It's amusing to see a libertarian suggesting that it's probably good for the few to suffer for the sake of the many. And interesting to see that the interests of existing illegitimate children are not noticed-- it's assumed that their mothers are the only people worth mentioning.
It's amusing to see a libertarian suggesting that it's probably good for the few to suffer for the sake of the many.
Eh. There are two camps in libertarianism: the moral libertarians, and the technical libertarians. The moral libertarians derive their policies from principles- force is wrong, taxation implies the threat of force, and thus we need to build a society without taxation if we want to live in a moral society.
The technical libertarians derive their policies from economic arguments and history. It doesn't matter whether you think it's moral or i...
A piece I saw that Benjamin Todd adapted from THINK's module on charity assessment. Some of you may recall the network's recent launch.
cipergoth said that it should be emphasised that this isn't a trick question where the answer is they all worked or none did.
I thought Round 2 would have no effect and expected Round #5 to have no effect not a negative one, I got 6 out of 8 correct. How well did you do?
I recommend checking out the links and references. Gwern's comment there was also interesting.