To me, that leads to the question of what is meant by "voluntary altruism." I don't think it is even within the realm of possibility that people will just know what they should be doing and then going ahead out of altruism to do it. It's not because of any greed or evilness on their part -- it's just out of the basic reality that different people have different views on what is for the good of another person, or of society in general. The common good depends on what one thinks is good for society, to some people equality means almost everything - to others, liberty is important - and there are many other values that people can seek to maximize to get to the common good.John_fi_Skye wrote:PS You were not that arsehole, Descartes.Coito ergo sum wrote:With parts of this, I am in agreement. I do think that the folks like Stalin and Mao committed horrors, and that those countries did not establish the idealized version of communism propounded by Marx.Rum wrote:I think the idealised version of it as described by Marx and Engels is, yes. However it is a vision and not in all likelihood a realistic proposition. The countries which have taken on some of its principles have used the excuse that the ends justify the means as a transitional phrase prior to the establishment of this perfect society. This has resulted in the horrors inflicted on its people by the likes of Stalin and Mao.Coito ergo sum wrote:What mind are you looking to change? Are you in favor of communism? You think it's a good idea?Rum wrote:
I'm glad I read this before I jumped in!
So I don't think I will. Nobody wins and nobody much changes their minds. Plus I don't enjoy arguing on the net for fun any more.
I think they also confused Capitalism with power and of course they had no idea how universal and continent spanning the power base of what we loosely call capitalists would be in the end. The poor no longer necessarily have only their labour to sell, which was supposedly the seat of working class solidarity. A significant minority now have absolutely nothing.
We will probably always have revolutions and regime change, but frankly I don't ever see the communist ideal being established.
The crux of my difficulty with communism, is that I'm unable to see the value in it even in its most idealized sense. I can't understand, and would ask you or someone else who does understand, how "from each according to his ability and to each according to his need" amounts to anything more than abject slavery. Seriously - I am not being hyperbolic or trying to make points for arguments sake. This is something I truly can't understand why anyone wants. The main reason I can't see why that, idealized, would be horrible is because there is no way to get around the fact that someone must decide what an individual's ability is, and someone must decide what his needs are. As soon as that happens, you have despotism. Once someone else, or a bureau, or a community, can tell you, an individual, that they think you are "able" to do X, Y and Z, and therefore you are duty-bound by the system to do X, Y and Z, and for that you get what they think you "need" - that is a horror unto itself, isn't it?
It has been advanced by some that the individual would get to decide for himself what he's able to give, and what his needs are. In that case, however, I think we can all see how that would collapse of its own weight. There isn't enough in the world for everyone to have everything they want, and to only do as much or as little as they please.
How can one make something good come of that basic premise? Help me.
May I remind you of my earlier post to you, about which you were kind, in which I was placing the emphasis on voluntary altruism. That's what would be a prerequisite of proper communism.
And now, the rest is silence, because truth's a dog must to kennel, as Shakespeare said in two different tragedies.
So, when it comes down to individual action, we can't really expect 300,000,000 individuals to each have the same concept of what is for the common good, and often what one perceives to be in the common good will quite often coincide with what is to the good of one's family, friends and loved ones, and oneself, rather than the overall common good. It is not only possible, but also inevitable, that as many people will think X is for the common good as will think the opposite of X is for the common good.