Nah. The book is a big metaphor used to explain the philosophy. Making the characters like that means they're harder to relate (I think to some degree, Rand thought she was Dagny) but easier to understand. Them being…
150 years later and Bastiat still got it.
Would you look at that. Turns out there's a word to describe the utopia high level language programmers use to justify the bloated software they use and produce.
I know what utilitarianism is, as someone who leans more to the side of deontological ethics. The problem with fairness not being an end means you can't have justice. Your moral ethics culminates on the never ending…
> My thinking is more so from a position of minimizing suffering Don't you think that's unfair by nature? How do you justify it?
Came for comments by economic illiterate lunatics who believe in the right to spend other people's money. I'm not disappointed.
Nah. The book is a big metaphor used to explain the philosophy. Making the characters like that means they're harder to relate (I think to some degree, Rand thought she was Dagny) but easier to understand. Them being…
150 years later and Bastiat still got it.
Would you look at that. Turns out there's a word to describe the utopia high level language programmers use to justify the bloated software they use and produce.
I know what utilitarianism is, as someone who leans more to the side of deontological ethics. The problem with fairness not being an end means you can't have justice. Your moral ethics culminates on the never ending…
> My thinking is more so from a position of minimizing suffering Don't you think that's unfair by nature? How do you justify it?
Came for comments by economic illiterate lunatics who believe in the right to spend other people's money. I'm not disappointed.