MrJonno wrote:That is a fundamental misunderstanding of what natural rights are, and belies an individual who has not read the first thing about natural rights (e.g. Thomases Hobbes, Locke and Paine, and Immanuel Kant). Kant and Paine, of course, purported to derive natural rights through reason. Read, e.g. Paine's "Age of Reason" and "Rights of Man." And, see, Kant's "Groundwork on Metaphysics and Morals" and his "Critique of Pure Reason." The underpinnings for the Enlightenment thinkers in this area can be found in major ancient philosophers, like Lucretius (de rerum natura), the Epicurean philosophers, etc.
Sorry I've on going on the great philosopher Seth not that I'm big on philosophy its generally far too vague to have much use
That also belies an individual who who has not read the first thing about it.
MrJonno wrote:
Higher animals possess empathy which is a tool for deciding morality but in most cases of trial and error combined with natural selection (at a society level) is what determines it.
Right. Reason and experience.
MrJonno wrote:
Morality evolves which is why I have a serious problem with natural rights it assumes people who to me are just savages even if enlightened for their time get to decide what is right or wrong.
Well, that isn't what it means. I already pointed out to you that the natural rights posited in the desert island example are not the way people live under a social contract idea. Locke pointed that out too. Life in a state of nature is not the same as life in a society wherein people create governments among them. However, the idea of natural rights gives an underpinning as to the purpose of government. Since government is a concept and an organization created by humans, it exists for the purposes humans have for it. Government does not exist as
a priori for no purpose or function, or as an overarching controller of all things. Government is a creation of humans.
MrJonno wrote:
Never mind 300 years old even 50 years ago people had views that would make them appear to be monsters today and hope in 50 years time people will look back and same about us, ie progessive politics and morality.
Natural rights don't presuppose that society never changes. This is another major misunderstanding you have.
MrJonno wrote:
While I don't think rights are natural government certainly is, it comes from the word to manage and any two organisms will try to control or influence one another even if unconsciously. Wolves certainly don't have rights but they have clear and recognizable government.
Wolves don't have a government. Organization and organisms living in organized groups is not a government. Well, that isn't what libertarians mean by it (or, anyone else I've ever heard talk about it).
Governments are systems created by groups of people to conduct policy, actions and affairs. It certainly seems natural for groups of humans to form governments, though.
MrJonno wrote:
I have problems with libertarianism because it dismisses the fact that for 7 billion people to survive on this planet they have to do things that they may not want to do, that while freedom can an enabler for people to be happy its the being happy bit that is important not the freedom.
Lack of freedom makes people unhappy.
Libertarianism does not presuppose a lack of all government or organization.
MrJonno wrote:
Libertarianism dismisses the fact that every human being is intrinsically and involuntary linked. That every action a person does including breathing causes harm to others so therefore you can't say a person can do anything they want as long as it doesn't harm others as that is meaningless.
Breathing causes harm to others? You'll need to back that up.
MrJonno wrote:
We are harming each other every day the only question to be decided of is how much can you harm another person for your personal benefit and happiness. Should you be allowed to go near other people with a cold despite the fact that your cold can quite easily kill someone who already in bad health. As a society we have decided that as colds are so common a few dead old people is a price worth paying for the majority of us to get on with our lives. Try replacing a cold with the ebola virus and most countries will if you are lucky lock you up in a hospital whether you want to go or not
Society "decided" that? When? How?
It's really more of a function of impracticality of enforcement that we don't have greater restrictions on folks walking about in public with colds and illnesses. I doubt libertarians would object to a rule that said that sick people have to stay home until they get well, depending on the illness, of course. Non-contagious diseases ought not be included, I suspect. That's like how libertarians would not object to noise ordinances and ordinances regarding smoke and noxious fumes being emitted from one person's property to another, or companies dumping garbage in a river that leaves that company's property, etc.
I think you don't understand libertarianism, and you haven't been bothered much to find out about it.