If that's an axiom for you, I suggest you reconsider it. If just the premise of an argument, then make your case! I think it's absurd on it's face, for oh so many reasons. But people have got out their rifles on such beliefs. Are you a rifleman? Or are you reasonable? If a rifleman, would you just stand still for a moment? if reasonable, then be reasonable and reason!in a capitalist society all activity is immoral. — Martin Krumins
But your underlying motive seems to be to defeat the notion of morality. Is that your motive? Not a respectable motive, I'm afraid, either intellectually or morally. — tim wood
I think the only "innocently immoral" people are children and idiots. Mere ignorance may account, but it's rarely exculpatory. I read this as simply the acknowledgment that government must sometimes mandate fairness as a matter of law, when it can be got to do so. And it is necessary that it do so; history teaches that, as well that government sometimes makes a bad job of it.Universalising a doctrine designed on fairness does as the right liberal wankers always state, an act of will over an innocently immoral being. — Martin Krumins
. Can't ask for more than that.I will take moral here in an economic sense to be fair... to a reasonable degree — Martin Krumins
Ownership is just how the world works. Folks who are against ownership are usually against your ownership and in favour of theirs, which they likely will call some other name, like "stewardship" or something like. Nor is it unfair. It can be unfair, but that's a different game. As to people behaving, often the standards of correct behaviour, especially in the marketplace, have to be legislated. Because the marketplace is often a function of adversarial practices.Now as an anarchist I believe that although the taking of ownership can never be fair or equivocal, I can think that It can be so scrutinized that people can behave properly and thus creating an equal stake society. whats your take? — Martin Krumins
Wrong. It's rude and uncharitable to assume that your interlocutor has an underlying ulterior motive... and I would have answered along the lines that my motive is exploring problems in philosophy, and how people respond to them. — Sapientia
Capitalism is moral when the people involved in it utilize it with moral standards in mind.
Eg: I helped someone in order to acquire this ring.
Capitalism is immoral when the people involved in it abuse it with immoral standards in mind.
Eg: I stole this ring. — Lif3r
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