It's nothing like the drunk driving argument. There's a ton of observable occurances and cold, hard, scientific data that drunkeness makes driving more dangerous. Using the "it doesn't apply to me" argument is a ridiculous comparison.... sorry if that sounds harsh.Kshartle wrote:I would like to clear up something that really hampers discussions here. The argument is constantly made here that if you can't produce evidence of something it is not true. This is a fallacious argument. It is called the Argument from Ignorance. The principle you guys would do well to learn is that "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence".moda0306 wrote: 1) If we don't want them, then why does almost every productive economy government provide these same things to their citizens: Roads, healthcare, military, police, sewer, other infrastrcture, etc. Do you have an example of a productive economy where the government is all-but non-involved in day-to-day economic activity (even if it's just infrastructural)?
When people say things like..."If that's true then show me where it exists"..they are implying if the other person can't show proof of existance than their argument is incorrect. Logic is never attempted. This is a false argument. It's barely worth pursuing, it's tiresome for the other person, it is a diversion that distracts from the discussion, and nothing ever goes anywhere.
To say "If Government spending is destructive then show me a productive society without government" is not an argument. At least, it's not one that is valid. People can choose to speculate as to why one doesn't exist, but they don't need to provide one to prove Government spending is destructive". Requiring one for proof of existance is an example of a lack of understanding of the principles being discussed.
This happens here all the time. It's like saying "If drunk driving leads to car wrecks how come I drove drunk last night and didn't get into a wreck!?!? Explain that one!"
I'm done responding to this fallacious argument anymore. It's unpleasant to ignore people's points and insist on the argument from ignorance. My only response will be to point out the fallacious nature of the argument.
Really not trying to be mean guys. You might not be aware to the extent this argument is used here. It's the backbone of many positions and it's false. I'm just hoping that as iron sharpens iron we can sharpen each other's deductive reasoning ability and stop with the false arguments. Lord knows i can use sharpening myself.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence_of_absence
We literally have a world with like 7 billion people in it, and something like 200 countries or "territories," none of which looks anything like a "free society" (unless you include lawless $hitholes, but lets just agree (for now) not to call them ideal libertarian landscapes), and some of THE MOST productive economies are private activity mixed with a VERY high degree of government control, spending, investment, healthcare, education, fiat currencies, gov't influenced banking, etc.
This would be ok if you were claiming that "while morally correct, it remains to be seen how productive and robust 'free society' economies truly are."
But you're not.
You're actualy claiming they're significantly more robust and productive. If that were the case, the natural state of the world would give us SOME sneaking evidence of this, because robust things tend to stick around, and production is a pretty obvious trait to identify.
So this would be like you stating that being drunk helps causes car accidents, and I noticed that in some of the most alcoholic places of the world they had unbelievably safe drivers, and that the most sober places in the world were having accidents all over (obviously not true), and pointed this out, and you said, "hogwash, that's not an argument, that's just an observation about the world."
When introduced to this fact, you just go back into generalities about the falseness of the system.
But in the end, if you think anything spurred on by government is just "economic activity," and not real "economic growth," I suppose you think South Korea, Japan, Western Europe, Taiwan, Singapore, Manhattan, (on and on and on) are just statist houses of cards of "economic activity." Is this what you're stating? Because these economies (most of them, anyway) have governments that spend money on healthcare, control education and currency, build massive statist-manipulated living areas known as "cities," and supply various infrastructural services, and by all common measures are extremely productive.
But that's not "real" productivity, is it? It's just "economic activity" spurred on by statist goons and carried about by obedient slaves.