Carleas wrote:James S Saint wrote:Isn't the intent of your proposal to come up with a means to ensure more rational laws, laws that better suit their stated purpose?
Yes, but I should clarify that purposes are not necessarily equal. Many laws have been passed, for example, with the explicit purpose of combatting drug use, and combatting drug use has the purpose of minimizing criminality or maximizing morality or some such. These latter, in turn, are sought for yet another purpose, perhaps achieving some sort of universal self-actualization or heaven on earth. The point is that experimentation is the law is beneficial not only for making laws achieve their purpose, but for making subordinate purposes consistent with whatever is the ultimate purpose of government, and ultimately for determining what an ideal purpose is for government.
First let me say that if you could for example, use each of 50 US states as separate experiments for different governing styles through a few generations, the information potentially gained would be utterly phenomenal. So if you could actually do what you suggested, the entire world would gain horrendously from the experience/experiment. But as I stated, there are actually a few problems (besides the intentional manipulation of generations of people's lives). And there is a better way.
You have mentioned "ultimate purpose". Can we agree that the ultimate purpose of any governance is merely to achieve, through cooperative effort, the means to accomplish things that the individuals could not have accomplished without said governance? And in addition but separately, what those things that are to be accomplished are, is up to the individuals involved?
The alternative would seem to be presumptuous because any experimental evidence gained would have to be assessed with some notion of better or worse governance. Who would assess whether sample A accomplished better or worse effects than sample B? What would be their standard?
If you agree that making laws more rational for sake of the individual lives involved, meaning that they actually do accomplish their stated purpose, is the ultimate purpose, doesn't that mean that it is an issue of authorizing or empowering rationality itself over merely passion voting?
As long as passion (anyone's) is the greater authority, I can't see how you would get away from the same passion manipulation of hopes and fears that have always been used, and are still very seriously being used, so as to merely accomplish what someone else's passion happen to dictate, a "Master". That is the Master/slave paradigm even if something like majority vote was to be used as the arbitrator, there are always ways to manipulate what that majority is going to vote toward and thus producing a Master while everyone else serves as their slaves.
Carleas wrote:James S Saint wrote:even I could take advantage of it and soon rule the world.
But surely
everyone couldn't take advantage of the laws to rule the world, because then there would be a world of rulers, which is functionally equivalent to no rulers at all. A system that can be gamed simply is not necessarily broken, because everyone is trying to game the system to their ends. The military industrial complex wants war, colleges and venture capitalists want peace, luxury item vendors want peace and wealth disparity, unions want a relatively flat society but can tolerate war, etc. etc. In Federalist 10, Madison talked about the influence of factions on government, and the solution as he framed it wasn't to eliminate the ability of factions to enact policies, but to keep factions small enough that they could never overwhelm the system (whether the American experiment in that was a success is debateable).
Whether ensuring that each of many factions is small, yields the most rational end result is one of the purposes of the experiment.. and is dubious at that.
Realize that in order to ensure equality, because you can't make an ass into a thoroughbred, you must make the thoroughbred into an ass. Any attempt to keep a faction equal in strength to the others, will eventually require that it be medically, neurologically or genetically, oppressed so as to ensure that it doesn't overwhelm the others. Remove all colors so as to ensure that all are equally gray? And is gray really the most rational color to have all things be?
It is easy to simply presume that all peoples are to be kept equal in strength of body and mind so as to ensure that none become the Masters of the others, but look what happens when you attempt such a thing. First, one has to presume to be the one in charge of keeping the others equal in potential. But how rational is that one? Being rational implies that there is a purpose for the actions involved and that those actions will in fact accomplish that purpose. But what is that purpose and who decides upon it? Merely ensuring that all people are alike?
Anyone on top of the game carefully trying to keep the others equal must get his information concerning decisions from somewhere. What if the best idea concerning his methods, the most rational plan, was within those he is oppressing? Will he know? Can he judge better than they?
Out of 100 groups being oppressed into equality, one of those must necessarily have the best or most rational thought concerning any particular issue over the other 99. It wouldn't always be the same group, but given any one issue, there must always be one group that is closer to being rational than the others. How would the Master above it all know which one that was on any given issue?
But more importantly, because it is necessary to medically and/or psychologically oppress many within the collection, wouldn't the one potentially coming up with the best idea be oppressed into not being capable of thinking to his best potential or capable of proving his point? There is always a competition of one type or another determining best from the others. But if all are being oppressed, especially medically, are you ever going to see the actual best, the most rational come forth? Is the Master to just presume that he alone knows, without such advisers as the people themselves, what is best or most rational? What is to be his standard?
These issues are directly related to what I have mentioned as that better way. But I want to ensure that we are seeing things close to the same level of concern before I try to explain that method.
Carleas wrote:If I read you correctly, much of what you say seems to be a criticism of government in general, of problems like government failure and regulatory capture. I agree those are issues, and my concern here isn't to address them directly, but to find a structural solution that addresses such problems organically.
That is Exactly what I would also propose, but merely by a different method than experimenting with the lives of others as though there is an all knowing Master who can decide better from best in the end. My method involves no Master above trying to gauge who is better or best other than Reality itself. Comment on the above concerns, and then I will reveal what I believe would get to the "most rational" result without presuming ahead of time or who is to arbitrate, what constitutes "most rational".