Master of Ossus wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:I for one would like to cut the bullshit. So, let us return to the original proposition of this thread...I am calling on you to explain to me the following:
1) How does this model work in light of irrationalities of pricing?
I'm not talking about monopolies or other tactics seen in competitive markets, either. I'm talking about fundamental limits of human psychology. Human beings are not capable of setting consistent, reliable prices on objects in terms of currency. This is easily proven. The most obvious example of is hyperbolic discounting: people who would rather take a dollar tomorrow than ten dollars in a year and a day. Or, conversely, are willing to spend ten dollars a day for a net result that they would not pay nine hundred dollars in a lump sum to get for the next ninety days. People are irrational like that.
1. The example that you give is a perfect example of individual preference which is revealed by pricing decisions. It in no way invalidates the market mechanism explained by Surlethe: it is just an unusual preference which is revealed by their actions in discounting. Some people have different preferences over time than others. I cannot understand how you think that this invalidates the mechanism explained by Surlethe.
2. Again, in competitive markets (which clear at the margin), the behavior of individual outliers does not mean that the market as a whole is irrational. Again, prices are set at the margin. There is no reason to believe that, because some people price irrationally, the market must therefore price irrationally because only the preferences of the marginal consumer impact market price.
How do you address the problem of situations where people empirically do not consistently settle on a price for a commodity that accurately reflects their short term and long term wishes?
Again, I'm not sure what you mean. Peoples' preferences for goods change over time, and their preferences for current vs. future consumption can be different from the preferences which are set at the margin. This is not in any way a challenge to the model.
It is most certainly a challenge to a model that bases ethical value on economic value if
economic value does not settle on consistent results. If "value" is to be some kind of intrinsic, objective property that we can use to say "should X be done?" then the value of X had damned well better be consistent between cases where all the facts are identical.
If the value of X is decided in part by random or irrational processes, then the process of valuation
is not objective. It cannot claim any priority over other arbitrary, socially constructed preferences, let alone over inherent preferences such as "not dying" that an individual might have. Therefore, there is no reason to use this model of all-value-as-economic. It serves no purpose and cannot claim to be any more rational or objective than any other.
2) Why do you draw no distinction between "willing to pay" and "willing and able to pay?"
Are there not ways by which I might come by the ability to pay for my desires without, in fact, doing anything of value to society? Say, by theft, or inheritance? Conversely, are there not ways by which I might be deprived of the ability to pay for my desires even though I continue to do things of value to society? Say, by a natural disaster?
Yes, there are. This is a much more powerful argument than anything that moron, Formless, was asserting. Indeed, this is one of Rawls' challenges to the model, which I already referenced in one of my first posts to that idiot.
Utilitarianism disregards these mechanisms through the concept of social insurance. You can buy that or dismiss it to the degree that you think it deserves.
I have yet to be convinced that Formless was an idiot; unfortunately it has come to my attention that he committed to other concerns than debating your position; I can't blame him, because I haven't seen a new argument from you in some time.
That said,
real utilitarianism does not disregard these mechanisms, because it does not blindly assert that you can measure the utility of all things in dollars. There is no constant by which the dollar can be converted into the utilon on a reliable, consistent basis.
You have dismissed this argument without adequate reason, as I expected.
3) Why do you believe an income curve to be necessary to utilitarianism?
In particular, why do you believe a draconian version of the curve is necessary, one where, as a practical matter, the value of your continued existence is set not by some kind of index of future potential, not by some kind of consideration of the effects on society of letting a dozen people die to save one, but by the size of the pile of small green bits of paper you happen to have on your person at the time?
I don't understand this criticism in the slightest. You'll have to explain, further. An income
constraint is necessary to an understanding of the utility curve, because it reveals the actual purchases that an individual will make. Indeed, a constraint of some kind is necessary to understanding the problem of resource allocation: without a constraint, there is no problem of resource allocation because you have presupposed infinite resources.
But you are not using a rational system for measuring this kind of thing. You are using a mutant version, one that ignores, for example, the possibility that individually rational decisions might lead to long term disasters. If you cannot measure a thing in units of cash on the barrelhead right this instant, you are denying that it needs to be measured at all, by basing the entire measure of value on the question of current income. Nor have you defended doing so, by appeal to practical consequences or by making a convincing argument that things not measurable in cash on the barrelhead this instant should be ignored.
You have dismissed this argument without adequate reason, as I expected.
4) What makes you think that the number of units of fiat currency that can be exchanged for an item is an objective measure?
It is objective. It can be readily ascertained by empirical observation. This is the definition of objective.
How can it be considered objective when it is determined by a combination of blind chance and irrational decisions? You might as well decide that service should be allocated to people who want them by alphabetical order.
In the sense that somewhere in the world the number is written down, cash value is objective. In the sense that it is non-arbitrary, that it reflects some relevant natural property, it is not. You should not congratulate yourself on your objectivity if you decide what to do by rolling dice, even though you can most certainly measure the outcome of a rolled die. Because that is not objectivity. That is an excuse to avoid objectivity, by making up some arbitrary and pointless way to make your decisions without reference to the broader realities of the situation.
You have dismissed this argument without adequate reason, as I expected.
5) Why do you think an "objective measure of value" is so urgently needed?
I don't, but we have one.
Because having found one, you immediately threw all the normal ethical concerns of the non-sociopathic fraction of the human race out the window. What's the rush? Why did you suddenly stop giving a damn about whether your proposed ethical system works for the benefit of actual people, rather than towards the optimization of some arbitrary quantity?
Because that IS the moral model that we are evaluating. It is not answerable to the sort of moral or ethical concerns that you or I might present and hold up as important. It's not a particularly good criticism of the model to say, "Well... other systems of morality wouldn't agree with that because they value [X, Y, or Z]."
For one, if we measure in "cash available on the barrelhead right now," we do not have an objective measure at all. We just have a number that happens to be written down somewhere. Allocating resources by alphabetical order would be equally objective- not objective at all, because alphabetical order is set by our own arbitrary social whims in naming people and in deciding which letters come first. It is not a law of physics.
Moreover, it is at best a catastrophic mistake and at worst blatant lie to say that a moral model is not answerable to moral concerns, just as it would be to say that a physical model is not answerable to concerns about the physical world. If a moral system is found to lead to disastrous results, it is flawed regardless of whether or not it is internally consistent. I have already pointed out that the proposed model is NOT internally consistent, and that it relies on basic assumptions about reality which are not true. But even if it were consistent, the fact that it has the potential to lead to disastrous results is still sufficient reason to avoid adopting it.
Because you have, so far, blithely dismissed the possibility that the system might simply break down when confronted with commodities essential for life.
I don't think it does, at all. Again, this is water-diamond paradox.
No, it is not. Water is cheaper than diamonds only after all demand for water is filled and no one wants any more than they can already have. In a desperate drought you can be damn sure that people would trade diamonds for water. They will likewise trade diamonds for medicine to save their lives, even if the medicine is much less difficult for the original seller to obtain than a diamond would be.
This is one of my fundamental objections. Prices are arbitrary. They depend on situational details, on trickery, on irrational decisions made by individuals, on almost everything. Not just on the physical investment of resources required to make a thing happen. If prices accurately measured physical investment, that would be different... but it is not.
You have dismissed this argument without adequate reason, as I expected.
Or that there might be commodities (say, a child's education) which have a value to society very different from what some individuals can be prevailed on to pay for it.
THIS is the better criticism. Thank you. Finally. The sort of strict libertarian model presented by Surlethe does not recognize circumstances of market failure. Presumably, a true adherent would either dismiss them or else retreat to the concept that it limits the application of their moral system. I'm actually not sure what they'd do, to be frank, but at least it attacks the premises of their moral code rather than presenting all manner of Formless' idiotic strawmen.
I have been addressing concerns of market failure for the entire post and only now do you admit it. Very well, then.
I am done with this. I have raised a series of very obvious objections to the proposed moral model, and you have ignored virtually all of them, until the last minute at which you suddenly turn around and admit a gross flaw in the model that all the previous objections were aimed at.
This is exactly how devil's advocacy should NOT work, with endless stonewalling ending in instant collapse the moment the magic words are said.