You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: New Libertarian Political Compass

in #society7 years ago (edited)

Thanks! I explained in the article but maybe I can clarify or simplify a bit here...
A contractualist believes that the NAP only applies to full moral agents (conscious adult humans of sound mind). Contrariwise, a universalist applies the NAP universally to all sentient individuals, regardless of their age, intelligence, or species.
A libertine is satisfied with only the NAP while a puritan also holds himself and those in his community to strict behavioral standards.

Sort:  

I'm not sure where to put myself in your matrix. I consider myself a Daoist and see many ways in which libertarian anarchism and daoism complement one another although their philosophical focus is quite different.

@chhaylin, how does Daoism differ?

@joeyarnoldvn, libertarian anarchism is very political in nature whereas Daoism describes a personal philosophy of living that would be compatible with anarchist politics. Libertarian anarchism states that government is bad and should not infringe people's freedoms. Daoism at its core is a philosophy on 'relational singularization' - how we, as radical individuals are related to one another and how from there we should live our deeply personal lives, not just our political lives.

I realize it may sound quite unclear. I need to find words to express myself better, and may write an article about it later on. :)

I like what you said here and I agree with it. I like the ideas of Daoism. I like freedoms for individuals in individualism.

Hi @samupaha, very nice article. I'm not sure whether we can call Daoism utilitarian. Daoists, to me, seem to me to be negating the conception of utility - or at least, utility for society in general. This is well exemplified in the story of the tree and the carpenter.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.16
JST 0.029
BTC 76073.33
ETH 2917.65
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.64