pek1 said:
So you think people owe you things for free? You're better off investing in real estate because it is equitable. What makes you think your $12K in stock is going to be worth that much tomorrow, next week, next month, next year?
I never said that I was going to invest my hypothetical $12K in stocks. Nor did I claim that information should be free. Let's back up a bit and review my earlier statement.
"If I had $12,000 in my pocket, I'd invest it! Information should not come at such an exorbitant price."
Are you familiar with basic logic? There's a concept called entailment. It means that there's a relation between two statements in which the truth of one statement guarantees the truth of another statement. Here's a simple example:
A. Fido is a dog.
B. Fido is an animal.
If it is true that Fido is a dog, then it is also true that Fido is an animal. Why? Because a dog is a type of an animal. Thus, Statement A entails the truth of Statement B. However, if you reverse the order of the sentences so they read this way:
A. Fido is an animal.
B. Fido is a dog.
Then you will discover that Statement A does NOT entail the truth of Statement B. It is true that Fido is an animal, but it is not necessarily true that Fido is a dog. Why? Because Statement A does not specify what kind of animal Fido is. For all we know, Fido could be a 450-pound Bengal tiger. Or an orangutan. Or even a domestic cat named Peking Duck. But we still don't have an established conclusion here, so there is no guarantee that Fido is a dog.
Now apply the logic of entailment to the following sentences. Statements A are what I said, Statements B are the conclusions you reached without any sufficient grounds.
a. If I had $12,000 in my pocket, I'd invest it.
b. Thus, I will invest $12,000 in stocks.
There is nothing in Statement A that guarantees the truth of Statement B. I could invest the money in my future children's educational savings. Or I could even invest it in real estate. The possibilities are limitless.
a. Information should not come at such an exorbitant price.
b. Thus, information should be free.
Again, there is nothing in Statement A that guarantees the truth of Statement B. I may believe that information should come at a cheaper price, such as five dollars, or it should be done in a fair trade-off involving faberge eggs. You don't know anything more than what I said in Statement A and you cannot assume what I meant without jumping around in the pool of possibilities.
If the order of the statements were reversed, the entailment would work. But this is not the case here.