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Beauty of Atheism

January 24th, 2008

I recently had the idea to write a series of stories based around the beauty and joy possible in a life of atheism. All too often atheists are cast as misanthropes and nihilists (and they is the case, from time to time), and I’d much rather show the better side of a godless life.

If anyone happens upon this and has such a story, fictional or otherwise, I’d love to hear it. I’ve been trying to come up with ideas for such stories myself, with limited success (though, admittedly, I just started trying), but I think the idea is sound. Why should believing that there is nothing beyond this life be a black concept? Why should living your life for yourself rather than some invisible deity be anything but fulfilling and lovely? I think a couple good stories would go a long way to show that life can be just that. (OK, just had an idea, will follow up on it)

Ideas

Notes on “Capitalism and Environmentalism,” by Richard Salsman

January 23rd, 2008

Richard Salsman begins by telling the audience that he will take them on an imaginative “nature walk,” and begins enumerating the various objects in the room, the natural materials that made them, and the men who first harnessed those materials. The steel in their seats and the air ducts for instance, and Carnegie.

The luxuries of civilized living are a derivative of nature, as are the men capable of manipulating and exploiting that nature. Man’s creations are perfectly natural and preferable. It is man’s nature to create and better his own existence, and the conveniences around the room (seats, walls, clothing, cushions, etc) are a direct result of man’s nature, not an abdication of it.

But students today are taught not to appreciate man, and in fact see his existence as opposed to nature. As if man is some alien thrust into a strange land, rather than the product of natural processes, as he actually is.

Productivity, man’s natural means of survival, is condemned as well, as it is the process of shaping matter to fit one’s purpose.

Homo Sapien is Latin for “wise man,” or as Aristotle defined him, a “rational animal.”

Salsman then goes on to show, through history, how they mind of man has been treated, and what consequences that lead to.

Ancient Egyptians: polytheistic mystics and slave drivers, Egyptians leave only the pyramids behind, which are little more than monuments built out of coercion to consecrate strange gods and deified tyrants. Twenty year life expectancy.

Greek culture brought about a love of knowledge (the first philosophers) and man’s mind. Life expectancy doubled.

But monotheistic cults began to take hold, and out of this sprang Christianity. Sweeping Europe, this doctrine denounced wealth, health and the physical world. Man is seen as evil; the supernatural is embraced while the mind is condemned. The consequence, as we know, was 500 years of theocracy: the Dark Ages.

Then followed the rebirth of reason: a renaissance. Aristotle is rediscovered, and men once again devote their minds to the betterment of their lives. Medicine, commerce, science and art progress by leaps and bounds, while religion attempts to snuff it out. But the enlightenment took hold, and reason led to the heroes of individual liberty, such as John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.

America entered its Industrial Revolution, showing just what the unfettered mind was capable of. The last 200 years account for only 4% of man’s recorded history, but in that little time he accomplished great things. For instance:

Population Growth-
1800 – 1 billion people inhabit the earth
1900 – 2 billion
Today – 6 billion
Twenty percent of those who ever lived, lived in the last 200 years.

Division of Labor:
1800 – 80% of the population is employed in farming the land
1900 – 35%
Today – 2%
The US, while making up only 5% of the world’s population, produces 50% of the world’s goods. Food consumption per person has increased dramatically, with no major increase in farmed lands thanks to technological advances in farming methods and food preservation.

Working Age:
1800 – The average age that a child started working was five
1950 – 17
Today – 19

And only in the past few decades have men actually retired, meaning that their wealth was so much that they could stop working a decade or more before their death and continue to live. Up until about 1920, men simply worked until they died.

Salsman marks the causes of this incredible growth with the 3 P’s:
Private Property
Prices
Profit Motive

Private property allowed men to take new ventures, thus creating new and better industries. The market pricing of goods caused a correlation of supply and demand, and higher prices of some goods meant innovation to combat those increases. And the profit motive meant that men could seek their own personal gain, and doing so meant satisfying the market’s needs and creating ever better goods and services.

At this point Salsman gets into the new enemy of freedom and the mind of man: environmentalist. But I admit that I didn’t take notes past this point, because I got really interested and listened instead. A mistake on my part, since I can hardly remember anything I heard just an hour ago, whereas the sparse notes I took beforehand are enough for near total recall… But you can take my word that environmentalist is bad!

No, don’t take my word. Check out these links instead from Capitalism Magazine.

Ideas

Business Corps

December 8th, 2007

The other day Rich and I were discussing the Peace Corps. Ultimately we both believe it isn’t a valid institution in that it’s run by the government and subsidized with government funds, but there’s no denying its usefulness to the participators. They are provided with experiences for two years that will skyrocket them above the knowledge of their peers, as well as push them to be more mature and worldly. And I quickly realized that there is a far more valid institution that could benefit from the same practice: capitalism. That is why I propose the creation of a “Business Corps.”

The Business Corps will accept applicants with both excellent academic credentials and real world business experience to participate in a 6 month to 2 year exercise in which each applicant will be sent to start a business, bring it to a profitable state, and assign his successors during the term of his participation.

Obviously no one should just be thrown out into the wild and told to make a living, or else the Business Corps would not be necessary. So here’s what I see as some of the prerequisites. Aside from proving his ability, the applicant must:

  •  Provide a complete business plan which he intends to carry out during his tenure with the Business Corps. This business plan should detail the shortest amount of time needed to be carried out, as well as the ideal locale.
  • The locale of the business must fall within a predefined list provided by the Business Corps, and should of course be the places where commerce and industry are most needed (for the purposes of a clear, local example, let’s say a southern town built around a steel factory which has recently gone out of business, leaving hundreds jobless).

If chosen, an applicant would receive the funds necessary to carry out his business plan and the means to survive while he does so. Besides that, luxury and cash should be limited.

The Business Corps would be funded by business owners and chairmen, who would of course have a stake in the business plans they fun, as well as the future careers of the participants. These funders would also act as counselors to specific participants, a role which non-funders could take part in as well.

Like the Peace Corps, the Business Corps should keep very strict policies. If a participant loses all his money, he must continue on his own dime or not at all. He must operate within the law at all times, and his dealings must be entirely transparent to the Business Corps.

In most cases the businesses created will be small to medium, and as such it will be assumed that the participant will want to move on to newer, better opportunities after the term of his participation. However, if he wants to continue running his new business, that isn’t a problem. After a preset amount of time running said company (say 5 years after the initial end date), he will have the option to buy out the Business Corps stake and retain full ownership of his company.

Very basic, I know, but I’d like to add to this when I think of more. It seems like a very useful idea.

Ideas