SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mac Con Ulaidh who wrote (57806)7/6/2009 1:18:16 AM
From: Mac Con Ulaidh  Respond to of 149317
 
ooops



To: Mac Con Ulaidh who wrote (57806)7/6/2009 12:02:17 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 149317
 
It was Lindy Bill who banned you? That thread is no place for you to be. You will learn little from anyone there and they will understand little of what you are saying.

A waste of time and energy I learned. Those folks are mostly right wing (libertarians actually) and have no idea what you are talking about.

Lindy Bill just asked me to leave. So I left.

I think his name is after the dance the Lindy hop.

His phiosophy is another version of libertarian ideology involving AYN RAND again and put forth by his guru Galambos. As with most libertarians they never seem to think of America as a society with rights and obligations. I never found anything profound on his thread.

Lindy Bill's guru:

Academia
Around 1960, Galambos left the aerospace industry to teach at Whittier College. In 1961, Galambos met with Ayn Rand, Ludwig von Mises, Leonard Read, Murray Rothbard, and Henry Hazlitt in New York. He also established The Free Enterprise Institute that year, which gave for-pay lectures on freedom and capitalism.[4]

[edit] Intellectual property
Galambos felt that intellectual property owners should have primary control over their own ideas and over how others might secondarily use those ideas. According to Galambos, all forms of property came from a combination of "primordial property" (a person's life)[5] and "primary property" (a person's own ideas).[6] By using the natural resources available in the physical universe, individuals use their primordial property, guided by primary property (actions, guided by ideas, respectively) to create "secondary property".[7][8] That which Galambos denotes as "secondary property" are the well-known, established, goods and services which individuals trade, use, and consume as they live their lives. But Galambos notes that before those well-known goods and services became established, they had to be first conceived, discovered, or recognized by their primary owners. These acts of conception, discovery, or recognition Galambos denotes as the "primary property" of the individual, original owners.

Some of Galambos' students were required to acknowledge a "proprietary notice" which asked those students to give credit (both intellectually and financially) for the information gleaned from his courses; later he required that all participants in his lectures sign a non-disclosure agreement to prevent publication of his ideas before he published them himself. Students were allowed to take notes for their private use and most lectures were taped. Course V-50T (the "T" was for Tape) was transcribed and published as Sic Itur Ad Astra (see below). Another course, V-201, which focused on mechanisms for intellectual property protection for inventors, also had a taped version, which is expected to be transcribed into future volumes.

V-50T and V-201T are occasionally offered as taped courses by The Free Enterprise Institute.

Since his father's name was Joseph Andrew Galambos, Galambos changed his name from Joseph Andrew Galambos, Jr., to Andrew Joseph Galambos, so that he wouldn't infringe on his father's property right in the name Joseph Andrew Galambos.[9]

Galambos also dropped a nickel into a fund box[10] every time[citation needed] he said the word "Liberty," as a royalty to the descendants of Thomas Paine, who invented the term.[11]

In 1998, volume one of Sic Itur Ad Astra ("This is the Way to the Stars") (ISBN 0-88078-004-5) was first published. The book is based on a course entitled "Course V-50, The Theory of Volition," Galambos gave at The Free Enterprise Institute in 1968. In the lectures which form the basis for the book, Galambos laid out his two postulates of volitional science,

"Postulate Number One: All volitional beings live to pursue happiness,"[12] and
"Postulate Number Two: All concepts of happiness pursued through moral action are equally valid."[13]
Galambos equates immoral action with coercion[14][15] and defines freedom as "the societal condition wherein every individual has one hundred percent control over his own property",[16][17] Galambos derives his theory from these postulates. The remainder of the course (and the book) consists of Galambos' elaboration of the theory and his application of that science to solve the problems of modern society.

[edit] Liberal viewpoint
Originally a Republican supporting Barry Goldwater, Galambos later became a classical liberal.[18] He supported private protection and defense, the absolute rights of the owner of private property, and was opposed to political voting and other forms of political activism.

[edit] End of life
In the 1980s, Galambos was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease and was institutionalized in 1990. He died on April 10