Strange how free will suddenly can become irrelevant, huh?This is silly semantic quibbling. It's legitimate in ordinary language, to call a government policy the cause of a statistical trend, even though everyone knows perfectly well that the efficient/necessary causes involved are the millions of individual decisions that go to make up the trend. Newspaper/media articles and scientific papers do it all the time. — gurugeorge
On the other hand you sayI don't have to define it, the employers do. — gurugeorge
This sound like you had an idea what was worth how much.Some labour just isn't worth very much — gurugeorge
Strange how free will suddenly can become irrelevant, huh? — Heiko
This sound like you had an idea what was worth how much. — Heiko
This makes the proposition that one is willing to understand the decisions made. One does not have to and hence: why should I? Just invest less in abstract "growth" and employ them right away.The higher unemployment rate that's caused by minimum wage laws is the aggregate result of all those many varied individual decisions, or one might say a mean around which all those varied decisions tend to cluster — gurugeorge
I see. Than it is just a sloppy formulation not pointing out the factum in the right way:No, it's just a general observation explaining the economic logic of the situation and making a prediction, based on economic theory, which has been borne out by the facts again and again and again. — gurugeorge
It is not about how much their work would be worth objectively but how much a potential employer could profit from it.They(Employers) are the ones who have to weigh up the costs and benefits to them — gurugeorge
division of labour — gurugeorge
No, the classical liberal or propertarian position is against colonialism — gurugeorge
Well, they didn't.I don't see evidence that communist regimes took extra care to preserve their environs, more the reverse. It is not like they tried sustainable practises and failed rather the reverse. — Andrew4Handel
— Andrew4Handle
Responsible breeding? What are you talking about?Overpopulation is a fairly recent problem. These countries became poorer and exploited under colonialism and inherited the colonialists religious beliefs in fertility and contraceptives etc.
It is ironic that the western countries which consume the most of the earth resources become complacent about their luxury and can boast of responsible breeding. It is not clear that all these others people can conceivably share our lifestyle and consume the same amount of resources. — Andrew4Handel
Responsible breeding? What are you talking about? — ssu
I think division of labour is problematic — Andrew4Handel
Someone has to sort odd peas, or clean toilets — Andrew4Handel
It is too late to claim we are starting on a level playing field. — Andrew4Handel
Contradicts this:- — gurugeorge
I was giving an example of the division of labour and how it creates menial tasks. — Andrew4Handel
I think we should interfere to improve the quality of peoples live as much as possible. — Andrew4Handel
I was giving an example of the division of labour and how it creates menial tasks. — Andrew4Handel
I was giving an example of the division of labour and how it creates menial tasks. — Andrew4Handel
And unless are you saying that there will be no necessity to sort peas or clean toilets in your ideal society, — gurugeorge
Well, that is happening. And it can happen in the future.Based on the rates of resource domination and depletion by the west to support our current lifestyles we would have to come up with some dramatic new technology to give everyone as similar lifestyle quality and not completely wreck the planet. — Andrew4Handel
Unfortunately?Decreasing the population is responsible breeding.
Unfortunately the worlds population is increasing. — Andrew4Handel
So you having those appliances isn't irresponsible, but some African having them would be?Are saying you think everyone can have a car, washing machine, microwave, computer and so on?
Even if it were possible I still think it would be irresponsible use of resources. — Andrew4Handel
How would you define what the labour is worth? — Heiko
I don't have to define it, the employers do. They are the ones who have to weigh up the costs and benefits to them, of employing such people. — gurugeorge
So you having those appliances isn't irresponsible, but some African having them would be? — ssu
Also, usually more affluent societies do take care more of their environment — ssu
I am not putting forth an ideal society. — Andrew4Handel
But is possible for a doctor to grow her own peas and clean her own toilet and play in an amateur orchestra. — Andrew4Handel
unemployment is caused either by people not trying to get employed or by firms not employing them — Heiko
So you having those appliances isn't irresponsible, but some African having them would be? And what is so irresponsible in having them in the first place? After all, for you and me to discuss this thing here on the Philosophy Forum means that both have a device to enter the internet. What is irresponsible in that? We'd be better off without Computers, the net, cars etc? — ssu
Also, usually more affluent societies do take care more of their environment — ssu
Perhaps you don't notice, but pollution in China actually does make my point: even if it has grown, it's still a poor country compared to West as the per capita isn't so high. Other places with huge pollution problems in urban areas are Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt, Mongolia, India. The least polluted urban areas you find in Australia, New Zealand, Estonia, Finland, Canada, Iceland. The comparison tells it all.I don't think this is true at all. I already linked you to the problem of pollution in China and that is where a lot of things we use in the West is manufactured. Britain became very polluted when we did our own manufacturing. — Andrew4Handel
This idea starts from the thinking that we humans are somehow separate from the life on the planet, that were are not a species as others and part of those living things. We surely are the dominant species and mold a lot the planet to our benefit, but that doesn't make us totally separate. In my view this is just the extreme hubris of humans who think that they are absolutely different from anything else. Life hasn't been harmonious even before us with mass extincion events happening before our time. The truth is that if a large asteroid hit the planet and would wipe out the human race, there still would millions of years for life to recover on Earth and prosper before the Sun burns the planet. So life on this planet isn't going to be erased away by us.No, but the planet, and all the living things that live here, would be. Better off, that is. It's humans that are the problem. Both in terms of our rapacious demands on the resources of our Earth, and the sheer number of us making those demands. — Pattern-chaser
'Dirty' Industries: Just between you and me, shouldn't the World Bank be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Least Developed Countries]? I can think of three reasons:
1) The measurements of the costs of health impairing pollution depends on the foregone earnings from increased morbidity and mortality. From this point of view a given amount of health impairing pollution should be done in the country with the lowest cost, which will be the country with the lowest wages. I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that."
Millions of tons of waste plastic from British businesses and homes may be ending up in landfill sites across the world, the government’s spending watchdog has warned.
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