- Sister Y's The Right to Marry
- A Really, Really, Really Long Post About Gay Marriage That Does Not, In The End, Support One Side Or The Other also recommended by CharlieSheen
I suggest that, given what we know about humans, the creation of an actual amoral and omnipotent third party would constitute UFAI ....
Now suppose the existence of an amoral, demiomnipotent third party that can determine if a person understands the implications of an agreement and is free from coercion, will formalize any contract iff all parties understand the implications of said contract and are free from coercion, and enforces all formalized contracts only at the request of any party to the contract. Is that UFAI, FAI, or neither?
I've left 'coercion' undefined for now; if your answer hinges on a precise point within the reasonable definition space, try to find that line.
Now suppose the existence of an amoral, demiomnipotent third party that can determine if a person understands the implications of an agreement and is free from coercion, will formalize any contract iff all parties understand the implications of said contract and are free from coercion, and enforces all formalized contracts only at the request of any party to the contract. Is that UFAI, FAI, or neither?
It's less unfriendly than fubarobfusco's example, but still not quite optimal, since refusing to enforce some contracts (most obviously, contracts which i...