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 Originally Posted by wufwugy
Do the predetermined rules have unintended consequences?
They might, that's why I suggested the rules need to be measured and revised is they don't work as intended.
 Originally Posted by wufwugy
When dealing with the non-experimental, answers are certainly knowable, yet nobody knows how to know them.
Not sure what you mean by knowing how to know, but anyway it seems like you could support rules in all cases where experimentation can be used?
 Originally Posted by wufwugy
Killing/stealing what? Who? When? How? Who gets to decide what the parameters are?
Just in general. Sure there are some special cases, but let's just treat them as such.
 Originally Posted by wufwugy
My view is that "wrong" is the initiation of violence or fraud. Ultimately, a society is made up of a collection of persons who determine some mainstream view of how to regulate what is "wrong". My protest is when initiation of violence is used (tax based monopolies) to regulate. Laws are really, really great stuff, but laws that are funded by initiation of violence are not the kind of laws that I think people would choose if they could freely choose.
That sounds like a yes to me? So what is fundamentally different about rules against these activities, why not let trial and error work its magic here also?
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