dexkaden wrote:
I love analyzing stuff. But before we analyze stuff, we ought to educate ourselves about the institution/behvior we are analyzing rather than taking our assumptions based on a single assumption and making them into theories, which we then try to prove by making more assumptions.
Well, of course because the issues that we assume about are ones that we don't innately understand.
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So before I analyze corporations as a whole institution, I ought to educate myself on the corporate business model, the corporate mentality, the corporate employee---rather than jump right in and make a generalized theoretical assertion that if "a" happens sometimes in "b," then "b" is obviously the root of all evil. Or, rather, if some corporate directors make decisions with negative effects, then obviously the corporation is the root of all evil.
Definitely, you need to get an overall picture and see the entire nature of the issue, both the good and the bad things that happen. I mean, we cannot assume on the nature of a corporate action without looking at what corporations actually do.
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Or I could just hire experts like Michael Moore and Noam Chomsky to testify as to the validity of my assumption and make a "documentary" about it... (but I digress.)
I like this way better though, it is easy, it is fun, and if we sell our assumptions well enough we can either just get rich or maybe even if we are lucky get in on the foundation of the new socialist economy and get positions oppressing the masses for the masses.