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The Fallacy of Ambiguity in the Non-Aggression Principle

Posted by By Neil December 14, 2020Posted inEpistemology, Moral Philosophy, Philosophy of Law, Political Philosophy
The Non-Aggression Principle (NAP) is an effectively axiomatic element of libertarian political philosophy. However, it suffers from a fallacy of ambiguity that results in omitting forms of aggression that are…
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The Categories of Well-Being

Posted by By Neil December 12, 2020Posted inEconomics, Moral Philosophy, Philosophy, Philosophy of Law, Political Philosophy
THE Categories of Well-Being is a universal hierarchy of intrinsic life values.[1] While each value is higher[2] than the previous, this does not indicate or suggest that the lower intrinsic…
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The Teleological Basis of Rights

Posted by By Neil December 8, 2020Posted inMoral Philosophy, Philosophy, Philosophy of Law, Political Philosophy, Praxeology
TELEOLOGY has fallen into general disrepute as a result of materialist and physicalist metaphysical worldviews which mostly gained prominence during the general European enlightenment period reaching its peak in the…
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  • The Fallacy of Ambiguity in the Non-Aggression Principle
  • The Categories of Well-Being
  • A Priorism: Impositionism or Reflectivism?
  • The Teleological Basis of Rights
  • The Basis of Methodological Individualism
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