teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pm
This is kind of like asking what would it take to convince you that the God is real.
Not remotely.
In order to convince me to be agnostic to a particular god, all you need to do is show me a definition that isn't in contradiction with logic or known science.
Tell me about Zorcon who is an alien god from another planet with super technology powers, and whose qualities aren't logically impossible, and I'll tell you I think it's unlikely but that I have to be agnostic to it. Then show me some physical evidence and my belief will shift.
The notion of anarchism being worse than government isn't in any way at odds with logic; it's an empirical question of human nature.
teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pmI would be convinced that anarchism was wrong if the scientists find a way to test the claim that government prevents violence and then agree that it actually does that.
https://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/burden-of-proof
Your assertion is that anarchism is right and government is wrong; you don't have any proof of that, can't have any, because they can't be compared.
There is no true anarchy, never has been. There's always a tribal government or leadership structure of some kind in a society.
For all you know, if true anarchy did happen everybody's brains would explode because as social animals we aren't wired to exist in such a world. It's unlikely, but you don't know that wouldn't happen.
You can no more make assertive claims about anarchy among humans than you can about unicorns, because neither exist.
teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pmSo far, it appears that scientists in the relevant fields neither agree on those things (Marija Gimbutas, for instance, claimed that warfare in Europe started only with the introduction of new technologies by the Indo-European speaking people, and that is obviously contradictory to what Pinker claims) nor have a way to test it.
Again you chase the eccentrics with fringe theories:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marija_Gimbutas#Reception
You're just cherry picking what you want to believe and pretending they're equal. Stop that.
And AGAIN, if you don't know then don't claim to know. Don't promote anarchism as the default assumption and pretend that government has some burden of proof to meet. Be agnostic if you want to, but if you promote anarchism you're no better than a Christian laughing at how silly Islamic beliefs are; you're still promoting some unfalsifiable faith.
The mainstream position is that government does some bad things, but also does a lot of good things (more now than in the past) and in a power vacuum much worse takes over (various tribal or organized crime type governments). If you found a way to somehow STOP those governments from taking over then anarchism might be better, but the only thing that stops one government from forming (historically) is another government.
If you don't think there's enough evidence for that for you, then be agnostic if you want to. You have no place to shift the burden of proof and call that WRONG and anarchism RIGHT, since you have no evidence.
teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pmI don't think it's that simple. Think of it this way: the government steals (takes away without your consent) a significant amount of money you earn (the tax rate here in Croatia is 25%, in other places it's even higher), promises you that it will keep you safe, and whether it actually does that is questionable.
And if it does, then for most people that may be worth it.
If it's questionable, it's an empirical question. Unless you can prove it doesn't, then you're taking an unfalsifiable position and turning it into just another faith in radical anarchism.
Right now all we can do is compare different kinds of government and government policies; we know some are better than others. What makes sense is to promote those policies we have EVIDENCE for as superior to what exists now, not to promote some magical faith based reasoning that taking away all of the government would be better without evidence.
We have evidence that things like basic income are good and improve the social and economic welfare of a society vs. what we do now. It makes sense to promote more research on that and trial adoption. We don't have evidence that abolishing government does anything good.
teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pmAnd, with that money, it does some things that are evidently wrong, like subsidizing the meat industry or enforcing the minimum wage. It's hard to argue that it's ethical.
Yes, so then we should get them to stop doing bad things and start spending money where it makes a positive difference based on the evidence.
If there's evidence that cutting taxes makes more of a positive difference than social programs (there isn't) then that's what we should do.
teo123 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 3:26 pmIf your neighbor stole some of your money and promised to keep you safe, and you had no good reason to believe he would actually keep you safe, would you say you didn't know if what he was doing was wrong?
That's not what's happening. If we had no modern or historical example of anybody ever being safe without a neighbor taking money and making that promise, and in fact never even had an example of that not happening, then it would be reasonable to err on the side of caution.
If we had evidence that people who gave money to neighbor X instead of neighbor Y were safer, then it makes sense to promote X over Y.
We have no evidence of not giving money period. Nothing, ever. It's an unreasonable position.
A few hundred years ago some enlightenment era thinkers were worried that if everybody became atheist then society would collapse. Today that seems silly, but we had never known a really secular society and we weren't sure if people would just go nuts without an invisible man watching them. We learned by comparing more and less secular areas that it wasn't a problem, and in fact the educational correlation does a lot more good than atheism does bad (if any at all), and that secularism results in less fighting between religions and prejudice, etc.
But we didn't know that before, so to argue a few hundred years ago for suddenly abolishing religion was a dangerous prospect; launching some totally untested thing upon a society. The church also did a lot more charity than it does now (which government has mostly taken over for), so it was a complex proposition. That kind of thing is why communism has again and again failed: speculation is fine and interesting, but practice and small scale tests tell you a lot more.