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The Bison King wrote:You are a hunter and you live in a cold and bitter land. You have recently purchased 2 puppies to help with the hunt when they are fully grown. You have little to feed them, and what you have you give to them in one bowl. The larger dog eats first and has his fill, and leaves little for the other dog. As they grow one dog becomes bigger and stronger while the other stays small and sickly. Seeing this, do you separate their feedings so that the smaller dog might receive an equal portion, or do you let nature take it's course and see if the smaller dog can fight for it's fair share?
















The Bison King wrote:You are a hunter and you live in a cold and bitter land. You have recently purchased 2 puppies to help with the hunt when they are fully grown. You have little to feed them, and what you have you give to them in one bowl. The larger dog eats first and has his fill, and leaves little for the other dog. As they grow one dog becomes bigger and stronger while the other stays small and sickly. Seeing this, do you separate their feedings so that the smaller dog might receive an equal portion, or do you let nature take it's course and see if the smaller dog can fight for it's fair share?








































































The Bison King wrote:You are a hunter and you live in a cold and bitter land. You have recently purchased 2 puppies to help with the hunt when they are fully grown. You have little to feed them, and what you have you give to them in one bowl. The larger dog eats first and has his fill, and leaves little for the other dog. As they grow one dog becomes bigger and stronger while the other stays small and sickly. Seeing this, do you separate their feedings so that the smaller dog might receive an equal portion, or do you let nature take it's course and see if the smaller dog can fight for it's fair share?
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Need more info on the utility (i.e. usefulness) of each dog at its current size. Would an increase in the food toward the little dog create a decrease in the food to the big dog?
Unlikely you would have 2 dogs unless you needed both, so of course you intervene
OR just provide more food.
and.. this is NOT a natural situation, it is a human dictating. Its not really how dogs generally act on their own.
Since you have little to feed the puppies, should we take it for granted
that you are also not a very successful hunter?
Well it would depend if the little dog was just awfully cute and precious, then I would have to feed him separately.
You mean that big dog is eating enough for two? Aren't you worried about it getting fat?
what kind of weaponry are you using to hunt? what are you hunting? can you kill the sickly dog and use it as bait?
I would have fed them equally from the start and not been such a dumb f*ck. Then I'd have two big, mean, kick ass dogs while you sit there sniveling over the predicament which you got yourself into.
i <3 metaphors

















Well, you said "purchase".The Bison King wrote:Unlikely you would have 2 dogs unless you needed both, so of course you intervene
Whatever they we're given to you. You're kind of missing the point.
The Bison King wrote:OR just provide more food.
I thought it was pretty clear that that isn't an option. The dogs are there TO help you get more food.
Tough. You posted. And, the trouble is your "scenario" is just too like what a lot of idiots really DO think.. and part of why we have millions of strays in this country.The Bison King wrote:and.. this is NOT a natural situation, it is a human dictating. Its not really how dogs generally act on their own.
oh my god just shut the hell up. God you are annoying.
The Bison King wrote:Since you have little to feed the puppies, should we take it for granted
that you are also not a very successful hunter?
yeah you suck.
















OK, I did forget the no food part. the answer to that is, again, don't have dogs you cannot feed. Per the "to get more food" bit,t hough, the trouble is your scenario is stupid. Puppies don't hunt. If you don't have enough food as it is, then you need to do something other than getting a dog. The time you spend training that dog to help you is better speant getting better at hunting.
Tough. You posted. And, the trouble is your "scenario" is just too like what a lot of idiots really DO think.. and part of why we have millions of strays in this country.
Player wrote:The Bison King wrote:Since you have little to feed the puppies, should we take it for granted
that you are also not a very successful hunter?
yeah you suck. (as a hunter)
Seems you dish it out, but don't want to take it.

















No, I took it pretty literally.The Bison King wrote:ok... you are aware that this really isn't about dogs, right?
















BigBallinStalin wrote:The Bison King wrote:You are a hunter and you live in a cold and bitter land. You have recently purchased 2 puppies to help with the hunt when they are fully grown. You have little to feed them, and what you have you give to them in one bowl. The larger dog eats first and has his fill, and leaves little for the other dog. As they grow one dog becomes bigger and stronger while the other stays small and sickly. Seeing this, do you separate their feedings so that the smaller dog might receive an equal portion, or do you let nature take it's course and see if the smaller dog can fight for it's fair share?
Need more info on the utility (i.e. usefulness) of each dog at its current size. Would an increase in the food toward the little dog create a decrease in the food to the big dog? If yes, then I'll assume that the reduction in the big dog's food would lead to a decrease in its utility. If this decrease in utility could be offset with an increase in utility from the little dog at a lower cost in additional units of food, then sure, feed the little dog more food.
But setting their food to equal portions might not be the best way to solve this dilemma. It's at the margin that matters.
I'll have Lootifer graph the diminishing marginal utility; maybe he could bedazzle you guys with a production-possibility frontier.








The Bison King wrote:Need more info on the utility (i.e. usefulness) of each dog at its current size. Would an increase in the food toward the little dog create a decrease in the food to the big dog?
Well dude we just don't know that. Perhaps the smaller dog will be forced to fight for his meal and become stronger. Perhaps he'll die from being a complete bitch. Perhaps the larger dog will become some sort of super dog if left to become the alpha.
On the flip side if you share the food the larger dog is likely to lose his prowess, you may get stuck with 2 dogs who are both mediocre at hunting rather than 1 dog who excels.

























So no that we have boiled that down, what was the point of you thread? did you want to tease out meanie pants dog haters? Or are you a meany pants dog hater

















The Bison King wrote:You are a hunter and you live in a cold and bitter land. You have recently purchased 2 puppies to help with the hunt when they are fully grown. You have little to feed them, and what you have you give to them in one bowl. The larger dog eats first and has his fill, and leaves little for the other dog. As they grow one dog becomes bigger and stronger while the other stays small and sickly. Seeing this, do you separate their feedings so that the smaller dog might receive an equal portion, or do you let nature take it's course and see if the smaller dog can fight for it's fair share?
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The Bison King wrote:So no that we have boiled that down, what was the point of you thread? did you want to tease out meanie pants dog haters? Or are you a meany pants dog hater
Feeding the dogs from one bowl and letting them decide represents the free market, dividing their food equally was socialism. The metaphor needs a little work, I think I need to change it to "you had a female dog who died giving birth to 2 puppies" since people seem to get hung up on the whole "why did you buy puppies you can't feed" thing. But yeah, according to this crude analogy most of you seem to think that the free market is a bad idea.

















BigBallinStalin wrote:The Bison King wrote:So no that we have boiled that down, what was the point of you thread? did you want to tease out meanie pants dog haters? Or are you a meany pants dog hater
Feeding the dogs from one bowl and letting them decide represents the free market, dividing their food equally was socialism. The metaphor needs a little work, I think I need to change it to "you had a female dog who died giving birth to 2 puppies" since people seem to get hung up on the whole "why did you buy puppies you can't feed" thing. But yeah, according to this crude analogy most of you seem to think that the free market is a bad idea.
Your analogy with the free market doesn't hold.
1) Humans don't equal 2 dogs, or any dog for that matter. Humans are capable of economizing on scarce resources--dogs just gobble it all up (i.e. 100% consumption).
2) Humans generally are capable of learning from trial-and-error, thus capable of determining a somewhat best distribution of food per utility for each dog.
2) Dogs can't spontaneously develop political, economic, and cultural institutions nearly as advanced as humans (if at all).
3) The market process isn't "food in a bowl, come get it at almost zero transaction costs for some unknown, varying amount of labor." Your depiction is somewhat more appropriate for a barter economy.
4) Where's the voluntary exchange? How does that play out in this supposedly free market v. socialism analogy?
5) The assumption that the hunter (one individual) is capable of designing the "socialism" or "free market" scenario completely misses the point of the free market. There's no central, single designer in the free market. It's about millions of individuals interacting; it's about disperse knowledge across these millions; it's about how prices transmit information, reveal knowledge which isn't as efficiently or isn't able to be articulated; it's about how profit and loss induce innovation; how privete property rights create incentives for greater growth in prosperity and innovation; ...
Etc., etc., etc.



















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