario is thus.
Three men Peter, Paul and Alan Greenspan are trapped within a closed system.
System has breathable air and some form of material ground but nothing else (utterly empty). System will reopen in exactly twelve months. System has no food or water.
Peter owns enough food and water to last (comfortably) three men for a whole year.
Paul and Alan Greenspan have nothing and they will die of thirst in a few days or of starvation after a few weeks or months.
Peter has to sleep sometime. If Alan and Paul sleep in shifts, one of them will always be awake, and thus they can overpower Peter in his sleep.

Ayn Rand relies on a few basic principles for her moral claims.
1. The non-initiation of force or in other words it is wrong to initiate force against another but not wrong to defend one against such.
2. Private property rights are paramount and only the legitimate owner of the property has the right to decide how to use share or otherwise dispose of said property. It would be wrong of others to steal defraud or initiate force against the owner in order to obtain the property.

In this scenario, under Randian ‘ethics’ Peter can choose to do whatever he wants with his food and water including sharing the supplies in any quantity, destroying them, keeping them all for himself – as explained above.
In this scenario, under Randian ‘ethics’ neither Paul nor Alan have any right to steal defraud or obtain by force Peters food even if Peter refuses to share (charity) even though this means Alan and Paul will both suffer and/or die because of Peter’s choice to be selfish or simply unconcerned (selfishness is a Randian virtue).

Morally, Alan and Paul should INITIATE FORCE against Peter, TAX his property, and REDISTRIBUTE his property evenly among them such that all three men survive.
Morally, even though the supplies are Peter’s private property, Alan and Paul have a claim on a fair share of Peter’s private property.

Since what is obviously, commonsensically, moral, utterly contradicts what Ayn Rand claims is moral, thus Ayn Rand is WRONG. Randian free market capitalism is based on immorality. Poor people have a legitimate moral claim on the property money and goods of those with excess (the rich). Socialism is inherently realistic and moral. Capitalism is not. Ayn Rand is not.

Imagine now if Alan Greenspan decided instead to team up with Peter instead. A two-way split is more food for the both of them than a three-way split. So now Peter and Alan Greenspan sleep in shifts (at least until Paul starves to death). This is analogous to capitalism whereby the rich buy protection to be protected from the poor who are thus cut out of the loop and the economy and left to rot and die.


PS If you rob Peter to pay Paul you will have a sore Peter; but a sore Peter and a living Paul is worth more than an indulged Peter and a dead Paul.


Objectivism was meant to be taken up by first world countries where such scenarios rarely (don't) happen in society. Trying to apply them to this may prove her philosophy immoral in some twisted sense, but that is because for it to work you need it applied to the right situation.

Show me a philosophy or political idea that works for everything and I'll show you god.

If a mod could bump this that'd be great btw

It was also a radical answer to a radical problem.
 
there was a point in one of her books where she said something about a woman wearing a bracelet 'giving her that most sensual of looks, that of being chained' when i threw the book across the room.
 
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