Says who? I'll agree that we're getting into the gray area of semantics though.TLDR;
Self interest does not equal greed.
And this is proof of the semantics of the argument. You're sentence implies that a willingness to be dishonest scales with greed. In my view of the word it does not, they are independent attributes.Not everyone has acted on greed to the point where it is detrimental to society at large or crossed the boundaries of morality. It's the second that concerns me.
You think greed and dishonesty are never connected? That there would be a magic land I'd love to live in.And this is proof of the semantics of the argument. You're sentence implies that a willingness to be dishonest scales with greed. In my view of the word it does not, they are independent attributes.
Added at: 21:19Wikitionary said:Noun
greed (uncountable)
- A selfish or excessive desirefor more than is needed or deserved, especially of money, wealth, food, or other possessions.
His greed was his undoing.
What drove them was their ambition, their greed for power.
????I'll admit that the classical definition denotes malfeasance, but we capitalists are trying to do the whole "take it back" thing with the word.
This.Lol, yes, but as Clerks 2 showed us, if it isn't your word, you can't really 'take it back'.
Well, then you just take it outright.Lol, yes, but as Clerks 2 showed us, if it isn't your word, you can't really 'take it back'.
The idea behind capitalism isn't that greed is good, but that, as long as we're on equal footing, my greed and your greed cancel each other out... and that's why it's ok.I'll admit that the classical definition denotes malfeasance, but we capitalists are trying to do the whole "take it back" thing with the word.
A strong desire to make money tells me nothing, i for one have a strong desire to make enough money to live comfortably, and i doubt anyone would say i'm greedy based on that....I just hate it when I ever hear the implication that a strong desire to make money is immoral. It's ridiculous.
Because, as we all know, there is One True Definition for each and every word, and the only time there is confusion is when someone makes up an alternate definition.Yes. It depends on whether you make up definitions or not.
I was just trying to be funny, tbh, but now I'd like reputable sources (this is the important bit) which don't use the word 'greed' in a negative light. No, NRO and their ilk do NOT count as reputable.Because, as we all know, there is One True Definition for each and every word, and the only time there is confusion is when someone makes up an alternate definition.
Isn't that exactly why we have dictionaries? Why y'all gotta be trippin' over Webster's needs, man?!Because, as we all know, there is One True Definition for each and every word, and the only time there is confusion is when someone makes up an alternate definition.
See, this is exactly where your "greed = self interest /= need" thing doesn't really work. There's nothing "excessive" in the idea, regardless of an accurate threat analysis, that domination of the space race, and the technologies going into it, had national security implications. Was it a "need"? Given the historical knowledge now, probably not. Was it greed? Only if you believe that self-interest to be excessive or out of proportion. And that one is a hell of a lot tougher to determine for the space race.Did we need a space program, did we need to go to the moon? Or was it something we just wanted?
You think making consumer products greedy? There's a massive investment of money into that kind of development, and consumers still need to choose to buy them.Do you NEED an iPhone?
ARPA, DARPA, and CERN (for the WWW, at least) thought so.Do you NEED the internet?
Ugh. Semantic arguments are not solved that way. Dictionaries describe the language we use and they do it imperfectly. Nobody learns what words mean or their various shades of meaning by memorizing dictionary definitions. Dictionaries are just a blurry reflection of the language we actually use. Most people are able understand subtle differences in meaning derived from context. In the above conversation, the context being given lends meaning to the word greed as "wanting things offers a good incentive for people to do things". They aren't saying, "coveting thy neighbor's potatoes is a good incentive to do things" and I think it is pretty clear through the usage. Relying on the dictionary as a defense, as if it is the repository for all meanings and the source of all meanings is simply a weak argument.I was just trying to be funny, tbh, but now I'd like reputable sources (this is the important bit) which don't use the word 'greed' in a negative light. No, NRO and their ilk do NOT count as reputable.
That's entirely my point. Nobody is equating anything. They aren't saying, "whenever the word greed is used, it means someone wants more". That's what it would mean to equate the terms. People are simply using a word with a slightly off-beat meaning. We do that all the time in language every day. If anything, people on the other side of the argument are equating "Greed is good" with "Malfeasance is good", which is clearly not the intent of the phrase.MD, I'm pretty sure that the equation of "greed" to simply "wanting more" is what's being argued about, actually.
Obviously they would need to weight in themselves, but I highly doubt that they are saying that the One True Definition of the word greed is that it means "wanting more". They are using it in that particular context is all.I think you and I are reading two very different threads. It seems to me that GB and Necro are saying that "greed," as they use it, is in fact a word simply implying "desire for more" and that malfeasance is an external component to that desire, while those of us on the flip side are saying that using the word "greed" without the component of malfeasance is a deliberate mis-use of the word.
This has been an entirely semantical argument from the get-go because no one in this argument (yet) is trying to claim that "desire for more" is an inherently bad thing. No one is arguing that Necro and GB are pro-malfeasance. Well, GB might be, but he's not currently arguing it.
I think that you're out of your mind if you think that's ever going to happen.I think you need to stop re-watching Wall Street for a bit.
Depends. Whose virtue are we defining, and are they more mature than Iaculus' girlfriends?I think that you're out of your mind if you think that's ever going to happen.
Also, since we're now onto semantics, who here wants to define virtue for me?
Depends. Whose virtue are we defining, and are they more mature than Iaculus' girlfriends?
It is less funny when Iaculus isn't around at the moment.Icarus
I don't think so. Maybe he just changed his login name.did he get driven away from the boards because everyone kept calling him a pedo?
"Desire for more" tell you nothing about how much you already have...I think you and I are reading two very different threads. It seems to me that GB and Necro are saying that "greed," as they use it, is in fact a word simply implying "desire for more" and that malfeasance is an external component to that desire, while those of us on the flip side are saying that using the word "greed" without the component of malfeasance is a deliberate mis-use of the word.
Actually money isn't that great of a motivator: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motivation#BusinessCommunists talk about "need." It doesn't work. If people get what they need (and only what they need) regardless of effort, merit or skill, the system collapses because there's no incentive to do anything above the bare minimum, if even that... except for the all-too-rare-in-humanity overpowering sense of altruism.
If the system collapses, you're obviously not doing enough...the system collapses because there's no incentive to do anything above the bare minimum
Almost as if it was the catch phrase of a movie villain?As an aside, of course the malfeasance associated with greed is bad. If that was the type of greed that people were talking about, then it would simply be stupid, a no-brainer of an argument. At worst, the phrase "greed is good" is a silly turn of phrase with a not-so-clever alliteration and very little more to it.
Actually, I'm under the impression he is getting more than the victims.The officer that pepper sprayed the students nonchalantly received over 27,000 angry or threatening emails and text messages, and as a result suffers from psychiatric and nervous system damage for whitch he was awarded $38,055 in workers compensation from UC Davis, just a little less than the students each received for their trauma.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-24650954
On 26 September 2012, The University of California announced its decision to offer $30,000 to each of 21 plaintiffs who were pepper-sprayed by John Pike, according to a proposed settlement of a class-action lawsuit. The school also offered to pay $250,000 of the students' legal fees and set aside an additional $100,000 for any future claims related to the incident, which would allow each additional claimant up to $20,000 in damages. As part of the settlement offer, the school stated that it had, in relation to the pepper incident, "acted reasonably and with good intentions, without violating the rights."