From the Mises Blog:
[Update: see also: some useful definitions from the “Mises Made Easier” glossary:
Praxeology, (from the Greek, Praxis, action, habit or practice; logia, doctrine, theory or science). The science or general theory of (conscious or purposeful) human action. Mises defines action as “the manifestation of a man’s will. Accordingly, he considers the use of the adjectives “conscious or purposeful” to be redundant. Praxeology is a manifestation of the human mind and deals with the actions open to men for the attainment of their chosen ends. Praxeology starts from the a priori category of action and then develops the full implications of such action. Praxeology aims at knowledge valid for all instances in which the conditions exactly correspond to those implied in its assumptions and inferences. Its statements and propositions are not derived from experience, but are antecedent to any comprehension of historical facts. EP. (Praxeology translated as “sociology”), viii, 68-124; HA. 1-3,30-36,47,51,57,64-71,174,646,648,651; UF. 14, 41-45, 64-65, 70-72.
Economics. A theoretical science which provides a comprehension of the meaning and relevance of purposive (conscious) human actions. It is not about things and material objects; it is about the meanings and actions of men. Economics is a science of the means men must select if they are to attain their humanly attainable ends which they have chosen in accordance with their value judgments. However, the valuation and selection of ends are beyond the scope of economics and every other science. Economics enables men to predict the “qualitative” effects to be expected from the adoption of specific measures or economic policies, but such predictions cannot be “quantitative” as there are no constant relations in the valuations which determine, guide and alter human actions.
For Mises’ comments “On Some Popular Errors Concerning the Scope and Method of Economics,” including Macroeconomics, see Chapter 5, §2 of The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science.
HA. 1-3,6-10,64-69,92-93,647-48,651,653-54; TH. 203; UF. 67-69, 73; also PLG. 1-20, 23.
Catallactics, n. catallactic, adj. The theory of the market economy, i.e., of exchange ratios and prices. It analyzes all actions based on monetary calculation and traces the formation of prices back to the point where acting man makes his choices. It explains market prices as they are and not as they should be. The laws of catallactics are not value judgments, but are exact, objective and of universal validity.
EP. 88-89, 149, 208; HA. 234,327-28,646,650,652.]
Update: See also Extreme Praxeology
[Archived comments below]
August 5, 2006 1:23 AM by Stephan Kinsella | Other posts by Stephan Kinsella | Comments (25)
Update: see this post for more on this.
***
I asked recently of some colleagues if anyone recalled where Mises said that economics or catallactics is the most developed or highly elaborated branch of praxeology, but that someone was working (at the time) on applying praxeology to the study of conflict, or war. Sudha Shenoy pointed me to the answer: in Mises’ Chapter 5, §2 of The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science. Mises writes:
Up to now the only part of praxeology that has been developed into a scientific system is economics. A Polish philosopher, Tadeusz Kotarbinski, is trying to develop a new branch of praxeology, the praxeological theory of conflict and war as opposed to the theory of cooperation or economics.[6][6] T. Kotarbinski, “Considérations sur la théorie générale de la lutte,” Appendix to Z Zagadnien Ogólnej Teorii Walki (Warsaw, 1938), pp. 65-92; the same author, “Idée de la methodologie générale praxeologie,” Travaux du IXe Congrés International de Philosophie (Paris, 1937), IV, 190-94. The theory of games has no reference whatever to the theory of action. Of course, playing a game is action, but so is smoking a cigarette or munching a sandwich. See below, pp. 87 ff.
***
Update: I stumbled across Adam Knott’s working paper, Rothbardian-Randian Ethics and The Coming Methodenstreit in Libertarian Ethical Science. Knott writes,
Specifically, praxeology has not succeeded to date, in arriving at cause and effect laws in the social-ethical realm. In the strictly scientific sense as understood by praxeology, there are no known laws of ethical phenomena akin to the various economic laws established since the beginning of economic science several centuries ago.
Not sure why Knott does not mention (if only to criticize) Hoppe’s work on extending praxeology to the field of ethics.
I’m not sure if Kotarbinski or anyone else ever completed this, or any other systematic study of a field of praxeology outside economics (and wouldn’t Mises’ and Rothbard’s analysis of intervention in the market be a type of application of praxeology to conflict?). I did find this unusual paper by Alexander Mosely, Praxeology and Cultural Convergences in the Rules of War, but this does not seem to be apropos.
Interestingly, in his Reply to Schuller, Rothbard writes:
The categories of praxeology may be outlined as follows:
Praxeology–the general, formal theory of human action:
A. The Theory of the Isolated Individual (Crusoe Economics)
B. The Theory of Voluntary Interpersonal Exchange (Catallactics, or the Economics of the Market)
1. Barter
2. With Medium of Exchange
a. On the Unhampered Market
b. Effects of Violent Intervention with the Market
c. Effects of Violent Abolition of the Market (Socialism)
C. The Theory of War–Hostile Action
D. The Theory of Games (e.g., Von Neumann and Morgenstern)
E. Unknown
Clearly, A and B–Economics–is the only fully elaborated part of praxeology. The others are largely unexplored areas.
See also MESPM, p. 74, where Rothbard writes: “What is the relationship between praxeology and economic analysis? Economics is a subdivision of praxeology—so far the only fully elaborated subdivision. With praxeology as the general, formal theory of human action, economics includes the analysis of the action of an isolated individual (Crusoe economics) and, especially elaborate, the analysis of interpersonal exchange (catallactics). The rest of praxeology is an unexplored area. Attempts have been made to formulate a logical theory of war and violent action, and violence in the form of government has been treated by political philosophy and by praxeology in tracing the effects of violent intervention in the free market. A theory of games has been elaborated, and interesting beginnings have been made in a logical analysis of voting.”
Rothbard’s mention of games apparently contradicts Mises’s disparagement of games as a possible field of praxeology; and Rothbard’s mention of the logic of voting seems a bit like public choice economics, but I am not sure. What other possible fields are there?
Arguably Hoppe’s extension of praxeological type reasoning to the field of ethics might fit under Rothbard’s category E, as Rothbard himself hinted at: regarding Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s argumentation ethics defense of libertarian rights, about which Rothbard wrote:
In a dazzling breakthrough for political philosophy in general and for libertarianism in particular, he has managed to transcend the famous is/ought, fact/value dichotomy that has plagued philosophy since the days of the scholastics, and that had brought modern libertarianism into a tiresome deadlock. Not only that: Hans Hoppe has managed to establish the case for anarcho-capitalist-Lockean rights in an unprecedentedly hard-core manner, one that makes my own natural law/natural rights position seem almost wimpy in comparison.
Rothbard, Beyond Is and Ought; see also Rothbard, Hoppephobia. Especially interesting in the context of this post, Rothbard concludes his piece,
A future research program for Hoppe and other libertarian philosophers would be (a) to see how far axiomatics can be extended into other spheres of ethics, or (b) to see if and how this axiomatic could be integrated into the standard natural law approach. These questions provide fascinating philosophical opportunities. Hoppe has lifted the American movement out of decades of sterile debate and deadlock, and provided us a route for future development of the libertarian discipline.
Interesting how Rothbard talks about possible extensions of praxeology as well as “axiomatics,” the logical-deductive approach of Hoppe that is compatible with, if not a type of, praxeology.
Notice that two of Rothbard’s books are Ethics of Liberty and The Logic of Action. Mayhap Hoppe’s use of praxeology to investigate political ethics is a case of the Ethics of Action: a unification of Austrian economics and epistemology with libertarian justice. It is no wonder that, in drawing from the economic and methodological insights of Misesian-Austrian economics, Austro-libertarian theory is so powerful and sound.
August 19, 2006 9:18 PM by Stephan Kinsella | Other posts by Stephan Kinsella | Comments (5)
I’ve been Hoppe-ing my brains out lately. Take this cool, pithy statement about the nature of economic analysis:
Essentially, economic analysis consists of: (1) an understanding of the categories of action and an understanding of the meaning of a change in values, costs, technological knowledge, etc.; (2) a description of a situation in which these categories assume concrete meaning, where definite people are identified as actors with definite objects specified as their means of action, with definite goals identified as values and definite things specified as costs; and (3) a deduction of the consequences that result from the performance of some specified action in this situation, or of the consequences that result for an actor if this situation is changed in a specified way. And this deduction must yield a priori-valid conclusions, provided there is no flaw in the very process of deduction and the situation and the change introduced into it being given, and a priori—valid conclusions about reality if the situation and situation-change, as described, can themselves be identified as real, because then their validity would ultimately go back to the indisputable validity of the categories of action.
A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism, p. 118-19.
This formulation highlights the distinction between the method appropriate to economic science and that applicable to the study of causal phenomenon (natural science).
Moreover, in view of this, what other fields of praxeology could there be that are not covered by this broad conception of economics? This type of economic analysis does not study only “cooperation,” and it of course does include the study of “conflict”–economics concerns the consequences of human action and social interaction both under a free market and on the hampered market. Wouldn’t a study of “war,” say, have to be a subset of economics itself?
Update: See also Extreme Praxeology
Update: see also:
October 29, 2008 2:13 PM by Stephan Kinsella | Other posts by Stephan Kinsella | Comments (1)
Adam Knott just sent me a copy of his interesting monograph, Praxeology and Ethics: Three Philosophers Considered–Rothbard, Hoppe, Searle, available at his site, Praxeology.com. Other works there include Striving and Attainment – A Theory of Social Interaction and A Praxeology of Coercion. (I mentioned some of this before in my post Extreme Praxeology.)
Update on the praxeology of war: see Joseph Salerno, Imperialism and the Logic of War Making.
Archived comments:
Every time government steps into a problem, it removes the possibility of peaceful disagreement, because one position or another is being enforced by law, which means by coercive force. Violence.
When government has a say on a subject, it is self-destructive to say “I don’t care”, because the people who do care are going to carry the “political” discussion their way, and then impose it on me whether I like it or not. No wonder countries erupt in violence as soon as a “government” is going to be formed, like Somalia and the Balkins.
Published: October 2, 2006 2:14 PM
Published: October 2, 2006 2:44 PM
Published: October 2, 2006 2:53 PM
Sione
Published: October 2, 2006 4:50 PM
Michael Taylor
Published: October 2, 2006 5:35 PM
Published: October 2, 2006 5:39 PM
50 or 60 MILLION per year World Wide.I am a pro-lifer who has no religious convictions at all . I didn’t need the fear of god or anything else to come to my decision, just a good sense of what is right and wrong.
You see we were all once a fetus. Is it beyond the realm of possibilities that when your mother first learned she was carrying you, she may have considered her options? What if she had decided to terminate? Would that have been OK?
You would not exist, if you have children they would not exist, and your (husband or wife) would be married to someone else. You would have been deprived of all your experiences and memories. In this day and age with terminations being so readily available and so many being carried out, if you make it to full term
you can consider yourself lucky. Lucky you had a mother that made the choice of life for you. Don’t you think they all deserve the same basic human right, LIFE?
I’m all for contraception, prevention is certainly better than termination.
Did you know you can get an implant that is safe, 99.9% effective, and lasts for three years? Just think girls not even a show for three years, wouldn’t that be great? I think too many people rely too heavily on the last option (abortion), I think if abortions weren’t so readily available people would manage their reproductive system far better resulting in a fraction of the number of unwanted pregnancies.
World wide there are over 50 MILLION aborted pregnancies each year. In America 3,500 terminations carried out every day, that’s over 1.3 million every year, 50% of all cases claimed that birth control had been used, 48% admitted they took no precaution, and 2% had a medical reason. That’s a staggering 98% that may have been prevented had an effective birth control been used. Don’t get me wrong, I suspect the percentages in Australia would be much the same.
Just a lot of unnecessary killing.
At the point of conception is when life began for you. This was the start of your existence. Your own personal big bang. Three weeks after conception heart started to beat. First brain waves recorded at six weeks after conception. Seen sucking thumb at seven weeks after conception.
I am convinced that in the not too distant future, people will look back at many of the practices of today with disbelief and horror.
Want to know how to find humanity-?
True humanity can only be achieved, by concidering others/ caring about others, as much as, if not more than yourself.
Until we do we are no more than an uncivilisation, with all the uncivilised things that we do…
Published: October 2, 2006 6:39 PM
I still think abortion is an awfull sin, but that’s between the mother and God. Hell, I see people make poor moral decisions every day when they turn on the afternoon soaps, but that doesn’t mean we should haul in the government stick a gun to their head and make them watch what we tell them to.
Published: October 2, 2006 10:37 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 12:30 AM
You wrote:
The answer is yes. Of course your mother was free to consider her decisions and of course she would have been well within her rights to terminate a pregnancy should she have so decided. There was no “you” at the time. There was a foetus but was that foetus conscious? No. Was it able to think, able to form memories, capable to gain experience and learn? No. Was it self aware? No. The answer is no, not yet. There was no identity of “you”.
What you need understand is that a potential is not an actual. Your mother’s decision was down to whether the potential to produce a baby in the next few months was out-weighed by other considerations in her life. Her choice and hers alone to make.
You wrote:
So what? Consider this. Had your father worn a rubber on the night you were to have been conceived, you would not exist. Same goes for your twenty plus siblings. Or are there no such. So then, what of it?
Potential and actual should not be confused. They are not the same.
Had you considered that every egg you allow to escape your body unfertilised is a potential “someone who does not exist”? And their potential children will not exist either? And their potential wives or potential husbands will (if they exist) be married to someone else. And they might have been the potential person who potentially had the cure for all the diseases that plague the World and one of their children’s children might have gone on to become the President of the Potential States of the World and potentially delivered peace and prosperity to all men (potentially) and all women (possibly) as well. It’s all your fault!
Do you remember the old Monty Python song, “Every Sperm is Sacred”? Well then, that’s your argument right there.
Remember, a potential is not an actual.
A non-existent has no experiences or memories. They simply do not exist. A non-existent can’t be “deprived” of anything. You are confusing a potential with an actual.
you can consider yourself lucky. Lucky you had a mother that made the choice of life for you.>
What choice your mother made was hers to make at the time. “You” as a conscious thinking entity did not exist. Had the pregnancy been terminated “you” would not have known about it anyway.
What you have to deal with now is the fact that you do exist; not that maybe, possibly, perhaps, could be, you might not have existed.
What is “they”? What precisely are you defining as “human”? What essential attributes are necessary? And what are you trying to define as a “right”?
BTW don’t all those wasted sperm and eggs deserve the same basic human right, LIFE? What about tumour cells? Be very careful answering that because there is little to distinguish certain tumour cells from those of a foetus. Do cells have a right to LIFE?
Ah, so an individual cell does have a right to LIFE. False! At that point all you can state is that the DNA that would allow a physical being to be formed that had the potential to become “you” was formed. “You” did not come into existence as a conscious, self-aware, volitional person until many months after that. In fact “you” did not exist until your brain was mature enough to operate in a certain manner. That time did not occur until months after the birth.
And finally the best, last of all:
No. It was your parents who experienced that at the time. One would hope they enjoyed it.
Talofa!
Sione
Published: October 3, 2006 1:40 AM
The number of people who make a particular decision and act in a particular way does not make the decision or action correct or incorrect. It just means that certain people have decided or acted in a particular manner.
You wrote: “You see we were all once a foetus. Is it beyond the realm of possibilities that when your mother first learned she was carrying you, she may have considered her options? What if she had decided to terminate? Would that have been OK?”
The answer is yes. Of course your mother was free to consider her decisions and of course she would have been well within her rights to terminate a pregnancy should she have so decided. There was no “you” at the time. There was a foetus but was that foetus conscious? No. Was it able to think, able to form memories, able to gain experience and learn? No. Was it self aware? No. The answer is no, not yet. There was no identity of “you”. What you need understand is that a potential is not an actual. Your mother’s decision was down to whether the potential to produce a baby in the next few months was out-weighed by other considerations in her life. Her choice and hers alone to make.
You wrote: “You would not exist, if you have children they would not exist, and your (husband or wife) would be married to someone else.”
So what? Consider this. Had your father worn a rubber on the night you were to have been conceived, you would not exist. Same goes for those twenty plus siblings you do not have.
Had you considered that every egg you allow to escape your body unfertilised is a potential “someone who does not exist”? And their potential children will not exist either? And their potential wives or potential husbands will (if they exist) be married to someone else. And they might have been the potential person who potentially had the cure for all the diseases that plague the World and one of their children’s children might have gone on to become the President of the Potential States of the World and potentially delivered peace and prosperity to all men (potentially) and all women (possibly) as well. It’s all your fault!
Do you remember the old Monty Python song, “Every Sperm is Sacred”? Well then, that’s your argument right there.
Remember, a potential is not an actual.
“You would have been deprived of all your experiences and memories.”
A non-existent has no experiences or memories. They simply do not exist. A non-existent can’t be “deprived” of anything. You are confusing a potential with an actual.
“In this day and age with terminations being so readily available and so many being carried out, if you make it to full term
you can consider yourself lucky. Lucky you had a mother that made the choice of life for you.”
What choice your mother made was hers to make at the time. “You” as a conscious thinking entity did not exist. Had the pregnancy been terminated “you” would not have known about it anyway. What you have to deal with now is the fact that you do exist; not that maybe, possibly, perhaps, could be, you might not have existed.
“Don’t you think they all deserve the same basic human right, LIFE?”
What is “they”? What precisely are you defining as “human”? What essential attributes are necessary? And what are you trying to define as a “right”?
BTW don’t all those wasted sperm and eggs deserve the same basic human right, LIFE? What about tumour cells? Be very careful answering that because there is little to distinguish certain tumour cells from those of a foetus. Do cells have a right to LIFE?
“At the point of conception is when life began for you. This was the start of your existence.”
False. At that point all you can state is that the DNA that would allow a physical being to be formed that had the potential to become “you” was formed. “You” did not come into existence as a conscious, self-aware, volitional person until many months after that. In fact “you” did not exist until your brain was mature enough to operate in a certain manner. That time did not occur until months after the birth.
And finally the best, last of all: “Your own personal big bang.”
No. It was your parents who experienced that at the time. One would hope they enjoyed it.
Talofa!
Sione
Published: October 3, 2006 1:50 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 7:59 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 8:40 AM
The argument over whether a fetus is “human” is of course irrelevant from this perspective, as well as being absurd as a scientific matter. Of course the fetus is human – it carries only human genes and, more importantly, it is diploid and carries a full complement of genes from both the father and mother. This allows us to distinguish it from ova and sperm, each of which is technically also a separate human life, but by itself incapable of developing into a full, diploid human (we are not parthenogenic, like certqin other vertebrates)
As a side note, I think that Block and Whitehead`s argument against RU-236 has its factual premises mistaken. The drug doesn`t kill the embryo, but simply prevents implantation in the uterus. Thus they should see the drug as a permissible eviction drug. As a related matter, science tells us that something like 1/4 to 1/3 of all fertilized ova naturally fail to implant.
There are other issues I`ll have to address later.
Published: October 3, 2006 8:49 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 9:06 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 10:18 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 10:35 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 11:20 AM
Published: October 3, 2006 11:46 AM
In fact, the birth of a fetus is probably a very generous cutoff because arguably children have no free will till several years after birth.In other words, you, or the legislature, or a court, or some other person, gets to decide when I am a “real person” and when the rights of life, liberty, and property attach to me. Can you think of a better definition of tyranny?
Published: October 3, 2006 11:54 AM
What is the moral status of a fetus that is the result of rape? It did not come into being as the result of any choice the woman made.
Published: October 3, 2006 12:27 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 12:42 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 1:24 PM
I think the second question is more important from a Libertarian, natural-rights point of view. Of those who think abortion should be punished I would ask: by whom? Rothbardian natural rights typically require the victim, or the victim’s representative, to persue action against the perpetrator. However, in the case of (voluntary) abortion the perpetrator and the victim’s representative are the same person, and no one else has standing. The only case where a rights-conflict could possibly exist would be where some other party, perhaps the father, was granted representation rights prior to the abortion. Then the problem would reduce to trespass and self-defense or eviction, the limits of which are far from decided.
Published: October 3, 2006 2:39 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 2:45 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 3:38 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 4:24 PM
And: “If Ernst Blofeld drops James Bond from a helicopter into my raft, which is in water infested by sharks in a blood frenzy, neither of us has the right to kick the other out.”
Depends on context. Since the raft is too small for both of you to survive you may tip him off. It’s an emergency and it’s your life or his!
Even were the raft large enough for two; what if you remember the time when James Bond mercilessly killed your innocent brother? Since your government is not going to ever provide justice in the matter, here is your opportunity for justice (and you are preventing a very dangerous state sanctioned killer from ever killing innocent people in the name of the state again).
The trouble with analogies is that they are not the same as the situation you are actually investigating. Some are closer than others but each comes with a particular context. They may be used to illustrate a point but they do not prove it. Analogy is “similar to” but not “the same as”.
You wrote: ” A pregnancy not resulting from rape would be like if I placed Bond on my raft while he was unconscious. He cannot consent to this action, so there can be no contract, but I did consent to placing him on it.”
This is all very well but it is not the same as an abortion. Mr Bond already exists as a volitional active self-aware person. The foetus soes not. Bond may well be unconscious at the time you place him on the raft but he will soon awaken and return to a state of awareness. He exists as a human identity already. In the case of a foetus what you are dealing with is different altogther. Here is a non-conscious, non-volitional, non-active entity which has the potential to become a person but it is not a person yet. Not self-aware. Not volitional. Not conscious. Not active. Never was. Potentially might be. In this example you are confusing a potential with an actual. They are not the same.
Sione
Published: October 3, 2006 4:29 PM
Or Posner, quoted here: “Thomson is right that we don’t force people to donate kidneys to strangers, or even to family members. But normally the potential donor is not responsible for the condition that he is asked to alleviate, in the way that a woman (unless she has been raped) is responsible, although only in part, for the fact that she is pregnant. The difference in evidentiary difficulty between asking who hit X and asking who failed to save X is a strong practical reason against liability for failing to be a good Samaritan. So although bystanders are not required to rescue persons in distress, someone who creates the danger, even if nontortiously, may be required to attempt rescue, and perhaps that is the proper analogy to the pregnant woman who wants to terminate her pregnancy.”
Beckwith and Thomas, in the JLS, relate this “duty founded on creation of peril” with pregnancy: For example, according to the prima facie case for negligence, one is liable for negligence if one (1) has a duty, (2) breached a duty, and (3) caused harm as a result of breaching the duty. One could argue against McDonagh in the following way: Since pregnancy is a foreseeable result of unprotected sex, and since for McDonagh a fetus is a human person, therefore, one who engages in sex has a duty to engage in due care so as not to bring into existence persons whose death due to abortion is foreseeable.
I think Feser gets right too: “it isn’t clear how it would justify any abortion other than in the case of pregnancy resulting from rape, with which the kidnapping by the violinist’s admirers is analogous. Surely a pregnancy resulting from consensual intercourseÑwhich, as everyone knows, has a chance of resulting in pregnancy even when contraception is usedÑis not analogous to Thomson’s example.”
See also Doris Gordon “Abortion and Thomson’s Violinist: Unplugging a Bad Analogy”.
Block and Whitehead say that the homeowner has the right to evict a trespasser (in the gentlest manner possible) but, as Ben has explained, the unborn is not a trespasser. The voluntary actions of the parents put him in that position. Imagine a homeowner that put an outsider (who is unconscious) inside his property and then, accusing him of trespassing, evict him causing his death.
Responding to Lisa, a fetus that is the result of rape may be evicted (in this case doesn’t apply the “duty founded on creation of peril”; the mother has been raped, she has not created the peril), a fetus that is the result of the voluntary actions of his parents can not.
Published: October 3, 2006 5:20 PM
Anyway, I enjoyed this article.
Published: October 3, 2006 8:17 PM
Published: October 3, 2006 8:36 PM
Another real example, a woman is informed by her specialist that she is sterile, her eggs are toast and she is unable to conceive. Subsequently she has sex and surprise! She falls pregnant. Her specialist was incorrect. Did she implicitly decide to have a baby? Can’t say that she did. She understood she was unable to have one. In her case unprotected sex with her boyfriend was not expected to ever result in pregnancy. Once again, the notion of an implied decision is invalid.
*
Aside from the problems in promoting a positive obligation, a debatable idea in itself, you are confusing a potential with an actual. A foetus is not the same as a person. Two differing entities. I’ve pointed this out previously so I’ll avoid repeating it again here.
*
I dislike analogies as they so easily confuse rather than clarify. Nevertheless, since the analogy of the trespasser and the homeowner has been raised here let’s examine further. The homeowner may well invite a person onto his property. That’s a deliberate and conscious act. It can’t be said that a woman having sex is necessarily inviting a foetus to come reside within her body. For a start that entity does not exist at the time she has sex. Secondly even if she did have sex, she did not necessarily intend to become pregnant. So, an invitation does not necessarily exist anyway.
And, of course, the analogy of the invited guest ignores the situation where the guest outstays his or her welcome. Just this weekend I noticed the boys down the street evicted an overstaying dinner guest early Sunday morning. From what I heard the permission to stay was rescinded. Out he went! Fair enough.
Talofa!
Sione
Published: October 3, 2006 8:51 PM
I disgree that it’s necessary to show that, and agree that it makes no sense, but the majority of people who claim abortion is morally wrong, it seems to me, are Christians, and that obviously makes sense to them: it’s a fundamental tenet of their religion!
Published: October 3, 2006 10:03 PM
“Each year, nearly half of the six million pregnancies in this country are unintended, and more than half of all unintended pregnancies end in abortion.”
“… 7% of American women who do not use contraception account for 53% of all unintended pregnancies.”
“>Dec. 2005 speech by Sen. H. Clinton
Do those who care about the loss of innocent life really want to support the offspring of the 7% of American women who do not use contraception and as a result account for 53% of all unintended pregnancies?
An undiscussed aspect of this is the frequent divergence of interests between the sexes over the abortion question. Mothers have to invest at least nine months of their bodies in carrying a child to term, and have physical investments in nursing and child-raising on top of that. Males, on the others, having made their donation of sperm, frequently get off scot free. I think it is rather clear that the bulk of the women who choose to have abortions are doing so because the putative “father” has, despite his success in wooing the mother, demonstrated a lack of commitment or capability of supporting the mother and child. The father may feel cheated – after all, he has done what nature has typically required in successfully bedding the mother – but if we remove the decision about whether to carry the child to term one effect is to encourage irresponsible male behavior.
We also undermine the ability of expectant mothers to make difficult decisions about how to allocate scarce resources between investments in education, work, existing children and those children as yet unborn. One might regret that advances in technology have enabled what is a difficult and perhaps faustian decision, but one can hardly put the genie back in the bottle.
Wouldn’t a better policy be to make sure that contraception is available so that pregnancy occurs only intentionally, rather than on a hit-or-miss default basis?
Published: October 3, 2006 11:15 PM
This analogy is not correct. Nobody says that a person who eat too many French fries cannot try to minimize the cost of his actions. What I’m saying is that he cannot externalize the cost of eating too many fatty foods to others. He, not others, must bear the cost of his voluntary actions. In the case of abortion/eviction (if that implies the death of the unborn), however, parents externalize the cost of their voluntary actions (voluntary sex). The child bears the cost of the parents’ actions. Parents don’t try to minimize their cost, they try to externalize it passing it to the child.
Published: October 4, 2006 5:54 AM
Published: October 4, 2006 10:19 AM
3 – The arguments that a person is “compelled to carry a child” I find nonsensical – the child develops, in the vast majority of cases, from an act with known risks (or perhaps even from intent) and without “compulsion”. It takes a positive act of killing (there is the compulsion) to stop it. But even the child required a positive act of support, the consequences demand that the child be given support by those most directly responsible for it’s existence.
4 – If I take an action which, by it’s nature, reasonably results in my having to care for a handicapped non-violent person for nine months, then decide later that I wish to evict that person but can do so only by tearing their flesh and bone to pieces and vacuuming their dismembered parts from my home, I’d say that was a moral crime to be fought against in every way, and any such “property right” later asserted to my home which contradict the natural consequences and natural moral law cannot reasonably exist in superiority.
5 – The general result of “libertarianism” seems to indicate non-physical evil would gain greatly in power: and evil doesn’t stay non-violent. The effect – especially in this environment – is to change the rules of the battleground in the state and yield it far more to evil and increase violence.
6 – It appears the traditional family is an essential atomic element of good society and perhaps cannot be usurped without a destruction of society – hence the institution of marriage is deserving of state sanction and alternative lifestyles, while they may be permitted, are not given equal time or weight.
7 – Natural moral law is a common ground for ethics and should be promoted along side (or even instead of) Rothbard’s (and other strict self-ownership) views. Natural moral law can be defended by appeal to acts and consequences, and just as economics is corrected by an axiomatic approach, morality is corrected by a practical cause-effect approach visible, and while disagreements can exist, agreeable enough to be settled on
Published: October 4, 2006 12:13 PM
YOu need to do better than that.
Sione
Published: October 5, 2006 7:39 PM
Published: October 6, 2006 5:43 AM
From this and your previous statements it is clear you are promoting a collectivism based on a primitive type of mystical faith. Unreasonable and illogical. You need to do better.
Sione
Published: October 6, 2006 3:39 PM
A further 48% had failed to use any birth control at all.
And 2% had medical reasons.
That means a stagering 98% may have been avoided had an effective birth control been used.
Published: October 6, 2006 9:02 PM
Published: October 7, 2006 9:22 AM
Then at least concider this -Soon after you were conceived you were no more than a clump of cells.
This clump of cells was you at your earliest stage, you had plenty of growing to do but this clump of cells was you none the less. Think about it.
Aren’t you glad you were left unhindered to develope further.
Safe inside your mother’s womb until you were born.
Published: November 22, 2006 10:22 PM
Then at least concider this…”Technically, since the egg is alive, and the sperm are alive, then life does not “begin”, rather it is continuous.
I happen to be horrified by the prevalence of abortion in our society, but equally horrified at the way the issue is demagogued for political purposes by politicians of every stripe, it being a red rag that can be used to motivate voters on both sides of the issue.
But since the issue was placed into the federal purview via Roe v. Wade, has anything really been done about it one way or the other? I submit, it has not, for the reasons above – a fair and reasonable dialogue on the issue will take away a powerful election tool.
What we are left with are rights, which we austrians usually trace back to the concept of self-ownership. To me, absent any alternative way to evict the unwanted tenant intact, there seems to be no way to prevent abortions consistent with the fundamental SO premise.
The best I can offer is a utilitarian argument that if abortion, adoption, and medicine were all unregulated, fewer unintended pregnancies might occur, and more of those would end with some kind of adoptive arrangement, lowering the incidence of abortion dramatically. What I know for sure however is that the current political non-solution is NOT working.
Published: November 23, 2006 12:57 AM
Published: August 4, 2007 5:34 AM
Published: November 13, 2008 6:16 PM
I agree rather with those whose argument rests on the idea that the fetus’ parents are responsible to care for him, or arrange care by others, since they voluntarily engaged in activity that brought the fetus into existence.
At the very least, if they are so irresponsible as to procrastinate on the abortion until the child reaches the point where he could survive outside the womb (which is now, what, six months?), then they should be prohibited from killing the child.
Published: December 30, 2008 11:40 PM
There is a catch, however: according to the rules of the house, if you attend this concert, there is a 50% chance that you will wake up afterward with a violinist hooked to you and using your kidney for nine months. There is, however, a special badge that you can purchase and display on your outer clothing that only makes it a 5% chance of being hooked to a violinist.Now, assume that candidate A, understanding the rules of the house and the potential consequences of attending the concert without a badge, proceeds to attend the concert but without purchasing the badge. Proceed with the analogy….
Published: December 31, 2008 4:31 PM