Again, you're not using the word properly. If you're hungry, you eat. If you're tired, you sleep. Rational, yes?
That's acting in self-interest. Any action you take that is deliberately self-destructive is irrational. To be rational, or reasonable, you must be trying to stay alive. Sawing off your arm is not rational.
Self-interest is entirely rational. If you disagree, prove it.
I do disagree. First off, self-destructive actions are not inherently irrational. Again, you've misdefined the word to mean "anything that benefits the individual", but for the moment, I'll go along with that definition. You and your daughter are in a boat, and the boat begins to sink. There is one lifejacket and neither of you can swim. If you save yourself, that's in your best interest. But if you save your daughter, it is ALSO in your best interest, because she carries your genes and allows them to survive. If you are past reproductive age and she is your only child, it makes MORE sense to save her and sacrifice yourself.
Of course, there are less extreme examples. Humans, unlike other animals, have the capacity for logic, reason, and foresight. This is important. Because when we are hungry, it is NOT always rational to eat. What if the only food we have happens to be infected with botulism? This knowledge makes it more rational to avoid eating it. When we are horny, it's NOT always rational to have sex. What if there's a virulent STD going around, and you can't be sure whether your partner has it or not? These are but two examples out of many in which "eat" does NOT logically follow hunger, and "sex" does NOT logically follow horniness.
Therefore, self-destructive actions are NOT always irrational. Sometimes they are merely the less-self-destructive of the options before you.
IN THE SAME WAY, government is in your best interest. If that is how you define rationalism, then government is entirely rational. People can not do everything themselves - we cannot purify water, police our property, test out new drugs, build roads, yadda yadda yadda, ourselves. So we pay somebody else to do them so that we can live as we see fit in our own self-interest. Rational.
Now, before you say that "private companies could do all those things too!", yes this is true. The difference would be, instead of paying taxes every year, you'd pay a turnpike on every road you chose to drive on, you'd pay the policing company to find the guy who murdered your wife, you'd pay each time you used a drinking fountain, and so on. This may or may not be considered a better option - that's a personal choice. BOTH are equally rational.
However, that's not the way it is. To simplify some history for you, a long time ago, a bunch of people got together and said, "How about if we form a system that takes care of public affairs and protects the people? If you want to live in this system, you'll have to agree to pay for the services and to be subject to the laws we form." Everyone thought this was a good idea, so they formed a country, fought for some land, and set up shop. A few hundred years later, you were born in such a country. The law still stands: if you live on the land the country has staked out, claimed, fought for, protected, and policed, you agree to follow the rules of that society. They DO own the land. If someone dropped a bomb on your house, who will go after them? The government. If another person tried to claim your house, who would protect your right to live there? The government. You own your land, but you do not preside over it. The government does. Therefore, they have every right to use force to make you follow their rules - JUST as you have the right to make the rules when it concerns your own property.
Just because you were born in the country doesn't mean you own any part of it. The land is not yours. It is theirs. If you tried to secede from the country and rule over your own land, this would make you a thief (and a treasonist), and the government would do its best to get its land back. If you succeeded in fending them off and getting them to recognize your yard's status as independent, THEN you could go around calling it your land and saying nobody has a right to tell you what to do on it. Until that happens, this behavior is irrational.
If you feel I am wrong or illogical in this reasoning, prove it.
Again, for a rule to be logical/rational it must apply in all circumstances.
Quite right. Self-interest doesn't apply in all circumstances (see above). Therefore, self interest cannot be defined as logical. Try again.
Therefore, taking ANYTHING into account besides the action itself is not rational.
This statement is incorrect. In order for a rule to work, it has to work in all circumstances, otherwise it's not a rule. Therefore, all rules MUST take into account everything in the environment (including the actions of others) that could affect the action.
For instance: "One plus one equals two" is a rule. In all circumstances, it is true.
But "Force is illogical" is NOT a rule, because you yourself have admitted there are plenty of times when you would be willing to use force against someone else (e.g. if they break into your home).
"Private companies could do just as well in 'governmental' roles as the government" is also NOT a rule. The word "well" is subjective. Irrational.
Moral of the tirade: rules must reflect reality in ALL circumstances.
keep in mind that the interests of others and the rights of others are different things.
You claim it is your right to act in your best interest. This may or may not be the case, but if you postulate that, must you not also postulate that others have the right to act in their interest?
circumstance to disprove a logical rule doesn't work. What if he's not a member of any gang? Then i win. Now your supposed logic has a fatal contradiction.
Logical fallacy. In order to prove something true, you must prove it in all cases, in all circumstances. This is why it's so difficult to make rules that work (see above). However, in order to prove something false, you must only show one circumstance in which it doesn't work. My ONE example completely disproves your assertion that it is always best to act in your self interest. In the case I suggested, it wasn't. Therefore, your "rule" is illogical.
Moving on.
Ultimately, the only action we can take to suspend the power of others to act logically is the use of force. If you don't like the results of my choices, don't hang around with me. That's your right. I can only take it from you by force.
And if you don't like the government, don't hang around in a governed country. That's your right. And none of us are forcing you to stay where you are.
Before you whine that "but everywhere in the world is governed!", that's untrue. There are plenty of tiny islands out there with no ruling body. Go nuts.
That may be true, but that doesn't make it rational. Again, circumstances. What if in reality everyone did act rationally? again your logic now has a contradiction.
Nope. Again, you are misunderstanding the tenets of logic:
Proof by example:
You say people always wash their hands after peeing. I say they don't.
To prove you wrong, all I have to do is show you ONE person not washing after peeing.
To prove me wrong, you must somehow show me ALL people after EVERY time they've ever peed, washing their hands EACH time.
In the same way, you posited that acting in one's self-interest is ALWAYS rational. I showed you one example in which it isn't rational. Therefore, I proved you wrong.
In order for your rebuttal to have made any sense, I would have had to have posited that acting selfishly is NEVER rational. I did no such thing.
As such, your "logic" isn't logic at all. Perhaps you need to read up on it more?
How can you say that cirucmstances that only apply today and may not apply tommorow somehow invalidate that theory?
Because I just did. Anarchy isn't always rational. Therefore, it isn't a rule. Therefore, it isn't rational to follow it.
Government isn't always rational either. Therefore, it isn't a rule. Therefore, it isn't rational to follow that either.
So logically, we're at an impasse. Whatever we choose to follow from here on in is no longer based on logic. It's emotion. I don't mind being governed. You do mind it. No logic involved, only opinion.
So we should stop trying to logically prove the other theory wrong. They are equally wrong. And equally right. Whatever we support is a personal choice.
you can't! circumstance is not a logical proof. self-government is rational, rule by the majority is not.
Oh! But I just did. Circumstance may not be a logical proof, but it is a perfectly viable logical disproof. Ergo, neither viewpoint is rational, because neither works in all circumstances. Like it or not, we're treading on emotional territory here.