Interesting. So you're saying that a prohibition against violence could not, itself, be enforced by violence as that would imply a contradiction.
Actually, I'm saying.... (the converse, perhaps?), that there can be no prohibition against violent reaction to violence, because demanding passive non-response would promote violence in the name of denying violence. Does prohibiting the initiation of violence (which I did not bother to address) come out to the same conclusion? Not as far as I can tell - here's what I got on that:
Once violence is underway, there is no option of non-violence, the acted upon party can not be held to blame for the violence. Also, to prohibit any action is to sanction the use of violence to stop it (how else can one enforce anything?). If unprovoked attack is bad, then the use of violence to cease it must be acceptable. If there is nothing wrong with unprovoked attack, than I can see no way that attack in self-defense could be called bad. If self defense is not bad, then a prohibition against initiating attack can not be bad.
So if initiation of force is evil, violent response is acceptable.
And if initiation of force is amoral, or even good, violent response is still acceptable.
Therefore, I do not find it to be contradictory to use violence as the means of prohibiting initiated violence, and in fact, can find no way that such a prohibition could be called wrong in any way.
The evil of initiating force is another matter, and seems to be solidly supported in the self-ownership framework.
Also, you view the concept of an implied contract as a slippery slope. Is this correct?
Actually, I view the coruption of language as one of the primary tools to destroy minds, to warp and enslave people.
The value of a contract is that it is an objective measure of what people explicitly agree to. A contract is a wonderful and valuable thing. Now take that word that has so much value, and graft it onto something that lacks all of the properties that give the word value - it feels like something valuable because the word itself has that attachment to something valuable, but it is in fact stripped of it's value. Now it is an "implied" (therefore never agreed to, never codified, merely some vapor-like vague idea, subject to whim) "contract". To give this air of nobility to that which is it's opposite screws up thinking and morality in serious ways.
Just consider what has come in the name of the following self contradictions:
"public property" "collective responsibility" "religious truth" "peacekeeping force"
So, just to clarify, you think that a person has a moral right to protect themselves and others. And, you do not think they have a moral duty to do so.
Correct. I can see no reason that one must only survive an attack if they are able to resist it on their own. This would be a right of an initiator of violence to not face violence from anyone except who they choose. The victim of attack has already had this hypothetical right violated, therefore the attacker should have no protection against the same.
Nor can I see any duty of self sacrifice being valid, for the reasons stated in the previous post. (it would make one a sacrificial lamb to another... are there different classes of people?)
Can I assume that you agree with the idea of moral rights but do not agree with the idea of moral obligations?
I am not completely comfortable with the term "rights", perhaps for asthetic reasons or the abuse the word has gone through in the hands of many - also because at this moment, it seems to imply a positive to me, even when the ridiculous "positive rights" are removed from the definition. For now I'll say that I do not agree with setting up different categories of people with seperate moralities, and therefore there can be no moral justification for initiating interfereance with another's choices. This stance supports the "right" to be left alone, and also destroys any notion of duty or obligation, save for chosen obligations.
I find chosen obligations to be valid because once one agrees to them, to withdraw is an act of force - some common methods are theft, fraud, and neglect.
The path of least resistance is often a short circut.
I am no longer on the boards.
I can be reached via email or Yahoo instant messenger:
blackacidlizzard@yahoo.com