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Thursday 3 October 2019

How can you compare capitalism to philosophy?

answers1: ...capitalism...bottom line make money for yourself... <br>
<br>
...philosophy...bottom line...self in a world of many changes internal
and externally...dealing with the 5 senses, 4 beings: mental,
physical, spiritual and emotional...how you deal with...beliefs, fate,
will and fact...
answers2: Capitalism is a system of economics. Philosophy is a study
of the way things should be and the way they started. Thus Capitalism
is just another subject within the realm of philosophy
answers3: You can't. Philosophy is a human art form trying to find
what is true. Capitalism is an economic system based on exploitation
and greed and is the antithesis of finding truth.
answers4: capitalism knows the cost, philosophy knows the beauty of life.
answers5: Philosophers throughout history, (Socrates, Plato,
Aristotle, Descartes, Hobbes, Kant, Nietzsche, Heideigger, Sartre,
Derrida), have been apologist for lying authorities. <br>
<br>
Capitalism is deception about ownership of companies. <br>
<br>
Get rich quick schemes in the capitalist business world, (buyouts,
IPOs, conglomerates, acquisitions, mergers, and the stock market), do
not actually work. Remaining solvent does not actually exist within
false economics capitalism. <br>
<br>
Profit existing in the capitalist business world, or millionaires
existing within capitalism, is pathological deception committed by the
21 organizations spying on the population with plain clothes agents,
(with covert fake names and fake backgrounds). <br>
<br>
Actual economics is the persons that are paying the business loans of
companies voting at work in order to control the property they are
paying for. <br>
<br>
Capitalism is the psychology of imaginary parents, false economics,
and the criminal deception of employees that are paying the bills
(including the stocks and bonds, or shares) of companies.
answers6: A capitalist system works best if even the people without
property accept the fact that the people who do have property have a
right to it. <br>
<br>
This is the notion of "legitimacy." All social systems have some
legitimacy issue, but it is in capitalism that they arise in this
form. If fear of the police and prisons is the only thing that
prevents theft, there will be a lot of theft (when potential thieves
are convinced no one is looking) and the institutions of law
enforcement maybe overwhelmed. On the other hand, if a lot of the
propertyless agree that stealing is wrong, and refrain from it
voluntarily even when no one is looking, the thefts that will take
place will be marginal and can be absorbed. <br>
<br>
Ultimately, legitimacy is an issue pf philosophy. So the implicit
philosophy of the non-wealthy is a crucial issue for capitalism. <br>
<br>
Hope that helps.

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