RC8
Senior Member
Really? What kind of scientist? I'm an economist. Pleased to meet you.
Evolutionary Ecologist (Biologist).
For a scientist advancing the virtues of empiricism, you sure now how to make conclusions based on fallacious reasoning and speculative bias. You're doing Karl Popper proud.
Read my previous post the 67Cup about why I'm not directly responding to this question. I explain it clearly.
I'm not making conclusions, I'm proposing constructive solutions based on a theoretical framework grounded on empirical evidence. You are just dwelling on meaningless artsy ideas that lead nowhere and offer no solutions.
My argument is really straight forward: keeping heritage buildings makes neighbourhoods more desirable and that's a good thing. If it means that wealthier people move in as rents go up so be it (as you can see class-warfare is your own personal trauma, not mine) - so long as we have sound planning regulations that just means that demand will be met elsewhere and there's no reason why those new neighbourhoods can't be made to be very desirable too.
By not protecting heritage buildings, however, we risk reducing the desirability of a neighbourhood, and we steal an irreplaceable asset from the local community. We would also reduce the economic potential that a neighbourhood has as a tourist destination, and would by increasing density lose the human scale that many heritage buildings provide.
Logically, based on the information I handle and in the particular case of Toronto, arguing against the preservation of heritage shows a total disregard for the common good and the pursue of happier healthier societies. Apart from saying that it would make the city cheaper and not backing it up you haven't provided a single argument against this.
I have explicitly asked you how you would proceed and how that would benefit the greater good. I'm open minded if people show convincing arguments backed up by some evidence. You have failed to answer over and over again. You are therefore not capable of having a constructive discussion. You keep falling back on irrelevant subjective psychedelic human constructs that are worthless and I have no time for.
Maybe doing that is acceptable in political philosophy (whatever that is), but I'm done going around in circles. If you want to reply please do so in the following form:
- I, Brockm, propose that we do __________ regarding heritage buildings in Toronto because it would benefit the greater good by _______. I don't agree with the notion that the market hand in hand with regulations would generate desirable neighbourhoods elsewhere if these buildings were protected because _________. I don't consider heritage buildings irreplaceable assets to the community due to __________. The reason why London, Paris, and NY are the most desirable cities in the world is _________, and _________ is an example that you can have very desirable dense places with low rent thanks to the lack of heritage buildings.
Either that or you admit that you don't give a damn about the greater good (which is fair enough but needs to be stated). Up to you.