Alrighty then, I will attempt learn something, hopefully without having my head bitten off. I will also try not to make any assertions for which I have no proof, simply because I just don't think I'm in the intellectual realm of some of the people (one in particular) in here.
Questions to G: with the example you linked of health care and how it worked some time ago; doesn't that just highlight the real problem with any social, political, economical theory at a very basic level? That is human intervention, human nature; I mean your governemnt, or any democratic government structure is suppposed to be "by the people, for the people" or something along those lines?
From reading this thread you are of the Austrian school of economic thought - am I right? If so is this true?
Is free market theory simply akin to an economic version of Darwinism? Simply a system of checks and balances that eventually evens itself out into a harmonious world where the market dictates everything? If it is, is it also prone to the idea of survival of the fittest, which if it wasn't for human intervention, would seemingly work to perfection in nature but seemingly brings the worst out in humans?
Last question - to actually enable the free market idea on a global scale, wouldn't that require eveyone to share the same ideas, beliefs, and mindset, much like a hive metality, which in itself would appear to be socialism at work?
Not so much an assertion but an assumption is that human intervention is the biggest problem with any theory as far as I can tell.
I apologise if my questions seem rather simplistic and I'm not tryingto troll. I am genuinely interested.
Questions to G: with the example you linked of health care and how it worked some time ago; doesn't that just highlight the real problem with any social, political, economical theory at a very basic level? That is human intervention, human nature; I mean your governemnt, or any democratic government structure is suppposed to be "by the people, for the people" or something along those lines?
From reading this thread you are of the Austrian school of economic thought - am I right? If so is this true?
If the above is true, what are the irrefutable facts about human existance? Other than purely biological/physiological instances i.e we all need to eat, sleep, shit etc, what is irrefutable about our existence that applies to absolutley evey individual on the planet without fail (excluding the biological/physiological)?The Austrian praxeological method is based on the heavy use of logical deduction from what they argue to be undeniable, self-evident axioms or irrefutable facts about human existence.
Is free market theory simply akin to an economic version of Darwinism? Simply a system of checks and balances that eventually evens itself out into a harmonious world where the market dictates everything? If it is, is it also prone to the idea of survival of the fittest, which if it wasn't for human intervention, would seemingly work to perfection in nature but seemingly brings the worst out in humans?
Last question - to actually enable the free market idea on a global scale, wouldn't that require eveyone to share the same ideas, beliefs, and mindset, much like a hive metality, which in itself would appear to be socialism at work?
Not so much an assertion but an assumption is that human intervention is the biggest problem with any theory as far as I can tell.
I apologise if my questions seem rather simplistic and I'm not tryingto troll. I am genuinely interested.
Last edited: