Galt wrote:TomViolenz wrote:Interesting, I didn't find the beginning of this discussion. Must have been in another thread. But I'm pretty sure that the a priory thing was already a side track. It was like this:
Me: Inheritance is bad, because power concentation and it limits what merit alone can achieve
You: But empire building! All else be kaos
(NICELY SPUN)
Me: Well, since we have no posibilities to repeat world history under controlled conditions, neither of us can prove our position.
You: You can't prove yours, but that does not affect mine, because Economics is an a priory science
This is where you lost me. Either I don't understand why this would affect my position, but not yours, or you're just not making sense. (Could just be a language or education thing on my part of course)
(THIS IS THE A PRIORI THING)
But I certainly won't let you pretend that voluntary association is coercion if P O V E R T Y. That's just demagogy, plain and simple.
Same thing happens here. I don't even understand what you are trying to say.
Could you make clearer what you think my position is and why that would be demagogy?!
Lolz.
From your posts, we can see that you view economics as an empirical science that requires looking at history, among other things, to understand. And since, as you rightly say, we can't go back in time and change shit around to see what other outcomes could be possible, you have no way of testing YOUR theories. I, on the other hand, hold that economics is an a priori science which can be developed without delving into the past.
And since my view is logically correct, as I proved to Finn, I "win" this one. Boom.
I then accused you of demagogy because you attacked the right for pointing out that the state's way of "helping humanity" involves coercion. Which it does.
I actually tried to ommit spin as much as possible, but wanted to be brief in my summary. (And I did it from memory too)
If you feel your position was badly represented, feel free to correct me.
There was also no snark intended in my post, as it seems everytime I try to be a little snarky, people (not you though!) get offended. Probably also a language thing.
I btw. never stated that I see economy (as a system) as an empirical science.
I rather think that economy is one of those "soft" sciences (not meant in a deragotory way), where axioms about reality can be made and tested as long as one understands that the model is not the reality. I think Finn explained this better before.
I, on the other hand, hold that economics is an a priori science which can be developed without delving into the past.
But only if the system is in itself consistent! And then the results you get are only valid within this system.
If your a priori science is a representation of reality, remains to be shown. In fact this is why there is so much measurement in Economics, they try to prove themselves to be truth, when all they prove is that their system is congurent to itself.
See it as the Eve online world. You can only play according to the rules of their world and within this world everything is consistent, but it does not necessarily represent reality. Of course Economy as a science tries to get ever closer to this real world (like all good models do), but then the question becomes: Is it still an a priori system, if you make adjustments to it, that are not reflected in the original system.