Starve for Us

The Atlantic suggests that Hamas has taken on starvation of its own people as a weapon of war. 
In recent days, I’ve spoken with dozens of Gazans who are furious about what is unfolding around them. They are angry, one told me, at the “hordes of selfish people who are attacking aid convoys to steal and collect aid in a horrific manner without caring for Gazans who chose not to participate in these humiliating and demeaning displays of inhumanity, no matter the level of hunger.” But their anger is directed primarily at Hamas, which they hold responsible for putting the people of Gaza in this position, and for its continued refusal to end the war that it started. “Hitler fought in his bunker until he killed himself in World War II in the Battle of Berlin,” another person said, complaining that Hamas is hunkered down in its tunnels, willing to see Gaza destroyed to the very last child.

Richard Fernandez notes the accuracy of the comparison with Hitler; normally such things are overblown, but he linked us to the relevant document. He adds:

"Ascendency" is being used in an ambiguous way there; it doesn't mean better or more moral, but it does mean primal. Primacy can be depicted as either lower or higher. 

AVI has additional thoughts. I wrote there, "It is a law of nature, whether or not it is not a law of God's, that the sons suffer for the sins of their fathers. No one wants to see innocents suffer, not starvation nor anything else. Yet this war was brought about by an act of blood sacrifice by Hamas on October 7th, 2023; they spilled a very great deal of blood to force this reckoning with Israel. They are the ones who willed this, and that with great intensity."

God may have chosen to answer their prayer. The Aztecs also practiced blood magic; and where is an Aztec today?

Newfound Gap Closed

Travel over the NC/TN border continues to be a problem after Helene. Every hard rain seems to produce a new land slip along the narrow passages. This one effectively bisects the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, cutting off the road from Gatlinburg to Cherokee. 

Water Maids II

Sometimes they have allies. 

Tough stuff.

Nicomachean Ethics IV.2: Magnificence

The following is probably the least interesting of Aristotle's virtues to most of us, simply because it is out of our range to do either well or badly. Magnificence is the greater of the 'spending virtues,' one that pertains to heavy expenses of the sort that only the truly rich can entertain. It is possible to do these well or badly, as with anything else. We can at least admire from afar the actions of a wealthy man who strives to use his wealth in ways that better everyone, as when Carnegie paid for public libraries to help everyone attain better access to learning and the classics. We can despise the misuses of great wealth. However, we can't do much to practice or habituate ourselves to this virtue one way or the other. 

As such, I will mostly put this past a jump break. If you're wanting to skip something, this is a good section to leave for later. The next virtue, magnanimity, is of the very first importance and demands attention. Magnificence is a spectator sport for the vast majority.
It would seem proper to discuss magnificence next. For this also seems to be a virtue concerned with wealth; but it does not like liberality extend to all the actions that are concerned with wealth, but only to those that involve expenditure; and in these it surpasses liberality in scale. For, as the name itself suggests, it is a fitting expenditure involving largeness of scale. But the scale is relative; for the expense of equipping a trireme is not the same as that of heading a sacred embassy. It is what is fitting, then, in relation to the agent, and to the circumstances and the object. The man who in small or middling things spends according to the merits of the case is not called magnificent (e.g. the man who can say 'many a gift I gave the wanderer'), but only the man who does so in great things. For the magnificent man is liberal, but the liberal man is not necessarily magnificent. The deficiency of this state of character is called niggardliness, the excess vulgarity, lack of taste, and the like, which do not go to excess in the amount spent on right objects, but by showy expenditure in the wrong circumstances and the wrong manner; we shall speak of these vices later.

The Golden Spike

Like you, I was taught in grade school about 'the Golden Spike' that was driven in 1869 to celebrate the completion of America's transcontinental railroad. The National Park Service has a whole facility devoted to it if you're ever out that way.

Imagine my surprise, then, to read this morning that America has functionally not had a transcontinental railroad in spite of all of that. 

For decades, a patchwork of regional rail networks across the United States have been forced to grapple with the same headache: Interchanges, where cargo is handed from one rail line to another.

Interchanges are one of the biggest friction points in freight logistics. They slow down the transport of goods that commonly travel on railroads--important products like lumber, food and fuel--while driving up shipping and supply chain costs for important industries like manufacturing, homebuilding, and retail. Ultimately, consumers foot the bill of the higher transport costs, exacerbating inflationary pressures on working-class Americans.

A long-anticipated answer to these problems arrived this week: the formation of America’s first coast-to-coast railroad via the industry-transforming merger of Norfolk Southern and Union Pacific railroads. By connecting over 50,000 miles of rail across 43 states and 100 ports, the transcontinental railroad will transform the U.S. supply chain to the benefit of businesses, manufacturers, consumers, and the American economy.

Union Pacific was one of the original participants in the 'Golden Spike' railroad; you'll see its name painted on one of the historic trains if you watch the movie. The physical railroad went all the way, but no institutional railroad ever did. 

There are the usual concerns about monopolies, but the elimination of interchanges will offer a significant efficiency. 

A neighborhood intervenes

A neighbor in this small community came to me last week for minor help with a notice to vacate tenancy, a first step towards pursuing an eviction in JP court. As she began to explain the background a bit I realized she needed an emergency intervention. After a sort of Eliza-escaping-over-the-ice weekend, she now has emergency custody of a granddaughter and an order barring an obstreperous family member from the premises. I've set up a GoFundMe account, to which my neighbors have begun contributing.

I was very touched last Friday night, when the cops showed up, that a neighborhood handyman stood by until 11pm at a corner store, waiting for the all-clear to come over and change all my neighbor's locks. He stayed until 2am, then brought over his family to form a prayer circle. Since then other neighbors have kept an eye on the house and texted me pictures of anyone who parks in front

Local Scottish History

In North Carolina, it has long been believed that a group of backcountry Scottish immigrants declared independence from the King of England in 1775. 
Primarily Scottish, many of the colonists were adherents to the Covenanted Reformed Presbyterian Church or related denominations, all of which emphasized that the temporal authority of kings and rulers was secondary to God’s, and to one’s own conscience. Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.

These “Covenanters” were soon presented with plenty of opportunities to test those beliefs.... On May 19, 1775, prominent citizens convened a meeting in Mecklenburg County, which according to Hardinger’s new book, “ One day revolution: the patriots who first declared independence,” was so small that there were only nine graves in the whole county at the time.

As fate would have it, during the meeting, a messenger arrived with startling news — the battle of Lexington had been fought in the Massachusetts Bay Colony exactly one month earlier. Colonists skirmished with a large British force there, and in Concord, and won. It was only a minor strategic victory, but it galvanized anti-royalist sentiment and likely influenced the actions of the delegates at the Mecklenburg meeting.

“These people are extremely angry,” Hardinger said. “They have a belief that says, ‘I can ignore an authority who is not doing what my conscience says is right,’ and so they’re right for doing this. The spark is the express rider that comes down on May 19.”

What, exactly, happened in Charlotte late that night remains shrouded in mystery. The original copy of what would later be called the “Meck Dec” was purportedly lost in a fire in 1800 at the home of Joseph McNitt Alexander.

It's an unprovable tradition, but it is certainly plausible. The Covenanters had been openly at war with the Kings of England who were at the time Stuarts, therefore also the King of Scots by prior claim to their status as Kings of England. They had in fact seized control of Scotland from the kings in the Bishops War, so called because the Stuarts insisted on Anglican bishops as a necessary means of control. "No bishop, no king," Charles I is supposed to have said, which proved prescient as he lost the war and later his head. Covenanters provided troops to the war in which he lost his head, after also providing troops to support the Irish rebellion of 1641. 

After the Restoration, Charles II raised an army of Highlanders and had them quartered upon the remaining Covenanters. There were significant further acts of violence during the "Killing Time" associated with the war of 1679, the Jacobite revolution of 1689, and several others. Large numbers were transported to the colonies. 

The probability of this group having decided to go to guns against the King of England is pretty high. There's not positive proof that their declaration existed, but I wouldn't wager much against the proposition that it did. 

Nicomachean Ethics IV.1b

The first chapter of Book IV continues. Yesterday we learned that liberality is more concerned with giving well than with taking; but the opposing vices concern both. We will see in the fullness of the analysis that giving still remains the most important.
The prodigal errs in these respects also; for he is neither pleased nor pained at the right things or in the right way; this will be more evident as we go on. We have said that prodigality and meanness are excesses and deficiencies, and in two things, in giving and in taking; for we include spending under giving. Now prodigality exceeds in giving and not taking, while meanness falls short in giving, and exceeds in taking, except in small things. The characteristics of prodigality are not often combined; for it is not easy to give to all if you take from none; private persons soon exhaust their substance with giving, and it is to these that the name of prodigals is applied- though a man of this sort would seem to be in no small degree better than a mean man.

Why is the prodigal better than the mean? Because his vice can't go on forever, and therefore won't.

For he is easily cured both by age and by poverty, and thus he may move towards the middle state. For he has the characteristics of the liberal man, since he both gives and refrains from taking, though he does neither of these in the right manner or well. Therefore if he were brought to do so by habituation or in some other way, he would be liberal; for he will then give to the right people, and will not take from the wrong sources. This is why he is thought to have not a bad character; it is not the mark of a wicked or ignoble man to go to excess in giving and not taking, but only of a foolish one. The man who is prodigal in this way is thought much better than the mean man both for the aforesaid reasons and because he benefits many while the other benefits no one, not even himself.

I'm going to put in a jump break for length, but if you skip the second part you will miss one of the more entertaining discussions.

Postcards from Way Outside Popular Culture

I gave up television in 2004, when I realized that I was only using our $80/month cable subscription to watch old cowboy movies on the Western Channel. In the ensuing two decades I haven't missed it, but I do find that I don't really know what's going on with cultural references. A few years ago, Cassandra of Villainous Company was making some remarks about Kate Upton; I couldn't understand why she was saying such things about the Princess of Wales, who had seemed nice enough when I read about her in the paper. Turns out there were two "Kate [Directional]ton" people, and one of them was a celebrity I didn't know about.

This week has been kind of like that. All of the blogs are talking about some old movie I vaguely recall having heard of but didn't see because it was a horror film. Only it turns out that was "Sweeny Todd," not "Sydney Sweeny," the latter of whom would have been seven years old when I quit watching TV.

OK, well, I know who she is now. People have a lot to say about how she looks, and you know, sure; she's a lovely young woman. But the most attractive thing about her to me is that she knows how to turn a wrench. I assumed on first viewing that the 1965 Mustang was a prop and that she had a stunt driver in this commercial. 


Not at all: turns out she's a trained mechanic who modifies old Fords for fun. Apparently Ford had the sense to get her to collaborate on a new Mustang, too. 

That's a cut above the kind of celebrity you usually hear about. 

The Triton

The Triton a-sail.

Last week's quick run to the Deep South was occasioned by a chance to observe a demonstration of the Triton autonomous underwater and surface vehicle, which is becoming a US Navy Program of Record. It did so without going through the crazy, expensive Pentagon procurement process; it was built independently and then proved that it satisfied requirements by being subjected to intensive testing.

Submerging.

It's a pretty neat piece of kit. I won't go into details about its uses for obvious reasons, but I'm glad we are the ones who will have the thing.

Nicomachean Ethics IV.1a: Liberality

Book IV begins with an extremely long chapter that I will break into two parts. It has to do with the first of the 'spending virtues,' liberality. Now the word implies that one is bountiful and generous, but of course for Aristotle it is meant to be the mean between the extremes. Thus, the normal, natural position of a person should be generosity:

Let us speak next of liberality. It seems to be the mean with regard to wealth; for the liberal man is praised not in respect of military matters, nor of those in respect of which the temrate man is praised, nor of judicial decisions, but with regard to the giving and taking of wealth, and especially in respect of giving. Now by 'wealth' we mean all the things whose value is measured by money.

This might be surprising, especially for those who were raised to think of thrift as a virtue. However, it is the magic of the spirit behind capitalism that free exchange causes a flourishing that increases the wealth of all. Hoarded wealth does nothing, like the dragon's gold in the Beowulf that simply laid hidden in the earth for generations, doing no one any good. It's the exchanging that creates flourishing. If I take some of that wealth and spend it to hire an artist, my world now has beauty; if I pay for a meal, it has good food. The artist and the cook now have money they can spend to improve their lives and to yield to others the ability to improve theirs also. 

This is a fecund understanding to have come from the ancient world, which was in positive terms much poorer than we are today. Even so, they already had the spirit of it: generosity is the natural position, the mean for which we should strive. 

It is also surprising to hear prodigality discussed outside the Biblical context: the story of 'the prodigal son,' which frames our understanding for more than two centuries, was not available to Aristotle. 

Further, prodigality and meanness are excesses and defects with regard to wealth; and meanness we always impute to those who care more than they ought for wealth, but we sometimes apply the word 'prodigality' in a complex sense; for we call those men prodigals who are incontinent and spend money on self-indulgence. Hence also they are thought the poorest characters; for they combine more vices than one. Therefore the application of the word to them is not its proper use; for a 'prodigal' means a man who has a single evil quality, that of wasting his substance; since a prodigal is one who is being ruined by his own fault, and the wasting of substance is thought to be a sort of ruining of oneself, life being held to depend on possession of substance.

This, then, is the sense in which we take the word 'prodigality'.

Thus prodigality is properly wasting one's substance, which means spending beyond what one can continue to support. It is not spending generously, but excessively.

Now the things that have a use may be used either well or badly; and riches is a useful thing; and everything is used best by the man who has the virtue concerned with it; riches, therefore, will be used best by the man who has the virtue concerned with wealth; and this is the liberal man.

Nicomachean Ethics III.12

This is the final chapter of Book III.
Self-indulgence is more like a voluntary state than cowardice. For the former is actuated by pleasure, the latter by pain, of which the one is to be chosen and the other to be avoided; and pain upsets and destroys the nature of the person who feels it, while pleasure does nothing of the sort. Therefore self-indulgence is more voluntary.

Is it true that pleasure does not 'upset and destroy the nature' of the person who experiences it? It seems as if sometimes it does; users of crystal meth, for example, often seem to come undone as a result of the pleasure they experience -- to the point that they will find their body covered in scabs and their teeth rotting out for lack of care. 

Temperance isn't about pharmakon, though. It is about natural pleasures: food, drink, sex. Those pleasures might destroy you -- drink perhaps especially, but sex can too. They are still all less dangerous than the workings of sorcerers

Hence also [self-indulgence] is more a matter of reproach [than cowardice]; for it is easier to become accustomed to its objects, since there are many things of this sort in life, and the process of habituation to them is free from danger, while with terrible objects the reverse is the case. But cowardice would seem to be voluntary in a different degree from its particular manifestations; for it is itself painless, but in these we are upset by pain, so that we even throw down our arms and disgrace ourselves in other ways; hence our acts are even thought to be done under compulsion. For the self-indulgent man, on the other hand, the particular acts are voluntary (for he does them with craving and desire), but the whole state is less so; for no one craves to be self-indulgent.

There's a reasonable point that you have a lot more power over the habituation process with self-indulgence, both because you have regular -- probably daily -- opportunities to practice temperance, and because you can do so in a state that is free from danger. Opportunities to be brave are much less common, and by nature entail a state of peril that can disrupt your reasoning. Thus, to the degree that you are self-indulgent you are especially blameworthy.

The name self-indulgence is applied also to childish faults; for they bear a certain resemblance to what we have been considering. Which is called after which, makes no difference to our present purpose; plainly, however, the later is called after the earlier. The transference of the name seems not a bad one; for that which desires what is base and which develops quickly ought to be kept in a chastened condition, and these characteristics belong above all to appetite and to the child, since children in fact live at the beck and call of appetite, and it is in them that the desire for what is pleasant is strongest. If, then, it is not going to be obedient and subject to the ruling principle, it will go to great lengths; for in an irrational being the desire for pleasure is insatiable even if it tries every source of gratification, and the exercise of appetite increases its innate force, and if appetites are strong and violent they even expel the power of calculation. Hence they should be moderate and few, and should in no way oppose the rational principle-and this is what we call an obedient and chastened state-and as the child should live according to the direction of his tutor, so the appetitive element should live according to rational principle.

Here we find an interesting insight: the child isn't expected to be temperate yet because they have not yet had their proper upbringing nor the opportunity to habituate temperance. The self-indulgent is thus possessed of a kind of immature character; they are analogously childish. They haven't grown up yet and put away childish things. The tutor of the child is meant to be replaced by the rational principle in us as adults; the proper upbringing is supposed to inculcate an understanding of what to practice as an adult. Once we develop the internal rule, we no longer need -- and should no longer want -- to be ruled from outside ourselves by others. The freedom of adulthood is won by this self-mastery.  

Hence the appetitive element in a temperate man should harmonize with the rational principle; for the noble is the mark at which both aim, and the temperate man craves for the things be ought, as he ought, as when he ought; and when he ought; and this is what rational principle directs.

Here we conclude our account of temperance.

Short and succinct compared to the long discussion of courage, but that is because courage serves as a model. Note that it was relatively easy to compare and contrast self-indulgence to cowardice, spell out how they are different, and then we can move on. 

In Book IV we will encounter many more virtues.  

From Your Lips to God's Ear

DOGE has built an automated/augmented intelligence bot with an astonishing goal.
The U.S. DOGE Service is using a new artificial intelligence tool to slash federal regulations, with the goal of eliminating half of Washington’s regulatory mandates by the first anniversary of President Donald Trump’s inauguration, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post and four government officials familiar with the plans.

The tool, called the “DOGE AI Deregulation Decision Tool,” is supposed to analyze roughly 200,000 federal regulations to determine which can be eliminated because they are no longer required by law, according to a PowerPoint presentation obtained by The Post that is dated July 1 and outlines DOGE’s plans. Roughly 100,000 of those rules would be deemed worthy of trimming, the PowerPoint estimates — mostly through the automated tool with some staff feedback. The PowerPoint also suggests the AI tool will save the United States trillions of dollars by reducing compliance requirements, slashing the federal budget and unlocking unspecified “external investment.”

That would be amazing. Since these are administrative regulations, too, they don't require Congressional action in most cases. 

A Brief Review

Jim Hanson would like to review best practices with close-quarter pistols.
The story he is referencing is here.

Another Evil Buzzword

This time the word is "mankeeping," which is I gather women having to care about their partners. 
Much of the time, Mr. Lioi said, his straight male clients tell him that they rarely open up to anyone but their girlfriends or wives. Their partners have become their unofficial therapists, he said, “doing all the emotional labor.”

That particular role now has a name: “mankeeping.” The term, coined by Angelica Puzio Ferrara, a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, has taken off online. It describes the work women do to meet the social and emotional needs of the men in their lives, from supporting their partners through daily challenges and inner turmoil, to encouraging them to meet up with their friends.

I have frequently suggested that there is a significant downside to the intrusion of 'therapy' into every aspect of life; here is another aspect of it. Of course you should rely chiefly on your spouse for your emotional needs: in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, etc. That is the bargain, and of old it was understood that husband and wife were partners in all of life's highs and lows. It wasn't seen as "unofficial therapy," or any sort of therapy. It was marriage; it was life. 

Therapy is properly limited to those who are recovering from injuries. Treating ordinary life as an ongoing source of injury -- indeed, usually as a source of "trauma"! -- has numerous bad follow-on effects. The implication here is that you should be paying somebody to 'treat' you for whatever daily difficulties you encounter. Otherwise, you're unfairly imposing on your spouse. 

The strength of a marriage comes from learning that you can rely on each other. A marriage works because you become practiced in leaning on each other, and find a partner who will help you carry your weight. You, in turn, help them with their own. 

I do think it's good to have friends; we talked about that not long ago. I wonder how quickly, though, these same women who are complaining about having to care for their partners would find themselves jealous if that emotional bonding was swapped outside of the marriage to another person. 

US Concessions to EU

None, apparently. They will tax our goods at 0%, we'll tax theirs at 15%. $600BB in U.S. investments and $750BB in energy purchases, replacing Russia as the provider of Europe's liquefied natural gas. 

I guess he is good at this deal-making thing. He understood the leverage, and explained it well enough that the EU sounded grateful to get out of this without it being worse for them.

RIP Tom Lehrer

I admit that I had not realized he was still alive; his work is well-known to me, but all of his famous pieces are from before I was born. 
Tom Lehrer, the Harvard-trained mathematician whose wickedly iconoclastic songs made him a favorite satirist in the 1950s and ’60s on college campuses and in all the Greenwich Villages of the country, died on Saturday at his home in Cambridge, Mass. He was 97.... Mr. Lehrer’s lyrics were nimble, sometimes salacious and almost always sardonic, sung to music that tended to be maddeningly cheerful. 
Let's have a few of them in memoriam





There are a whole lot more, if you like the form. These are all national security oriented, which is how they originally came across my desk (as it were). There are plenty that are not. 

Nicomachean Ethics III.11

Of the appetites some seem to be common, others to be peculiar to individuals and acquired; e.g. the appetite for food is natural, since every one who is without it craves for food or drink, and sometimes for both, and for love also (as Homer says) if he is young and lusty; but not every one craves for this or that kind of nourishment or love, nor for the same things. Hence such craving appears to be our very own.

That is straightforward enough.  

Yet [this craving of one's own] has of course something natural about it; for different things are pleasant to different kinds of people, and some things are more pleasant to every one than chance objects. Now in the natural appetites few go wrong, and only in one direction, that of excess; for to eat or drink whatever offers itself till one is surfeited is to exceed the natural amount, since natural appetite is the replenishment of one's deficiency.

This isn't strictly true, as we see e.g. in cases of anorexia, but he is correct that almost everyone only goes wrong in being excessive.

Hence these people are called belly-gods, this implying that they fill their belly beyond what is right. It is people of entirely slavish character that become like this.

There is a term that we might usefully recover: belly-gods! 

Aristotle believes in natural slavery, by which he means that some people are fitted out by their natures only to be slaves. Here is an example of someone who might be that way, because they are incapable of controlling even their most basic impulses. 

However, I note that in Iraq I observed that the very few genuinely obese men I met were sheikhs of one sort or another. In many cultures the ability to become fat is a demonstration of power, and a proof of command rather than slavishness. I wonder if Aristotle is merely encultured to the Greek approach here. 

But with regard to the pleasures peculiar to individuals many people go wrong and in many ways.

Our age has filled books on this topic -- mostly autobiographies by people proud of their errors. 

For while the people who are 'fond of so and so' are so called because they delight either in the wrong things, or more than most people do, or in the wrong way, the self-indulgent exceed in all three ways; they both delight in some things that they ought not to delight in (since they are hateful), and if one ought to delight in some of the things they delight in, they do so more than one ought and than most men do.

So, that's important to enumerate. 

Ways to go wrong in desire for food/drink/sex: 

1) Delighting in the wrong things, which are hateful things.
2) Delighting too much in the right things.
3) Delighting in the right things, but in the wrong way.
4) Doing all three of these at once ("self-indulgence"). 

Note another partial ad populum appeal: "more than one ought to and than most men do." There is a logos, sometimes, that lets us know what one 'ought' to do; but we must in other cases appeal to what is normal. Our culture has rejected both of those approaches: it rejects a logos based on any sort of human telos, and also rejects the idea that what is normal -- say, not being transgender -- should be a standard that is in any way binding. That's a challenge, particularly on matters of temperance (which, again, include all sexual pleasures).

Plainly, then, excess with regard to pleasures is self-indulgence and is culpable; with regard to pains one is not, as in the case of courage, called temperate for facing them or self-indulgent for not doing so, but the self-indulgent man is so called because he is pained more than he ought at not getting pleasant things (even his pain being caused by pleasure), and the temperate man is so called because he is not pained at the absence of what is pleasant and at his abstinence from it.

The self-indulgent man, then, craves for all pleasant things or those that are most pleasant, and is led by his appetite to choose these at the cost of everything else; hence he is pained both when he fails to get them and when he is merely craving for them (for appetite involves pain); but it seems absurd to be pained for the sake of pleasure.

There's a sort of non-logical contradiction, which is an odd entity: contradictions really only belong to logic, not to ethics in which strict logic doesn't (because it cannot) apply. This absurdity is thus analogous to a contradiction rather than a true contradiction (pace Hegel, who built his entire moral philosophy around 'contradictions' of this sort). Aristotle seems to have synthesized the law of non-contradiction into a form that we still use today and in a way that was central to his metaphysics, so even an analogy to a contradiction strikes him as absurd and offensive. 

People who fall short with regard to pleasures and delight in them less than they should are hardly found; for such insensibility is not human. Even the other animals distinguish different kinds of food and enjoy some and not others; and if there is any one who finds nothing pleasant and nothing more attractive than anything else, he must be something quite different from a man; this sort of person has not received a name because he hardly occurs.

There are enough of them these days that they have a flag and several names for variants. There are a lot more people now, however, so even that which 'hardly occurs' will occur when there are eight billion instances. 

The temperate man occupies a middle position with regard to these objects. For he neither enjoys the things that the self-indulgent man enjoys most-but rather dislikes them-nor in general the things that he should not, nor anything of this sort to excess, nor does he feel pain or craving when they are absent, or does so only to a moderate degree, and not more than he should, nor when he should not, and so on; but the things that, being pleasant, make for health or for good condition, he will desire moderately and as he should, and also other pleasant things if they are not hindrances to these ends, or contrary to what is noble, or beyond his means. For he who neglects these conditions loves such pleasures more than they are worth, but the temperate man is not that sort of person, but the sort of person that the right rule prescribes.

This having become so foundational a standard of Judeo-Christian ethics, it hardly needs elaboration.