Health Care: A Liberty Issue

Too many conservative commentators are focusing on the inessential and the peripheral.  Yes, Obama is a brazen liar, a bullshitter, and a consummate Orwellian abuser of the English language.  He lied when he said that those who like their plans can keep their plans, and it is obvious why he lied:  the ACA probably would not have gotten through otherwise.  But the important issue is not Obama and his mendacity. It is not about Obama, which is also why it is perfectly lame, besides being slanderous, for the scumbaggers on the Left to accuse opponents of the ACA of racism.  The fundamental issue is the assault on individual liberty and the totalitarian expansion of the state.  That assault and this expansion don't have a skin color, white, black, or mulatto.

Mark Steyn got it right back in 2009 in an NRO piece that is no longer available.  (Damn you, NRO! Links to high-quality content ought to be permalinks.)  Excerpts
(emphasis added):

. . . [nationalized] health
care is the fastest way to a permanent left-of-center political culture. That’s
its attraction for an ambitious president: It redefines the relationship between
the citizen and the state in a way that hands all the advantages to statists —
to those who believe government has a legitimate right to regulate human affairs
in every particular. [. . .]

It’s often argued that, as a
proportion of GDP, America spends more on health care than countries with
government medical systems. But, as a point of fact, “America” doesn’t
spend anything on health care: Hundreds of millions of people make hundreds of
millions of individual decisions about what they’re going to spend on health
care.
Whereas up north a handful of bureaucrats determine what Canada
will spend on health care — and that’s that: Health care is a government budget
item. [. . .]

How did the health-care debate
decay to the point where we think it entirely natural for the central government
to fix a collective figure for what 300 million freeborn citizens ought to be
spending on something as basic to individual liberty as their own
bodies?

Are you willing to
sell your birthright, liberty, for a mess of pottage?  That's the issue. 
Liberals are a strange breed of cat. They'll puke their guts out in defense of
their 'right' to abortion and their 'right' to violate every norm of decency in
pursuit of the 'artistic' expression of their precious and vacuous selves, but
when it comes to the right to be in control of the sorts of care their bodies
receive they reverse course and surrender their liberties.

Psalm 23 Revised

By Mark Helprin:

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of debt, I fear no bankruptcy, for Obama is my shepherd. He prepareth a table of food stamps before me, and maketh me lie down beside waters He hath cleansed and seas He hath made recede, even though the bad Republicans wisheth the earth to be burnt unto a cinder, and will not buy the electric car that is good, for it hath zero emissions, and receiveth its power from a power plant, which hath not zero emissions, but the ways of the President are mysterious.

He hath told the stubborn Israelites, evil builders of apartments, that they know not their own interests and He does, and know not what they do, when they fear the nuclear weapon of the Persians. The ways of the President are mysterious. He alloweth the Persians to get the nuclear weapon (unless He hath something up His sleeve), for He knoweth that when they behold Him they will stay their hand, and not burn the Israelites unto a cinder, as they pronounce.

Read it all.

Halloween Varia

1. Mark Anderson's Halloween greeting takes the form of a quotation from Moby Dick, the relevance of which escapes me:  "The subterranean miner that works in us all, how can one tell whither leads his shaft by the ever shifting, muffled sound of his pick?"  Wider context here.

2. Why Liberals Love Halloween

3. Zombies and Other Minds

4. Fake Halloween Tombstones and the Brevity of Life

5. On this date in 2008, MavPhil moved to Typepad which has proven to be a satisfactory blogging platform with an extremely reliable server.  It works best with Mozilla Firefox. Traffic is up: on good days 2000 pageviews and up.

6.  Zombie Girl: But She's Not There!

7.  A Strange Experience in the Charles Doughty Memorial Suite

8. Screamin' Jay Hawkins, I Put a Spell on You

9. Mark Anderson explains #1 supra:

On Halloween I take to class a medical-school skull with a removable skull cap.
Inside are various gloomy or semi-gloomy thoughts on slips of paper. Each
student takes one, and next time we meet students read them aloud one by one,
and when they're done we discuss them. Anyway, I was preparing the skull this
morning and thought you might enjoy Melville's thought.

10. October, sadly, ends once again.  How fast she flies.  But here in the Sonoran desert she is the harbinger of the loveliest time of the year.  Happy Halloween, everyone. 

Copy Editor Makes Me Out to be a Disease

Dear Dr. Varicella:
 
Attached you will find two PDFs: a copyedited version of your manuscript and a version indicating changes to the original file. This is your final opportunity to make any clarifications or stylistic changes to the manuscript.
An honest mistake, no doubt, so I won't reveal the names of the editor or the journal.  But it is a little ironic that a copy editor would make such a mistake.  It's tough being an editor.  It's a lousy job.  So I want to thank all of the editors out there without whom those of us who publish  would not see our words in print.

The only thing that really gets my goat is political correctness in a copy editor. I vent my spleen in The Paltry Mentality of the Copy Editor and Copy Editors and Political Correctness.

Let me end with a bit of praise for the tribe of bloggers. Most people 'massacre' my name and it "pisses me off" in the phraseology of Jeff Dunham's Walter; but bloggers almost universally get it right.  No surprise, I suppose:  bloggers are an elite group of highly literate natural-born scribblers.

Do Merely Intentional Objects Have Being of Their Own? With a Little Help from Ingarden

WARNING!  Scholastic hairsplitting up ahead!  If you are allergic to this sort of thing, head elsewhere.  My old post, On Hairsplitting, may be of interest.

My  Czech colleague Lukas Novak seems to hold that there is no mode of being that is the mode of being of purely or merely intentional objects:

. . . no problem to say that a merely intentional object O has an esse intentionale; but what is this esse? There are reasons to think that it is nothing within O: for objects have intentional being in virtue of being conceived (known, etc. . . ), and cognition in general is an immanent operation, i.e., its effects remain within its subject. It would be absurd to assume that by conceiving of Obama just now (and so imparting to  him an esse intentionale) I cause a change in him! So intentional being seems to be a mere extrinsic denomination from the cognitive act, a merely extrinsic property. Consequently, objects which have only intentional being, are in themselves nothing. They do not represent an item in the complete inventory of what there is. It seems to me that it is an error (yes, I believe there are philosophical errors:-)) to assume that objects must be something in themselves in order to be capable of being conceived (or referred to).

IngardenWhile agreeing with much of what Novak says, I think it is reasonable to maintain that  merely intentional objects enjoy intentional being, esse intentionale, a mode of being all their own, despite the obvious fact that merely intentional objects are 'existentially heteronomous,' a phrase to be defined shortly.  But to discuss this with any rigor we need to make some distinctions.  I will be drawing upon the work of Roman Ingarden, student of Edmund Husserl and a distinguished philosopher in his own right.  I will be defending what I take to be something in the vicinity of Ingarden's position.

1. An example of a purely intentional object is a table that does not exist in reality, but is created by me in imagination with all and only the properties I freely ascribe to it.  In a series of mental acts (intentional experiences) I imagine a table.  The table is the intentional object of the series of acts.  It is one to their many, and for this reason alone distinct from them.  Act is not object, and object is not act, even though they are correlated necessarily.  In virtue of its intentionality, an act is necessarily an act of an object, the italicized phrase to be read as an objective genitive, and the object, being purely or merely intentional, is dependent for its existence on the act.   But although the object cannot exist without the act, the object is no part of the act, kein reeller Inhalt as Husserl would say.  So, given that the act is a mental or psychic reality, it does not follow that the object, even though purely intentional, is a mental or psychic reality.  Indeed, it is fairly obvious that the imagined table is not a mental or psychic reality.  The object, not being immanent to the act, is in a certain sense transcendent, enjoying  a sort of transcendence-in-immanence, if I remember my Husserl correctly.  Of course it is not transcendent in the sense of existing on its own independently of consciousness.  Now consider a really existent table.  It may or may not become my intentional object.  If it does, it is not a purely intentional object.  A purely intentional object, then, is one whose entire being is exhausted in being an object or accusative of a conscious intending.  For finite minds such as ours, nothing real is such that its being is wholly exhaustible by its being an intentional object.

My merely imagined table does not exist in reality, 'outside' my mind.  But it also does not exist 'in' my mind as identical to the act of imagining it or as a proper part of the act of imagining it, or as any sort of mental content, as Twardowski clearly saw.  Otherwise, (i) the merely imagined table would have the nature of an experience, which it does not have, and (ii) it would exist in reality, when it doesn't, and (iii) it would have properties that cannot be properties of mental acts or contents such as the property of being spatially extended.

2.  The problem posed by purely intentional objects can be framed as the problem of logically reconciling the following propositions:

A.  Some mental acts are directed upon nonexistent, purely intentional, objects.
B.  Anti-Psychologism:  These purely intentional objects typically do not exist intramentally, for the Twardowskian reasons above cited.
C.  These purely intentional objects do not exist extramentally, else they wouldn't be purely intentional.
D.  These purely intentional objects are not nothing: they have some mode of being.
E.  Existential Monism:  everything that exists or has being exists or has being in the same way or mode.

The pentad is logically inconsistent.  One solution is to reject (D):   Purely intentional objects do not exist at all, or have any sort of being, but we are nonetheless able to stand in the intentional relation to them.  To this Twardowski-Meinong-Grossmann view I have two objections.  First, what does not exist at all is nothing, hence no definite object.  Second, if intentionality is a relation, then all its relata must exist. A better solution, that of Ingarden, is to reject (E).

3. Ingarden rejects Existential Monism, maintaining that  there are different modes of being. (TMB, 48) Here are four modes Ingarden distinguishes:

a. Existential Autonomy.  The self-existent is existentially autonomous.  It "has its existential foundation in istelf." (Time and Modes of Being, p. 43) 

b. Existential Heteronomy.  The non-self-existent is the existentially heteronomous.  Purely intentional objects  are existentially heteronomous:  they have their existential foundation not in themselves, but in another.  Now if existential heteronomy is a mode of being, and purely intentional objects enjoy this mode of being, then it follows straightaway that purely intentional objects have being, and indeed their own heteronomous being.  If Novak denies this, then this is where our disagreement is located.

c. Existential Originality. The existentially original, by its very nature, cannot be produced by anything else.  If it exists, it cannot not exist. (52)  It is therefore permanent and indestructible. God, if he exists, would be an example of a being that is existentially original.  But matter, as conceived by dialectical materialists, would also be an example, if it exists. (79)

d. Existential Derivativeness.  The existentially derivative is such that it can exist only as produced by another.  The existentially derivative may be either existentially autonomous or existentially heteronomous.  Thus purely intentional objects are both existentially derivative and existentially heteronomous.

4. Now let me see if I can focus my rather subtle difference from Novak.  I am sure we can agree on this much: purely intentional objects are neither existentially original nor existentially autonomous.  They are existentially derivative, though not in the way a divinely created substance is existentially derivative: such substances, though derivative, are autonomous.  So I think we can agree that purely intentional objects are existentially heteronomous.  The issue that divides us is whether they have their own, albeit heteronomous, being.  Or is it rather the case that their being reduces to the being of something else?  I say that purely intentional objects have a very weak mode of being, existential heteronomy, in Ingarden's jargon.  Novak denies this.  Novak cites his master, the doctor subtilis, Duns Scotus:

 

And if you are looking for some “true being” of this object as such [viz. of
the object qua conceived], there is none to be found over and above that
“being in a qualified sense”, except that this “being in a qualified sense” can
be reduced to some “being in an unqualified sense”, which is the being of
the respective intellection. But this being in an unqualified sense does not
belong to that which is said to “be in a qualified sense” formally, but only
terminatively or principiatively — which means that to this “true being” that
“being in a qualified sense” is reduced, so that without the true being of this
[intellection] there would be no “being in a qualified sense” of that [object
qua conceived]. – Ord. I, dist. 36, q. un., n. 46 (ed. Vat. VI, 289)

The idea seems to be that the being of the purely intentional object reduces to the being of the act, and that it therefore has no 'true being' of its own. The purely intentional object has being only in a qualified sense.  This qualified being, however, reduces to the being of the intellection.  I think this reduction opens Scotus and Novak up to the  charge of psychologism, against which Ingarden, good student of Husserl that he was, rails on pp. 48-49 of TMB.  For if the being of the purely intentional object reduces to the being of the act, then the purely intentional object has  mental or psychic being — which is not the case.  The object is not a psychic content.  It is not the act or a part of the act; not is it any other sort of psychic reality. 

Psychologism is avoided, however, if purely intentional objects are granted their own mode of being, that of existential heteronomy.  Although they derive their being from the the being of mental acts, their being is not the being of mental acts, but their own mode of being.  Analogy:  Though created substance derive their being from God, their mode of being is their own and not the same as God's mode of being.

The ObamaCare Outrage is Upon Us

The Outrage Arrives

The ObamaCare Awakening

For all of the Affordable Care Act's technical problems, at least one part is working on schedule. The law is systematically dismantling the individual insurance market, as its architects intended from the start.

The millions of Americans who are receiving termination notices because their current coverage does not conform to Health and Human Services Department rules may not realize this is by design. Maybe they trusted President Obama's repeated falsehood that people who liked their health plans could keep them. But Americans should understand that this month's mass cancellation wave has been the President's political goal since 2008. Liberals believe they must destroy the market in order to save it.

Do you get it, now?

Cancelled Policies Ignite Furor

I'm sorry, but I feel no sympathy for the liberals who supported ObamaCare and then were shocked when their premiums skyrocketed.  They say things like, "I was all for ObamaCare but I didn't think I'd be paying for it."  Well, who did you well-off liberal dumbasses think was going to pay for it?  Now that you've been kicked in the balls by reality you might consider getting your heads out of your feel-good asses long enough to start thinking for a change about what this lying left-wing fascist is doing to our country.  Most of what he says is bullshit and shuck-and-jive, but he meant it when he spoke of fundamentally transforming America.

Exaggeration

Not content to say what is true, people exaggerate thereby turning the true into the false. This post analyzes a particular type of exaggeration which is illustrated by something Dennis Prager said on his radio show one morning:  "Happiness is a moral obligation, not a psychological state."  Since I agree that we have a moral obligation to try to be happy, I won't say anything more about the first half of Prager's assertion.  What I object to is the second half.  Why does he say something that is plainly false?  What we have here is a form of exaggeration.  Prager wants to convey to us something that he, rightly, believes is important, namely, that we ought to strive to be happy, both for our own benefit and for the benefit of others.  In order to emphasize the point, to throw it into relief as it were, he follows it up with another assertion whch is false, namely, that happiness is not a psychological state.  Obviously, if I am happy, I am in a psychological  state.  What interests me is the pattern or form of this type of exaggeration which is this:

To emphasize that a is F, say 'a is F but not G' even though a is G.

Three examples from sober philosophers.

Martin Buber, who is certainly no Frenchman, writes that "a melody is not composed of tones, nor a verse of words. . ." (I and Thou, p. 59) His point is that a melody cannot be reduced to its individual notes, nor a verse to its constituent words. But he expresses this truth in a way that makes it absurdly false. A melody without tones would be no melody at all. The litterateur exaggerates for literary effect, but Buber is no mere litterateur. So what is going on?

For a second example, consider Martin Heidegger. Somewhere in Sein und Zeit he writes that Das Dasein ist nie vorhanden. The human being is never present-at-hand. This is obviously false in that the human being  has a body which is present-at-hand in nature as surely as any animal or stone. What he is driving at is the truth — or at least the plausibility — that the human being enjoys a special mode of Being, Existenz, that is radically unlike the Vorhandenheit of the mere thing in nature and the Zuhandenheit of the tool. So why doesn't he speak the truth, and nothing but the truth, without exaggerating?

And then there is Ludwig Wittgenstein, who, according to J. N. Findlay, "took every wrong turn a philosopher can take." (Personal communication) Wittgenstein's fideism involves such absurd exaggerations as that religions imply no theoretical views. But when a Christian, reciting the Apostle's Creed, says "I believe in God the Father, almighty creator of heaven and earth . . ." he commits himself thereby to the metaphysical view that heaven and earth have a certain ontological status, namely, that of being creatures.

Of course, the Christian is doing more than this: his 'I believe' expresses trust in God as a person and not mere belief that certain propositions are true. But to deny that there is any propositional  content to his belief would be ludicrous. And yet that appears to be what Wittgenstein is doing.

‘Each Other’ versus ‘One Another’

There are still a lot of posts from the old Powerblogs site that have yet to be uploaded here.  What follows is one that even I find pedantic.  And I'm a pedant!

Can 'each other'  and 'one another' be used interchangeably by good writers, or is there some distinction we need to observe? Compare 'less' and 'fewer.' Good writers know that 'less' is used with mass nouns such as 'food,' 'furniture'  and 'snow' whereas 'fewer' is employed with such count nouns as 'meals,' 'tables' and 'snow plows.' Correct: 'If you eat less, you consume fewer calories.' Incorrect: 'If you eat less, you consume less calories.'  The second sentence should grate against your linguistic sensibilities.

No doubt there are schoolmarm strictures that good writers may violate with impunity. 'Never split an infinitive' and 'Never begin a sentence with a conjunction' are two examples. But I deny that the fewer/less distinction is in the same grammatical boat: it reflects prima facie logical and ontological distinctions that need to be acknowledged. They are distinctions of the Manifest Image, to borrow a term from Wilfrid Sellars, distinctions that are innocent until proven guilty. Whether these distinctions can survive deeper logical and ontological analysis is a further question.

Now on to my topic.  

Bill and Ron are chess players who play each other on Sunday afternoons. But we could just as well say that they play one another on Sunday afternoons. For if each plays the other, then each plays
another. And if each one plays another, then each one plays the other given that there are only two players. Now suppose Bill and Ron start a chess club with more than two members. When the members meet they play one another, not each other. Why?

Suppose there are three members. Each one plays one of the others; it is not the case that each one plays the other — for the simple reason that there are two others. Since each one plays one of the two others, each one plays an other, hence another.

I therefore lay down the following rule. 'Each other' and 'one another' are stylistic variants of each other, and are to that extent intersubstitutable salva significatione,  in contexts in which two things stand in some sort of reciprocal relation. In contexts in which more than two things stand in some sort of reciprocal relation, however, 'one another' is correct and 'each other' incorrect.

How did I arrive at this? Well, I gave an argument that appeals to  your reason. I did not invoke any authority — that would be  unphilosophical. Nor does actual usage cut any ice with me. Since  grammar has a normative component, it cannot merely describe actual usage. For if boneheads prevail, usage degenerates. Describing the details of degeneration may well be a worthwhile linguistic exercise,  but conservatives, here as elsewhere, want to impede degeneration rather than merely record it. Grammar must be based in logic, logic in ontology, ontology in — what?   Onto-theology? 

Charles Krauthammer the Chess Player

Excerpt:

Krauthammer became hooked on the game when he was 20 — he is now 60 — and visited a friend in Cambridge, Mass. He found his friend’s roommate sitting with a chess set and an unfamiliar device.

“I said, ‘What is that?’ ” Krauthammer recalled, “And he said, ‘That is a chess clock.’ I had just come in from the plane. It was 10 o’clock at night, and I sat down to play and didn’t get up until 5 in the morning. I had found something that I loved, and I was in deep trouble.”

Krauthammer has chess boards in his office and a “chess room” at home. For a while, he held a small, informal chess club every Monday; members included the liberal scourges Charles Murray (co-author of “The Bell Curve”) and the writer Dinesh D’Souza. Krauthammer said they called it the Pariah Chess Club.

Saturday Night at the Oldies: “I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen”

Kerouac's Big Sur opens with a reference to a song:

The church is blowing a sad windblown "Kathleen" on the bells in the skid row slums as I wake up all woebegone and goopy, groaning from another drinking bout and groaning most of all because I'd ruined my "secret return" to San Francisco by getting silly drunk while hiding in the alleys with bums and then marching forth into North Beach to see everybody altho Lorenz Monsanto and I'd exchanged huge letters outlining how I would sneak in quietly, call him on the phone using a code name like Adam Yulch or Lalagy Pulvertaft (also writers) and then he would secretly drive me to his cabin in the Big Sur woods where I would be alone and undisturbed for six weeks just chopping wood, drawing water, writing, sleeping, hiking, etc., etc.

What is this song "Kathleen"?  Reading on (emphasis added):

But instead I've bounced drunk into his City Lights bookshop at the height of Saturday night business, everyone recognized me (even tho" I was wearing my disguise-like fisherman's hat and fishermen coat and pants waterproof) and "t'all ends up a roaring drunk in all the famous bars the bloody "King of the Beatniks" is back in town buying drinks for everyone — Two days of that, including Sunday the day Lorenzo is supposed to pick me up at my "secret" skid row hotel (the Mars on 4th and Howard) but when he calls for me there's no answer, he has the clerk open the door and what does he see but me out on the floor among bottles, Ben Fagan stretched out partly beneath the bed, and Robert Browning the beatnik painter out on the bed, snoring… So says to himself "I'll pick him up next weekend, I guess he wants to drink for a week in the city (like he always does, I guess)" so off he drives to his Big Sur cabin without me thinking he's doing the right thing but my God when I wake up, and Ben and Browning are gone, they've somehow dumped me on the bed, and I hear "I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen" being bellroped so sad in the fog winds out there that blow across the rooftops of eerie old hangover Frisco, wow, I've hit the end of the trail and cant even drag my body any more even to a refuge in the woods let alone stay upright in the city a minute —

"I'll Take you Home Again, Kathleen" sounds like an Irish ballad but was actually written by an American, Thomas P. Westendorf, in 1875.  Kerouac might have first  heard it in the 1940s. 

Josef Locke's rendition from the late '40s.

Arizona's own Marty Robbins' version

Slim Whitman's

Johnny Cash's

Louisiana Jazz Band version

The Platters, too, give it a try.

On the Label ‘Obamacare’

Some object to the popular 'Obamacare' label given that the official title of the law is 'Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act' or, as commonly truncated, 'Affordable Care Act.' But there is a good reason to favor the popular moniker: it is descriptive where the other two labels are evaluative, expressing as they do a pro attitude toward the bill. 

Will the law really protect patients?  That is an evaluative judgment based on projections many regard as flimsy.  Will the law really make health care affordable?  And for whom? Will care mandated for all be readily available and of high quality? 

Everybody wants affordable and readily available health care of high quality for the greatest number possible.  The question is how best to attain this end.  The 'Affordable Care Act' label begs the question as to whether or not Obama's bill will achieve the desired end.  'Obamacare' does not.  It is, if not all that descriptive, at least evaluatively neutral.

If Obama's proposal were  referred to as "Socialized Medicine Health Care Act' or 'Another Step Toward the Nanny State Act,'  people would protest the negative evaluations  embedded in the titles.  Titles of bills ought to be neutral.

Proponents of a consumption tax  sometimes refer to it as a fair tax.  Same problem.  'Fair' is an evaluative term while 'consumption' is not.  'Consumption tax' conveys the idea that taxes should be collected at the consuming end rather than at the income-producing end.  'Fair tax' fails to convey that idea, but what is worse, it begs the question as to what a fair tax would look like.  It is a label that invites the conflation of distinct  questions:  What is a consumption tax?  Is it good?  Answer the first and it remains an open question what the answer to the second is. 

What is fairness?  What is justice?  Is justice fairness?  These are questions that need to be addressed, not questions answers to which ought to be presupposed.

There is no good reason to object to 'Obamacare' — the word, not the thing.