This thread got nasty fast; I expected it to end with my last post, Scriver's after, and the silly bit about vegetables. To call back to that page...
Could you tell me, as another sovereign entity, how I reject a piece of metal traveling towards my head faster than I can see?
Similarly, a society based on the valuation of individual choice is also reasonable. That you or I might be unable to use magic superpowers to deflect shrapnel doesn't make it invalid.
Actually...that's the point I was making. I thought I had
clearly implied earlier (with some detailing in the spoiler) that the system you described could only support itself from collapse if everyone involved with it strongly held the values of which you spoke. However, being as that is so nearly impossible, I had tried to get the version of the system from you that dealt with the issue, but then you made it clear that the system explicitly didn't deal with it...leaving us with a system that could only possibly work if reality itself followed it too; id est one requiring a way for me to simply reject harm, like from a bullet, at will.
I can tell you have this thing really deeply in your mind and you see good in it, but it sounds like you lack any way to export that good. Even your last couple posts seem to be causing a lot more trouble than they help, kinda like they say government does. Maybe going and sleeping or getting a snack would help, if applicable?
Predit: I think Glowcat describes the first part of my post better with the second part of his post.
Predit2:
[...]and I believe government can be used as a tool to guide humans toward a culture where government is no longer necessary.
It'll still likely be an efficient form of organization, but really, who can say what the best system for a utopia is? They all work in such an environment. So maybe they'd fade away as useless vestiges of the past, or remain as benign instruments for use by people wise enough to refrain from abusing them, but it doesn't really matter.
Ah, yeah. This is that thing that I was making circles around eariler, and the first part is what I failed to keep going with; using the current government as a tool-- as a cacoon-- for another better government later that will lead to another government, and so on and so forth until we finally have something kinda resembling utopia (which will still have problems, but they wont be because of pointless, organizational waste).
Predit3: Is Scriver's description really what you meant Vector? I was confused about that too.