Arthur wrote:>> They are:
>>
>>"";
>>
>>"".
>>
>> No exceptions allowed!
>>
>> The first, of course, means that that their can be no such thing as
>> unemployment - which might lead to some rewarding questions.
>>
>> The second accounts for some behavior that we are sometimes affronted by.
>
>It seems to me that neither statement can be proved or disproved.
>As assumptions one could just as well pose the opposite: 'desires are
> 'desires satisfied with greatest exertion' Arthur, look around.
Everywhere are people - including you and me - who are not described by
your posits. These Assumptions are self-evident - which gives them their
strength.>Or 'desires appear unlimited since they change over time' 'desires
>satisfied with different levels of exertion, depending on the physical
>and mental state of the individual', etc... Now you are, as they say,
cooking with gas. Your examples are all covered by the two Assumptions.
Work on these, for they give all of us who deal with people a beginning.
However, it's important that they aren't complicated or amended into
obfuscation. Harry
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Harry Pollard (818) 352-4141
Henry George School of Los Angeles
Box 655
Tujunga CA 91042
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