anotherneil
Well-Known Member
Yes, and part of what this experiment will do is show what kind of conflict can arise and become problematic for each political ideology.The only need for any political system or philosophy is to create a framework for resolving conflict within a socially interacting group of people.
The conflicts that arise from policies that put the collective before the individual will be challenging to resolve on the socialist island, and the conflicts that arise from individuals putting themselves before the collective will probably be impossible to resolve on the anarchist island.
On the libertarian island, they'll have democracy, infrastructure, and equilibrium, so there's going to be much less conflict that can arise, and for the conflicts that do arise, they'll have a good system for resolving them.
The initial supplies and conditions aren't going to last 5 years; the initial supplies will deplete, and conditions have to at least be sustained & maintained.Given your initial conditions of plenty of supplies for everyone, and presumably plenty of space in which to live, I don't think you will find much difference between any of the islands within 5 years time.
Correct; IRL we live in a society where political ideologies are mixed together; it's hard to distinguish them. The different political ideologies will take credit for successes or blame the others for failures. The idea behind this experiment is to isolate these 3 basic political ideologies to help determine which is best & which is worst, in a scientific, objective, and impartial way.It is how a society deals with limits and inequalities regarding needs and wants that becomes the test of that society and its political structure.
How would they be arbitrary? I'm asking for a thought experiment, not for a guess.Also, whether prioritizing individual rights or collective rights is preferable is subjective and my judgement as an outside observer would be arbitrary
Why would they be irrelevant? You have to live in a society of different competing political ideologies and their consequences, which affect you, your family, your friends, your coworkers, your neighbor, and your society in general, so I don't think it is irrelevant.and irrelevant.
Not for 5 years, I suspect.If your volunteers are predisposed or pre-socialized to prefer a particular social structure, presumably they will be happy in that structure filled with other like-minded individuals.
I don't agree; the reason for why I don't agree is because IRL we have problems war, crime, poverty, homelessness, and political corruption that we can't seem to resolve, and the same underlying conflict or dilemma that causes these problems to manifest IRL will also have the potential exist, although at a smaller or watered down scale, on the 3 islands. Some of it is inevitably going to manifest on some of the islands, and the experiment will show which ones have a propensity to cause them to manifest, and which political ideology deals with them the best when they do.You may get equally high reported happiness ratings from each island at the end of the five year experiment.
Yes, we agree on this one.I would also add that absent ubiquitous plenty and no conflicts ever arising, anarchism is a fantasy and not possibe in the real world.