Freedom is removal of restrction. Less restrictions, more freedoms.
Absolute freedom is the removal of all restrictions. Including the restriction of absolute freedom. — god must be atheist
The usual conception of a maximally free society allows maximal liberty, except as limited by claims to property, including one’s own body (“that’s me/mine, you can’t do that unless I consent”) as well as maximal immunity except as limited by the power to contract (nobody can change your liberties or claims unless you agree to it). — Pfhorrest
And I also advocate a similar exception to the power to contract, saying that people are immune from contracts that would limit their ability to exercise their power to contract. This not only means that you can’t sell yourself into slavery, but also things like non-compete clauses, and broadly all contract of rent and interest, fall afoul of this exception. — Pfhorrest
The idea that one requires statism and laws to prevent him from doing harm to others is infantile.
the way it frames social relations in commercial terms — Echarmion
That is as a system where the only positive relationship between people is a contract, and outside of this you only have purely negative relations to other members in the society, i.e. the only obligations are those to refrain from a specific set of actions. — Echarmion
It ignores the way humans are dependent on mutual aid from one another, and can thus treat a homeless beggar as free as Jeff Bezos. — Echarmion
But do not all ongoing relationship limit your power to contract? Or even large individual purchases? Taking up a mortgage to buy a house is a very significant limitation to my further ability to contract. — Echarmion
And this also puts wage labor in a problematic position, because part of a contract as a laborer is that you place yourself under the authority of another person in a limited and specific way. While the obligation is generally not enforceable in industrialised countries, it's still there. — Echarmion
I see it rather as framing the foundations of commerce in social terms. — Pfhorrest
Such that if you are doing nothing, you are doing nothing wrong, which is as it should be. — Pfhorrest
The problem stems from there being such a difference between the beggar and Bezos in the first place, which my modification to the usual contractual-propertarian libertarianism is meant to address. If a society's deontic principles result in the already-rich getting richer and the already-poor getting poorer, rather than everyone trending toward the middle over time all else being equal, then something somewhere has been done wrong, and I identify that "something done wrong" as primarily the institutes of rent and interest. — Pfhorrest
In practice perhaps, but not in the structure of the contract itself. A mortgage contract doesn't say that you may not enter into other kinds of contracts. It does, however, say that upon certain conditions you pre-emptively agree to owe more money than you've already agreed to owe (interest), which would be invalid under my principles. — Pfhorrest
Freedom is rather central to our moral systems though, so I'd argue more than just commerce is at stake. — Echarmion
Is it? Doing nothing is already a value judgement. You're only really doing nothing when you're not conscious. So refering to doing other things as nothing is already judging them as irrelevant to the question. But can your everyday conduct, which falls under the "nothing" here, really be ignored when talking about freedom? — Echarmion
But even if Jeff Bezos and the beggar were trending towards the middle, that'd still not address the imbalance in their relation to each other. — Echarmion
This seems a fairly thin justification. After all, you know in advance just what interest you own, and hence you're not under some arbitrary authority of the lender. — Echarmion
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