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December 26 Information
Leeward Island missionaries
This
book summarize the history of the London Missionary Society in the Society Islands mentioning accounts mentions by the missionaries like James C. Vivian. Where can I find the original accounts written by resident missionaries such as Vivian? Anywhere online? Would these papers be held with the records of the London Missionary Society at the library of the School of Oriental and African Studies in London?--
KAVEBEAR (
talk)
08:03, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Looks like SOAS is the best place to start. They definitely hold at least some original material written by Vivian from the field (examples
here and
here). The archivist can be contacted via docenquiry@soas.co.uk. -
Karenjc(talk)08:54, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The cathedral's
website says it has been suggested that Henry made it a cathedral as a tribute to Katherine, so it's possible that Mary felt she couldn't move her mother's bones as they would make the cathedral a place of pilgrimage for her. --
TammyMoet (
talk)
12:12, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think Tammy was suggesting that Mary wanted Peterborough to become a unique place of pilgrimage for her mother, and that's why she didn't move the bones to Westminster Abbey.
Blueboar (
talk)
13:55, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
If so, Mary had changed her mind by the time she wrote her will, in which she requested that her mother be disinterred from Peterborough and reburied close to her own tomb. This request, like others in her will, was ignored. -
Karenjc(talk)23:11, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Did Ayn Rand ever address this question?
My understanding is that she advocated a pure Laissez Faire economy where government stays completely out of business, not regulating it at all. My question: are there any sources to her addressing questions as to how, if her philosophy were implemented, things like Henry Frick working steel workers into the ground and bringing the hired guns the Pinkertons to the
Homestead Strike would not happen? Basically, why she thought her philosophy would not lead to Robber Barons everywhere?
75.75.42.89 (
talk)
18:47, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
She doesn't allow the initiation of force by any party, public or private, businessman or laborer. See
[1]. Nor is she of the notion that crimes won't happen. That's the whole reason the government exists, to prevent, if possible, and punish them. She's neither for the businessman against the laborer nor for the laborer against the businessman. Her characters Mike in The Fountainhead and the Wet Nurse in Atlas Shrugged are some of her greatest heroes. If you want essays on the subject, read Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.
μηδείς (
talk)
19:36, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Rand doesn't think robber barons are a problem. If their workers don't like conditions, her view would be that they can and should strike out on their own. Furthermore, she would argue, I think, the robber barons' mastery of business entitles them to their wealth and power. The issue is the conflict between freedom and equality. Rand comes down absolutely on the side of freedom. The issue that she doesn't acknowledge is what happens when the only freedom available to some people is the freedom to starve.
Marco polo (
talk)
19:57, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
It is an amusing book/short story. When Mr. Equality shows his rediscovery of electricity to the collective and how it could be used for light, they cry "What will become of all the candlemakers?!" :)
20.137.2.50 (
talk)
16:30, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Basically a nation full of Luddites. Like the story of the New England farmer who was turning 100, and a reporter commented to him that he must have seen many changes in his lifetime. The farmer answered, "Yep... and I was against every one of 'em." ←
Baseball BugsWhat's up, Doc?carrots→
18:34, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
What do you mean by "power"? Rand never says anything of the sort. Nor would she use a term like robber baron, which implies some unspecified crime of being a businessman. People don't just materialize out of thin air, starving to death on the estates of productive businessman. Let's stick to sources and quotes, rather than smears and supposition.
μηδείς (
talk)
20:32, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Here is a supporter of Ayn Rand who agrees with me that her conception of freedom includes the freedom to starve. That is not a smear, it is even a source sympathetic to Rand. And
here is a source explaining why Rand lacks much credibility among serious economists or other scholars.
Marco polo (
talk)
21:25, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
This is not a chat board or a soapbox. If you have requests for references, like the ones I have given, feel free. Otherwise there are plenty of places to express your opinions elsewhere.
μηδείς (
talk)
02:23, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I appreciate the references so far, Medeis and Marco polo. I'll try to find Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal through my local library system, as I'm not interested enough to buy the book.
75.75.42.89 (
talk)
03:57, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The owners of the TSF would have been
criminally negligent in the least for chaining the doors shut, if not guilty of
manslaughter.
The owner of the Savar building is the son of a politician whom it would seem was able with his
political pull to bypass the rules that applied to other owners, and who had industrial machinery running in a building certified only for commercial use. Without making a definitive statement, since our article doesn't go into the proper details, he'd presumably be liable to charges of criminal negligence in regard to the safety of those entering his building, and civilly liable to any banks or owners who suffered damages due to his misuse of the structure.
In the US, for example, one wouldn't get a loan on a property unless the building's use were described and its suitability to that use somehow certified. Issues like
due care and
attractive nuisance and such would apply based on
common law. Businesses wouldn't be able to secure loans or make contracts if reasonable liability insurance were required, yet the standards of industry consultants like
Underwriters Laboratories weren't met.
Who pays (or, how does the government realistically raise enough money) for the courts and police to rule and enforce in Rand's world?
20.137.2.50 (
talk) 20:07, 27 December 2013 (UTC) (IP deleted question after it was answered, I restored it for context.
μηδείς (
talk)
20:24, 27 December 2013 (UTC))reply
The people who use them? Rand isn't a rationalist or a utopian; she doesn't have a set agenda other than moving towards freedom and
minimal government. Local jurisdictions would work out what was best, lotteries, user fees, taxes on contracts, loser pays/the court taking a percentage of judgments. This is covered in Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.μηδείς (
talk)
20:24, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Assuming that's meant seriously, it is interesting that slavery can only exist where it is established by government regulation. (This is covered over chapter length in Paterson, cited above.) There was no slavery in the US North, or in the territories, where local government wouldn't enforce it. Only after statehood was granted to "slave states" did or could plantation owners expand into those territories, under slave constitutions.
The
Dred Scott Case, decided by a Democrat majority and written by a Democrat chief justice, upholding slavery, required that free states submit to the federal government and enforce the fugitive slave act. They required the industrial capitalist North to countenance and collude in an institution they wanted no part of, and fond no profit in. It was the laissez-faire classic liberals in Britain who outlawed slavery, and they who prevented Britain from intervening on the side of the the South in the US Civil War. Note also that there never was any industrial slavery in the US, only the mockery of feudalism that existed on southern plantations. Again, how any of this has to do with Capitalism or Ayn Rand is, to say it charitably, unclear in the extreme.
μηδείς (
talk)
02:36, 29 December 2013 (UTC)reply
not a debate forum
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
Did Rand ever propose any way that you could be put in an ambulance and taken to a hospital after a debilitating heart attack if you left your ID and wallet at home? Or some way to get the fire department to fight a fire at your neighbor's house when they haven't paid up on their firefighting insurance? As far as I can tell, Rand was adamantly opposed to paved public roads, which puts her pretty far into the "totally unworkable ideas whose proponents claim can be reached from first principles thanks to amphetamines" camp, also inhabited by certain political figures about which Mike Godwin has noted certain rhetorical affects. Read "The Ethics of Emergencies” in The Virtue of Selfishness to see her try to figure out how to avoid cooperation.
Nature and logic do not agree.EllenCT (
talk)
04:16, 29 December 2013 (UTC)reply
If you have questions, post them, or if you have an answer to how Rand would respond to hiring private agents to commit murder, please post it.
μηδείς (
talk)
00:38, 30 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Independent and unaligned politicians in Australia
What's the difference, at least in a NSW context? Apparently
Inverell Shire has a nine-member council with two independents and seven unaligned; I can't understand why they're not all grouped together.
Nyttend (
talk)
22:11, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
It's very common in Australian local government elections for members of the major political parties to stand, but claim that that are not representing their party, just themselves and the local people, and hence are independent. I think it's a load of hogwash, but maybe it's relevant hogwash.
HiLo48 (
talk)
23:16, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Welcome to the Wikipedia Humanities Reference Desk Archives
The page you are currently viewing is an archive page. While you can leave answers for any questions shown below, please ask new questions on one of the
current reference desk pages.
December 26 Information
Leeward Island missionaries
This
book summarize the history of the London Missionary Society in the Society Islands mentioning accounts mentions by the missionaries like James C. Vivian. Where can I find the original accounts written by resident missionaries such as Vivian? Anywhere online? Would these papers be held with the records of the London Missionary Society at the library of the School of Oriental and African Studies in London?--
KAVEBEAR (
talk)
08:03, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Looks like SOAS is the best place to start. They definitely hold at least some original material written by Vivian from the field (examples
here and
here). The archivist can be contacted via docenquiry@soas.co.uk. -
Karenjc(talk)08:54, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The cathedral's
website says it has been suggested that Henry made it a cathedral as a tribute to Katherine, so it's possible that Mary felt she couldn't move her mother's bones as they would make the cathedral a place of pilgrimage for her. --
TammyMoet (
talk)
12:12, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I think Tammy was suggesting that Mary wanted Peterborough to become a unique place of pilgrimage for her mother, and that's why she didn't move the bones to Westminster Abbey.
Blueboar (
talk)
13:55, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
If so, Mary had changed her mind by the time she wrote her will, in which she requested that her mother be disinterred from Peterborough and reburied close to her own tomb. This request, like others in her will, was ignored. -
Karenjc(talk)23:11, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Did Ayn Rand ever address this question?
My understanding is that she advocated a pure Laissez Faire economy where government stays completely out of business, not regulating it at all. My question: are there any sources to her addressing questions as to how, if her philosophy were implemented, things like Henry Frick working steel workers into the ground and bringing the hired guns the Pinkertons to the
Homestead Strike would not happen? Basically, why she thought her philosophy would not lead to Robber Barons everywhere?
75.75.42.89 (
talk)
18:47, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
She doesn't allow the initiation of force by any party, public or private, businessman or laborer. See
[1]. Nor is she of the notion that crimes won't happen. That's the whole reason the government exists, to prevent, if possible, and punish them. She's neither for the businessman against the laborer nor for the laborer against the businessman. Her characters Mike in The Fountainhead and the Wet Nurse in Atlas Shrugged are some of her greatest heroes. If you want essays on the subject, read Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.
μηδείς (
talk)
19:36, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Rand doesn't think robber barons are a problem. If their workers don't like conditions, her view would be that they can and should strike out on their own. Furthermore, she would argue, I think, the robber barons' mastery of business entitles them to their wealth and power. The issue is the conflict between freedom and equality. Rand comes down absolutely on the side of freedom. The issue that she doesn't acknowledge is what happens when the only freedom available to some people is the freedom to starve.
Marco polo (
talk)
19:57, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
It is an amusing book/short story. When Mr. Equality shows his rediscovery of electricity to the collective and how it could be used for light, they cry "What will become of all the candlemakers?!" :)
20.137.2.50 (
talk)
16:30, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Basically a nation full of Luddites. Like the story of the New England farmer who was turning 100, and a reporter commented to him that he must have seen many changes in his lifetime. The farmer answered, "Yep... and I was against every one of 'em." ←
Baseball BugsWhat's up, Doc?carrots→
18:34, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
What do you mean by "power"? Rand never says anything of the sort. Nor would she use a term like robber baron, which implies some unspecified crime of being a businessman. People don't just materialize out of thin air, starving to death on the estates of productive businessman. Let's stick to sources and quotes, rather than smears and supposition.
μηδείς (
talk)
20:32, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Here is a supporter of Ayn Rand who agrees with me that her conception of freedom includes the freedom to starve. That is not a smear, it is even a source sympathetic to Rand. And
here is a source explaining why Rand lacks much credibility among serious economists or other scholars.
Marco polo (
talk)
21:25, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
This is not a chat board or a soapbox. If you have requests for references, like the ones I have given, feel free. Otherwise there are plenty of places to express your opinions elsewhere.
μηδείς (
talk)
02:23, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
I appreciate the references so far, Medeis and Marco polo. I'll try to find Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal through my local library system, as I'm not interested enough to buy the book.
75.75.42.89 (
talk)
03:57, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
The owners of the TSF would have been
criminally negligent in the least for chaining the doors shut, if not guilty of
manslaughter.
The owner of the Savar building is the son of a politician whom it would seem was able with his
political pull to bypass the rules that applied to other owners, and who had industrial machinery running in a building certified only for commercial use. Without making a definitive statement, since our article doesn't go into the proper details, he'd presumably be liable to charges of criminal negligence in regard to the safety of those entering his building, and civilly liable to any banks or owners who suffered damages due to his misuse of the structure.
In the US, for example, one wouldn't get a loan on a property unless the building's use were described and its suitability to that use somehow certified. Issues like
due care and
attractive nuisance and such would apply based on
common law. Businesses wouldn't be able to secure loans or make contracts if reasonable liability insurance were required, yet the standards of industry consultants like
Underwriters Laboratories weren't met.
Who pays (or, how does the government realistically raise enough money) for the courts and police to rule and enforce in Rand's world?
20.137.2.50 (
talk) 20:07, 27 December 2013 (UTC) (IP deleted question after it was answered, I restored it for context.
μηδείς (
talk)
20:24, 27 December 2013 (UTC))reply
The people who use them? Rand isn't a rationalist or a utopian; she doesn't have a set agenda other than moving towards freedom and
minimal government. Local jurisdictions would work out what was best, lotteries, user fees, taxes on contracts, loser pays/the court taking a percentage of judgments. This is covered in Capitalism, the Unknown Ideal.μηδείς (
talk)
20:24, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Assuming that's meant seriously, it is interesting that slavery can only exist where it is established by government regulation. (This is covered over chapter length in Paterson, cited above.) There was no slavery in the US North, or in the territories, where local government wouldn't enforce it. Only after statehood was granted to "slave states" did or could plantation owners expand into those territories, under slave constitutions.
The
Dred Scott Case, decided by a Democrat majority and written by a Democrat chief justice, upholding slavery, required that free states submit to the federal government and enforce the fugitive slave act. They required the industrial capitalist North to countenance and collude in an institution they wanted no part of, and fond no profit in. It was the laissez-faire classic liberals in Britain who outlawed slavery, and they who prevented Britain from intervening on the side of the the South in the US Civil War. Note also that there never was any industrial slavery in the US, only the mockery of feudalism that existed on southern plantations. Again, how any of this has to do with Capitalism or Ayn Rand is, to say it charitably, unclear in the extreme.
μηδείς (
talk)
02:36, 29 December 2013 (UTC)reply
not a debate forum
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
Did Rand ever propose any way that you could be put in an ambulance and taken to a hospital after a debilitating heart attack if you left your ID and wallet at home? Or some way to get the fire department to fight a fire at your neighbor's house when they haven't paid up on their firefighting insurance? As far as I can tell, Rand was adamantly opposed to paved public roads, which puts her pretty far into the "totally unworkable ideas whose proponents claim can be reached from first principles thanks to amphetamines" camp, also inhabited by certain political figures about which Mike Godwin has noted certain rhetorical affects. Read "The Ethics of Emergencies” in The Virtue of Selfishness to see her try to figure out how to avoid cooperation.
Nature and logic do not agree.EllenCT (
talk)
04:16, 29 December 2013 (UTC)reply
If you have questions, post them, or if you have an answer to how Rand would respond to hiring private agents to commit murder, please post it.
μηδείς (
talk)
00:38, 30 December 2013 (UTC)reply
Independent and unaligned politicians in Australia
What's the difference, at least in a NSW context? Apparently
Inverell Shire has a nine-member council with two independents and seven unaligned; I can't understand why they're not all grouped together.
Nyttend (
talk)
22:11, 26 December 2013 (UTC)reply
It's very common in Australian local government elections for members of the major political parties to stand, but claim that that are not representing their party, just themselves and the local people, and hence are independent. I think it's a load of hogwash, but maybe it's relevant hogwash.
HiLo48 (
talk)
23:16, 27 December 2013 (UTC)reply