| | Sherman, you wrote, I think I understand the distinction you're drawing between an epistemological "ought" and an ethical "ought." I'm still trying to figure out how either type of "ought" bears on "rights" and whether or not "rights" are observable existents. In Post 145, I wrote that "we can observe an 'ought,' because we can observe our values and what is necessary to achieve them. Similarly, we can observe a right to freedom -- which is simply the moral obligation to respect each other's freedom -- because we can observe that respecting each other's freedom is necessary to achieve our values. In post 149, you replied, I agree we can know our own values and choose means to achieve them. However, can we know ("observe") what the values of others should ("ought to") be? If so, I'd like to hear your explanation of how. We can identify that other people value happiness as an end in itself, by observing that they are members of the same species as we are. We can know that happiness is experienced by them as self-evidently valuable, just as it is experienced by us as self-evidently valuable. You're not disputing that, are you? As far as the "right" to freedom goes...I disagree with your statement that "we can observe that respecting each other's freedom is necessary to achieve our values." I don't think you can describe the observable connection between "respecting each other's freedom" and "achiev[ing] our values." Again, if you can, I'd be interested in hearing your description. Well, without the freedom to act on your judgment, you can't act on your value judgments, right? You may be able to describe a theoretical connection. But is it possible to "observe" a theoretical connection? If so, how? You can't "observe" it in the sense that you can perceive it directly on a sensory-perceptual level, but you can certainly identify it by observing that certain conditions are required for man to achieve his values. You seem to be well-versed in economics and I detect a hint of Austrian economics in your comments regarding ends and means. If I'm correct, I'd be curious to know how you reconcile Austrian subjectivism with Rand's Objectivism. I have never been able to do so. In fact, since becoming acquainted with von Mises and the Austrians I have not been able, in good conscience, to call myself an Objectivist, though I began the liberty "journey" with Rand and still to this day agree with virtually the entire Objectivist political philosophy. It's the Objectivist view of "rights" and "morality" in absolutist terms that I have the hardest time with. I think that Rand and Mises were on the same page regarding the conditional nature of means and ends as they relate to human action, but Mises didn't go any further than that; Rand did. Rand identified that without the recognition of a 'right' to freedom of action, the choice to act on one's value judgments cannot be preserved. Now this may have been implicit in Mises, but it wasn't made explicit. Also, Mises didn't relate human values to man's biological needs -- to the fact that man is being of a specific nature, who requires certain objective conditions for the achievement of his happiness. Mises left it entirely subjective. According to the Austrians, no voluntary choice can be criticized, because values are subjective, but if values are subjective, then on what grounds do the Austrians criticize the subjective values of the socialists and interventionists? While advocating subjectivism, the Austrians smuggle objectivist ethics in the back door. This is also the problem with the economics profession in general. They approach economics as if it were a value-free science ('Wertfreiheit'), and disdain any attempt to 'moralize' about economic values. Galt forbid that an economist should ever endorse the "right" to the pursuit of happiness. Austrian economics could use a good dose of Objectivism!
- Bill (Edited by William Dwyer on 11/14, 4:56pm)
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