It's not a final conclusion, but only a possible conclusion. The fact that it is new lends an additional weight of evidence against it. How much weight depends on how highly we rate ourselves as thinkers in comparison to everyone else in the world and throughout history.Ondrej wrote:Well, I think you see my point. The implications are indeed damning. So you start with a conclusion and try to justify it. This is no different from just taking it on faith. What has happened in history must be right.
So it's not at all what I mean that "what has happened in history must be right." I thought I was appealing to a common value, because of all I've heard you say before about how the liberals are "tearing down pillars of society laid by Christianity" etc. I thought this meant you had a respect for tradition and I was appealing to that. If I'm wrong and you don't respect tradition, then what is wrong with liberals tearing down pillars? You're doing just the same. Both sides think they can simply invent a better society and politics out of their own heads without paying any attention to tradition or history - except perhaps as negative examples of how people screwed up because they didn't do things the way I would have suggested.
Let me turn the question around, then. What is the significance, for you, that nobody in history has considered taxation to be theft, and that almost nobody today thinks this either? How much weight do you give this in your considerations?