S
St_Francis
Guest
It would be really helpful if you would use words the way they are meant to be used, or be more clear when you put them in quotation marks.“Anarchy” for me, is what you would call “a mess”.
This is due to the Hobbesian definition of “anarchy” being a state of war of all versus all.
I don’t actually believe that all “anarchy” entails literal war, but by simile a mess or chaotic jumble is like a war of all against all and so even a peaceful "mess’ I call “anarchy”.
However this definition is not the true definition of anarchy and it certainly is consistent with government, that is, a form of state (monarchy, aristocracy, etc.). And that is why I put " " around the word anarchy.
And to reiterate, I call justice the opposite of tolerance only inasmuch as they sometimes require opposite actions. Justice requires punishment many times, and tolerance requires that we don’t punish. However again, I am only speaking of justice and tolerance from the point of view of the actions they sometimes entail. It is from the interaction of these contrary actions that I call morality a principle of “anarchy”.
Tolerance is not part of morality.
And the way to win an argument is to prove your point, not mangle everything until you reach the conclusion you were hoping for. So far, you have offered absolutely no evidence for your contention that CST leads to anarchy or a mess, unless by mess you mean a state in which authority is less centralized, according to the level of involvement needed.
For example, there are two towns. In one, they might decide to find a public library; in the other, they might decide that since the rich family in town already lends out its books to people that they do not need to find a library. No problem: different decisions for different situations. This is not a “mess.” And it would be bad for the Federal government to suddenly come down and say that every town had to find a library no matter what their circumstances, wouldn’t it?
OTOH, when cars first started being driven, there were different stop light set-ups for different towns. In some, the lights were horizontal, and the colors could go in either direction; in others, the lights were vertical, but also in different directions. So people would drive from town to town and get confused, esp if they were colorblind (red-green is the most common form of color-blindness). So it makes sense for this to be standardized across the state or across the nation.