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What Gives You the Right to Exist?

What Gives You the Right to Exist?. Fred E. Foldvary. The philosopher-bandit. Prove to me that you have a right to exist! God? By religion, many have been killed. Many faiths. Need a logical derivation. Law? It changes, and can be morally wrong. U.S. law authorizes killing.

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What Gives You the Right to Exist?

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  1. What Gives You the Right to Exist? Fred E. Foldvary

  2. The philosopher-bandit • Prove to me that you have a right to exist! • God? By religion, many have been killed. • Many faiths. Need a logical derivation. • Law? It changes, and can be morally wrong. U.S. law authorizes killing. • Social custom? Authorizes killing. • Mere tradition not a moral justification.

  3. It is morality • Morality gives us the right to exist. • By forbidding murder, because murder is evil. • Requires an absolute moral code: • natural moral law. • A permanent universal ethic. • Whence?

  4. What is morality? V ← e(A) For act A, the ethic e designates a moral value V of good, evil, or neutral.

  5. Is there an ethic u, universal to humanity, independent of culture, derived using reason? Ontology: u exists if it fits the criteria for natural moral law.

  6. The criteria: 1. Universal to humanity. 2. Comprehensive for all acts. 3. Logically consistent 4. Non-arbitrary: not dependent merely on personal whim. 5. Unique: no other ethic can fit as the basis for proper governance.

  7. John Locke, Second Treatise of Government (1690) The state of nature has a law of nature to govern it which obliges every one; and reason, which is that law, teaches all mankind who will but consult it that, being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions...

  8. The premises • 1) human equality • 2) independence in thinking and feeling • 3) personal ethics

  9. What acts are good? • Acts which are welcomed benefits are morally good. • The value “good” originates in subjective personal good.

  10. Acts which affect no others are morally neutral.

  11. Acts which negatively affect others: coercive harms, and offenses.

  12. Offenses depend purely on the beliefs, values, interests of the affected parties: the u.e. assigns the moral value: neutral.

  13. For example

  14. Coercive harm is an invasion, morally evil, but with qualifications:

  15. Incidental injuries are morally neutral. Hypothetical acts are neutral.

  16. Morally evil Direct and actual coercive harm is morally evil. The refusal to benefit others is morally neutral.

  17. The universal ethic 1. An act is good if and only if it benefits others. 2. An act is evil if and only if it is a direct, actual invasion. 3. All other acts are neutral.

  18. Liberty is the absence of legal restrictions other than the prohibition of coercive harm.

  19. Natural Rights • The moral right to do X is equivalent to: • the negation of X is evil: • R(A) = (u(-A) ↣ E) • Moral rights are human or natural rights.

  20. The answer You have the moral right to exist because: by the universal ethic, it is evil for others to take your life.

  21. The function of the universal ethic: the moral foundation for law and governance. • 1) No legal restriction on peaceful and honest acts. • 2) No taxes on non-invasive human action. Public revenue from fees, fines, natural resources.

  22. The law of the market. To the creator belongs the creation.

  23. The pure market consists of voluntary exchange. “Voluntary” implies an ethic. A universal meaning of “market” implies a universal ethic. The u.e. determines “market.”

  24. The free market is ethical. The same ethic that determines the meaning of the market also determines justice, and so a pure free market is inherently ethical.

  25. Applications * Pollution: trespass, compensation. * Poverty: opportunity denied. * Crime: only with victims.

  26. The free society Equal rights for all, Privileges for none.

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