Up@dawn 2.0

Friday, October 18, 2019

Quiz Oct 23/24

Berkeley, Voltaire & Leibniz, Hume, & Rousseau, LH 15-18;FL 27-28. Midterm report presentations continue.

1. What English poet declared that "whatever is, is right"?

2. What German philosopher, with his "Principle of Sufficient Reason," agreed with the poet?

3. What French champion of free speech and religious toleration wrote a satirical novel/play ridiculing the idea that everything is awesome?

4. What 1755 catastrophe deeply influenced Voltaire's philosophy?

5. What did Voltaire mean by "cultivating our garden"?

6. Was Voltaire an atheist?

7. (T/F) Hume thought the human eye so flawless in its patterned intricacy that, like Paley's watch, it constitutes powerful evidence of intelligent design.

8. (T/F) Hume's view was that it's occasionally more plausible to believe that a miracle (the unexplained suspension of a law of nature) has happened, than not.

9. Rousseau said we're born free but everywhere are in ____, but can liberate ourselves by submitting to what is best for the whole community, aka the _______.

10. Who pretended to slap and body-slam the head of the WWF on stage before entering politics?

11. At what annual event do adults go to the desert and dress up as unicorns, birds, mermaids, geishas etc.? 

12. 
What are the "two underlying Fantasyland features?"

13. Who was a hideous and tragic victim of "Kids 'R' Us Syndrome?

14. Andersen links widespread "images of fantastical sexuality" with what normalization? 

BONUS QUESTIONS on Berkeley (& Locke):

  1. How did Samuel Johnson "refute" Berkeley's theory?
  2. What made Berkeley an idealist, and an immaterialist?
  3. In what way did Berkeley claim to be more consistent than Locke?
  4. What was Berkeley's Latin slogan?
  5. What obvious difficulty does Berkeley's theory face?






DQ
  • Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
  • "The skeptic continues to reason and believe, even though he asserts that he cannot defend his reason by reason." 671 Does he then have a rational basis for his assertion?
  • Comment: "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672
  • "The growth of unreason... is a natural sequel to Hume's destruction of empiricism." 673 Did Hume destroy empiricism, or just show that it leads to skepticism? Does skepticism lead to unreason?
  • Has civilization improved humanity? What do you think of Voltaire's reply to Rousseau? 688
  • What do you think of Russell's comments on Rousseau's belief in God (692) and his "sentimental illogicality" (694)?
  • What do you think of Rousseau's "noble savage"? 693
  • What do you think of Russell's critique of the claim that the general will is always right? 699
  • By enforcing laws that compel us to pay taxes and support social services (unless we're rich enough to take advantage of tax loopholes, apparently), doesn't the modern state effectively accept Rousseau's version of the social contract?
  •  If "whatever is, is right," is political reform or personal growth and change ever an appropriate aspiration? Does anyone ever really act as if they believe that this is the best of all possible worlds? What would you change about the world or your life, if you could?
  • Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
  • What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?
  • Comment, in light of Boswell's last interview with Hume (see "Supremely happy"), on the cliche that "There are no atheists in foxholes."
  • Comment: [We have insufficient experience of universes, to generalize an opinion as to their probable origins.]
  • Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness? 
  • Do you think we should attempt to balance personal freedom with the public interest? Are taxes and other civic obligations (including voting) examples of an attempt to do that? Can anyone ever be compelled to be free? Can an individual be truly free while others remain "chained"? Would life in a "state of nature" be a form of freedom worth having? Is anti-government libertarianism a step forward or back, progress or regress? If Rand Paul had been President in the 1960s, would there have been an effective Civil Rights movement in America?
  • Have you encountered or directly experienced an event you would consider a "miracle" in Hume's sense of the term? Was it a "miracle on ice" when the U.S. beat the U.S.S.R. in 1980? Is it a miracle that K.C. almost won the World Series? Is it a miracle that you and I are alive? Do we need a better word for these events?
  • If you agree that "Panglossian" (Leibnizian) optimism is ridiculous, what form of optimism isn't? Are you an optimist? Why?
  • Do you like Deism? Is it more defensible, against charges of divine indifference, than mainstream theism?
  • Was Voltaire's play an example of "cultivating your garden"? What other examples can you think of? 
  • Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

The Almanac recognizes Sam Johnson's sidekick James Boswell, who was also Voltaire's friend. A good segue for us:
It's the birthday of James Boswell (books by this author), born in Edinburgh, Scotland (1740). He is best known as the author of Life of Johnson (1791), a biography of Dr. Samuel Johnson, which is considered by many people to be the greatest biography ever written in English. As a young man, Boswell's father wanted him to settle down and take care of the family's ancestral estate in rural Scotland. Boswell wanted adventure, excitement, and intrigue, so he ran away to London and became a Catholic. He began keeping a journal in London, and instead of describing his thoughts and feelings about things, he wrote down scenes from his life as though they were fiction. He described his friends as though they were characters and recorded long stretches of dialogue.
As a young man, Boswell was the life of the party, and everyone who met him liked him. The French writer Voltaire invited him to stay at his house after talking to him for only half an hour. David Hume asked him to stay at his bedside when he died. He hung out with the philosopher Rousseau, and Rousseau's mistress liked him so much that she had an affair with Boswell. He was even friends with the pope. And then on May 16, 1763, he met the scholar and writer Samuel Johnson in the back room of a bookstore. Johnson was a notoriously unfriendly man, but Boswell had long admired him and tried hard to impress him. The next time they met, Johnson said to Boswell, "Give me your hand. I have taken a liking to you." Johnson was 30 years older than Boswell and he was the most renowned literary scholar in England. Boswell was undistinguished compared to Johnson's other friends, but Boswell never tried to compete with Johnson's intellect. Their relationship was like an interview that went on for years. Boswell would just ask questions and listen to Johnson talk, and then he would go home and write it all down in his journal. 
The two men eventually became great friends. They talked about everything from philosophy and religion to trees and turnips. Boswell knew early on that he would write Johnson's biography, but he didn't start until after Johnson's death. The work was slow going. He watched as several others published books about Johnson, and he worried that no one would care about his book when he finished it. He had to fight with his editor to keep the odd details, like the things Johnson had said to his cat and what kind of underwear he thought women should wear. He felt that these were the details that revealed who Johnson really was. When the book finally came out, it was a huge best-seller. No one had ever written such a personal biography that so completely captured a life, and no one has done so since.==
It's possible that he, like Yogi Berra, didn't say everything he said. Abe Lincoln warned us not to believe everything we read on the Internet. But these lines attributed to Voltaire are good:


  • “Let us read, and let us dance; these two amusements will never do any harm to the world.”
  • “‎Life is a shipwreck, but we must not forget to sing in the lifeboats.” 
  • “Judge a man by his questions rather than by his answers.” 
  • “Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.” 
  • “Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do.” 
  • “The most important decision you make is to be in a good mood.” 
  • “I have chosen to be happy because it is good for my health.” 
  • “Doubt is an uncomfortable condition, but certainty is a ridiculous one.” 
  • “Cherish those who seek the truth but beware of those who find it.” 
  • “What is tolerance? It is the consequence of humanity. We are all formed of frailty and error; let us pardon reciprocally each other's folly - that is the first law of nature.” 
  • “The human brain is a complex organ with the wonderful power of enabling man to find reasons for continuing to believe whatever it is that he wants to believe.”
  • “One day everything will be well, that is our hope. Everything's fine today, that is our illusion” 
  • “The greatest consolation in life is to say what one thinks.” 
  • “Let us cultivate our garden.” 


Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 
(1646-1716)
...La Monadologie (Monadology) (1714) is a highly condensed outline of Leibniz's metaphsics. Complete individual substances, or monads, are dimensionless points which contain all of their properties—past, present, and future—and, indeed, the entire world. The true propositions that express their natures follow inexorably from the principles of contradiction and sufficient reason.

The same themes are presented more popularly in the Discours de Metaphysique (Discourse on Metaphysics) (1686). There Leibniz emphasized the role of a benevolent deity in creating this, the best of all possible worlds, where everything exists in a perfect, pre-established harmony with everything else. Since space and time are merely relations, all of science is a study of phenomenal objects. According to Leibniz, human knowledge involves the discovery within our own minds of all that is a part of our world, and although we cannot make it otherwise, we ought to be grateful for our own inclusion in it.





And the meliorist just wants to make it better.


William James, in Pragmatism:
Truly there is something a little ghastly in the satisfaction with which a pure but unreal system will fill a rationalist mind. Leibnitz was a rationalist mind, with infinitely more interest in facts than most rationalist minds can show. Yet if you wish for superficiality incarnate, you have only to read that charmingly written 'Theodicee' of his, in which he sought to justify the ways of God to man, and to prove that the world we live in is the best of possible worlds... (continues)
And,
...there are unhappy men who think the salvation of the world impossible. Theirs is the doctrine known as pessimism.

Optimism in turn would be the doctrine that thinks the world's salvation inevitable.
Midway between the two there stands what may be called the doctrine of meliorism, tho it has hitherto figured less as a doctrine than as an attitude in human affairs. Optimism has always been the regnant DOCTRINE in european philosophy. Pessimism was only recently introduced by Schopenhauer and counts few systematic defenders as yet. Meliorism treats salvation as neither inevitable nor impossible. It treats it as a possibility, which becomes more and more of a probability the more numerous the actual conditions of salvation become.
It is clear that pragmatism must incline towards meliorism... (continues)
==
An old post-

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Voltaire & Leibniz

Brains, John Campbell was saying in his Berkeley interview, are a big asset. "It's very important that we have brains. Their function is to reveal the world to us, not to generate a lot of random junk."

Voltaire, dubbed by Russell "the chief transmitter of English influence to France," was an enemy of philosophical junk, too. One of the great Enlightenment salon wits, a Deist and foe of social injustice who railed against religious intolerance (“Ecrasez l’infame!”) and mercilessly parodied rationalist philosophers (especially Leibniz, aka Dr. Pangloss).
Pangloss was professor of metaphysico-theologico-cosmolo-nigology. He proved admirably that there is no effect without a cause, and that, in this best of all possible worlds, the Baron’s castle was the most magnificent of castles, and his lady the best of all possible Baronesses… Candide“There is a lot of pain in the world, and it does not seem well distributed.” [slides here]
William James called Leibniz's theodicy "superficiality incarnate": "Leibniz's feeble grasp of reality is too obvious to need comment from me. It is evident that no realistic image of the experience of a damned soul had ever approached the portals of his mind..." And James's comments continue, in a similarly scathing vein. He was particularly incensed by the disconnect between Leibniz's philosophy and the suffering of a distraught Clevelander whose plight and ultimate suicide stands for the despair of so many through the ages. But if you like Leibniz's defense of the ways of god, maybe you'd love his monadology. Maybe not. But if one substance is good, how good is a practical infinity of them?

Russell raises the basic objection to Leibniz's "fantastical" scheme of windowless monads: if they (we) never really interact, how do they (we) know about each other? It might just be a bizarre collective dream, after all. And the "best possible world" claim is just not persuasive, though many will want to believe it.

People wish to think the universe good, and will be lenient to bad arguments proving that it is so, while bad arguments proving that it is bad are closely scanned. In fact, of course, the world is partly good and partly bad, and no ' problem of evil' Voltaire’s countryman Diderot offered a sharp rejoinder to those who said nonbelievers couldn’t be trusted. “An honest person is honest without threats…” [Voltaire @dawn...Leibniz@dawn... Spinoza Leibniz slides... Voltaire_Leibniz_ James]

"Whatever is, is right." I don't care which Pope* said that, it's crazy. No way to think and live.

Submit.—In this, or any other sphere,
Secure to be as blest as thou canst bear:
Safe in the hand of one disposing pow'r,
Or in the natal, or the mortal hour.
All nature is but art, unknown to thee;
All chance, direction, which thou canst not see;
All discord, harmony, not understood;
All partial evil, universal good:
And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite,
One truth is clear, Whatever is, is right.
*An Essay on Man 


Everything happens from a cause, sure, but not "for a reason" if that's code for "for the best."

Irremediably, irredeemably bad things happen. Regret is an appropriate first response. Of course we should try to prevent recurrences of the worst (by our lights) that happens.

Voltaire's Candide may be the most devastating parody ever penned. A "logical explanation for everything" leaves the world much as it found it, less than perfect and easy to improve. Feeding the hungry, curing the sick, educating the ignorant, saving the earth, etc., are obvious improvements to begin with. "All is well," Miss Blue? (An obscure reference to a sweet-hearted cleaning lady I used to hear on the radio when I was young, who ruined that phrase for me.) I don't think so.

But the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 did nothing to block Voltaire's "Pangloss" from continuing to insist that everything is the result of a pre-established harmony. What must it be like, to live in a bubble of denial so insulated from reality as to permit a learned person to believe that?

After tornadoes, earthquakes, and other fatal natural disasters, people interviewed on television frequently thank god for sparing them. Hardly a reasonable response, even if a lifetime of indoctrination and insulation makes it "understandable." But to say it in the hearing of survivors whose loved ones weren't spared? Unspeakably insensitive. If "acts of god" (as the insurance companies put it) take life randomly, and you happened to be one of the random survivors, is gratitude really the humane response?

Candide's statement that "we must cultivate our garden" is a metaphor for not just talking about abstract philosophical questions but instead doing something for our species while we have the opportunity. It's a plea for applied philosophy. I'm fresh from a philosophy conference where, I'm sorry to report, the old bias in favor of Grand Theory still has its champions. Spectators, not ameliorators, more concerned to polish their conceptual palaces than rebuild the crumbling human abode. (Thinking in particular of an environmental ethics session, where activists were slighted for being less than rigorous.)

Voltaire, as noted, was a deist, a freethinker, and a pre-Darwinian. He was not an atheist. But is that just an accident of history? If he'd come along a century later, might he have embraced godlessness?

Hard to know. He marveled at nature's universe, wondered at (didn't shrink from) the stars, and burned with a passion to make a better world. The highest powers are those aligned with that quest, not the complacent and wildly premature contention that this is the best of all possible worlds. His god, in any age, would not have been an excuse for passivity or indifference to the fate of the earth and its riders.
==
BONUS: Whose ex-boyfriend said the eye was proof of intelligent design?

BONUS: Melissa Lane says it was a paradox of civilization for Rousseau that we're in a society of plenty, but are less _____ than when we wandered naked in the glades of some barbaric past.


BONUS+: Who has a "walk" in Edinburgh? Who had a dog?

BONUS++: Bertrand Russell says Hume cannot refute the lunatic who thinks he's a what?





No testimony is sufficient to establish a miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind, that its falsehood would be more miraculous, than the fact, which it endeavours to establish…. Whoever is moved by Faith to assent to [miracles] is conscious of a continued miracle in his own person, which subverts all the principles of his understanding, and gives him a determination to believe what is most contrary to custom and experience. David Hume
==
Are you an Inductivist? Do you regularly anticipate, worry about, plan for the events of the day? Would it be reasonable or prudent to do otherwise? What is the practical point of entertaining Humean skeptical arguments about what we can know, based on our experience? Do such considerations make you kinder and gentler, less judgmental, more humble and carefree? Or do they annoy you?

Do you trust the marketplace to provide justice, fairness, security, and a shot at (the pursuit of) happiness for all? Are there some things money cannot buy, but that the public interest requires us to try and provide for one another? Is there an internal mechanism ("hand") in capitalism to insure the public interest's being met? Is capitalism inherently geared to short-term private profit, not long-term public good? Can a market-oriented economy deal adequately with climate change? (On this issue, see Naomi Klein's new book This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate.)

Asking again: Are you happy? Would you be happier if you had better access to health care, if college costs were lower, if career competition were less intense, if you didn't have to commute to school and work, if your neighbors were your closest friends, if your community was more supportive and caring, ...? What if any or all of that could be achieved through higher taxes and a more activist government?

Also note: not assigned but highly recommended, Alison Gopnik's recent PB discussion of theHume-Buddhist connection.
==
David Hume (follow his little finger) has a public "walk" in Edinburgh.

In 1724 the town council bought Calton Hill, making it one of the first public parks in the country. The famous philosopher David Hume lobbied the council to build a walk ‘for the health and amusement of the inhabitants’, and you can still stroll along ‘Hume Walk’ to this day.He agreed with Diderot that good and honest people don't need threats to make them so, they just need to be well nurtured and postively reinforced in the customs and habits of a good and honest society. Divine justice, he thought, is an oxymoron. “Epicurus’ old questions are still unanswered… (continues)”

Everyday morality is based on the simple fact that doing good brings you peace of mind and praise from others and doing evil brings rejection and sorrow. We don’t need religion for morality… religion itself got its morality from everyday morality in the first place… JMH

Hume was an interestingly-birfurcated empiricist/skeptic, doubting metaphysics and causal demonstrations but still sure that “we can know the world of daily life.” That’s because the life-world is full of people collaboratively correcting one another’s errors. Hume and friends “believed morality was available to anyone through reason,” though not moral “knowledge” in the absolute and indubitable Cartesian sense. Custom is fallible but (fortunately) fixable. [Hume at 300… in 3 minutes... Belief in miracles subverts understanding]

On the question of Design, intelligent or otherwise, Hume would definitely join in the February celebration of Darwin Day. Scientific thinking is a natural human instinct, for him, for "clever animals" like ourselves, providing "the only basis we have for learning from experience." (Millican) [Hume vs. design (PB)... Hume on religion (SEP)]

Open your eyes,” Richard Dawkins likes to say. They really are an incredible evolutionary design. Not “perfect” or previsioned, but naturally astounding.
==
An early episode of the new Cosmos takes a good look at the eye as well.

Julia Sweeney's ex-boyfriend notwithstanding, an evolving eye is quite a useful adaptation at every stage.

Hume, open-eyed but possibly blind to the worst implications of his skeptical brand of empiricism, is on Team Aristotle. Russell, though, says we must look hard for an escape from the "dead-end" conclusion that real knowledge must always elude us, that (for instance) we cannot refute "the lunatic who believes that he is a poached egg." Russell says this is a "desperate" result. I say it would be more desperate to feel compelled to refute Mr. Egg in the first place. Remember the old Groucho line? "My brother thinks he's a chicken - we don't talk him out of it because we need the eggs."
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, of Team Plato along with other celebrants (like the other Marx) of "a communitarian ideal based on men's dreams," was an emotional thinker with a romantically-inflated opinion of human nature and the “noble savages” who would have embodied it in a hypothetical state of nature.



What’s most interesting to me about Rousseau is that his Emile so arrested the attention ofImmanuel Kant that he allowed it to disrupt his daily walking routine “for a few days.” Nothing short of seriously-incapacitating illness would do that to me. Apparently Kant was typically the same way, except for just that once.
Kant could get very upset if well-meaning acquaintances disturbed his routines. Accepting on one occasion an invitation to an outing into the country, Kant got very nervous when he realised that he would be home later than his usual bedtime, and when he was finally delivered to his doorstep just a few minutes after ten, he was shaken with worry and disgruntlement, making it at once one of his principles never to go on such a tour again.

So what’s in Emile that could so dis-comport a creature of such deeply ingrained habit? A generally-favorable evaluation of human nature, and a prescription for education reflective of that evaluation. Kant thought highly enough of Rousseau’s point of view to hold us all to a high standard of reasoned conduct. We should always treat others as ends in themselves, never as mere means to our own ends. We have a duty to regard one another with mutual respect.
The character of Emile begins learning important moral lessons from his infancy, through childhood, and into early adulthood. His education relies on the tutor’s constant supervision. The tutor must even manipulate the environment in order to teach sometimes difficult moral lessons about humility, chastity, and honesty. IEP

Yes, fine. But what precisely in Emile kept Kant off the streets, until he was finished with it?

Could have something to do with other characters in the story. “Rousseau discusses in great detail how the young pupil is to be brought up to regard women and sexuality.” Now maybe we’re getting somewhere.

Or not. Rousseau’s observations regarding women sound pretty sexist and ill-informed, nothing Kant (as a relatively un-Enlightenend male) wouldn’t already have shared.

Maybe it’s what Emile says about freedom that so arrested Kant? “The will is known to me in its action, not in its nature.”

Or religion? “It is categorically opposed to orthodox Christian views, specifically the claim that Christianity is the one true religion.” Maybe.
The Vicar claims that the correct view of the universe is to see oneself not at the center of things, but rather on the circumference, with all people realizing that we have a common center. This same notion is expressed in Rousseau’s political theory, particularly in the concept of the general will.
That’s very promising. Kant’s Copernican Revolution etc.

I wonder if the mystery of Kant’s lost walks could be related, too, to another of fellow-pedestrian Rousseau’s books, Reveries of the Solitary Walker?
The work is divided into ten “walks” in which Rousseau reflects on his life, what he sees as his contribution to the public good, and how he and his work have been misunderstood. It is interesting that Rousseau returns to nature, which he had always praised throughout his career… The Reveries, like many of Rousseau’s other works, is part story and part philosophical treatise. The reader sees in it, not only philosophy, but also the reflections of the philosopher himself.
That may not be a clue but it’s a definite inspiration for my own Philosophy Walks project, still seeking its legs.

Melissa Lane, like me, is very interested in Rousseau's walking.

BTW: we know Rousseau had a dog. Did Kant? If so, wasn’t he neglecting his duty to walk her?

Is nature full of design without a designer (as possibly reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in the "grandeur" of nature, in Darwin's view) or what? Most designers sign their work unambiguously, even ostentatiously.

We talked miracles earlier in the semester, so this may be redundant. But so many of us were so sure that we'd encountered or directly experienced suspensions of natural law that it seems worth a second pass. Was it a "miracle on ice" when the U.S. beat the U.S.S.R. in 1980? Is it a miracle that K.C. almost won the World Series? Isn't it a miracle that you and I are alive? Or that your friend or loved one, who'd received the very bad prognosis, is? Well, not exactly. All of those are plenty improbable, given certain assumptions. But none of them is an obvious law-breaker. We need a better word for these events, a word that conveys astonished and grateful surprise but does not court woo. Or I do, anyway.

J-J Rousseau seems to have been a self-indulgent paranoiac scoundrel, but he wasn't wrong to say we need to balance personal freedom with the public interest. Minimally, we need to tax ourselves enough to provide good public education, reliable infrastructure, and a secure peace. And we need to vote. (I'll ask in class how many are registered and how many will actually cast a ballot tomorrow, then I'll ask what would J-J say.)

Maybe he was just phrase-making, but "compelled to be free" has a chillier aspect from our end of the twentieth century. Whenever we act to pad our own nest wile neglecting the well-being of others, we reinforce the "chains" of oppression. Yet life is a chain. We should remember that a chain is no stronger than its weakest link.

Whenever I hear libertarians rail against government activism, I wonder: if a Rand Paul had been President in the 1960s, would there have been an effective Civil Rights movement in America?

Last Fall I tried to buoy the spirits of my friend from Kansas City, after his upstart Royals fell to the Giants. I pointed out that teams more often rally when down 3-2 than not. His pessimistic reply: I'm a skeptic about induction. It was a joke, and maybe Hume was joking too. Aren't we all Inductivists, regularly anticipating, worring about, planning for the events of our days? Would it be reasonable or prudent to do otherwise?

Of course we could do with less worry, but that's because experience has taught the truism that most of our worries are unfounded. So what, really, is the practical point of entertaining Humean skeptical arguments? It's not to urge us over the Pyrrhonic cliff, but to redouble our curiosity and our humility: to make us kinder, gentler, less neurotic friends and fellow citizens. As Hume said, "Be a philosopher; but amidst your philosophy, be still a man."

Melissa Lane's interview on Rousseau raises important questions for our time, when the marketplace so clearly has faile to provide justice, fairness, security, and a shot at (the pursuit of) happiness for all. Michael Sandel rightly says there are some things money cannot buy, but that the public interest and common decency nonetheless require us to try and provide for one another.

Adam Smith's "invisible hand" seems more invisible than ever, short-term private profiteering more prevalent. Can a market-oriented economy deal adequately, for instance, with climate change? Naomi Klein's new book This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate says no.

More Rousseau-inspired challenges: Are we happy? Would we be happier if we had better access to health care, if college costs were lower, if career competition were less intense, if you didn't have to commute to school and work, if your neighbors were your closest friends, if your community was more supportive and caring, ...? What if any or all of that could be achieved through higher taxes and a more activist government?

But let's be real, Jean-Jacques: most of that was never on offer in any realistic state of nature.


91 comments:

  1. Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    A logical explanation of something does not justify an action. Explaining why you did something wrong is important, but you can not allow an explanation to justify a wrongdoing. For example, a police officer shoots a non-violent suspect who ran from him, and claims that he shot the suspect because they ran away.However, that explanation does not give the officer justification to shoot that person. The suspect did not act out in a violent manner, they simply ran. (H01)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Payton, I agree that just because someone may have an explanation for something, that doesn't mean they were right in doing what they might have done. A logical explanation does not excuse what someone may think justifies the action they took.

      Delete
  2. Below is a very interesting short clip relating to the WWE and Donald Trump from 2007. Does it stimulate the mind? Not really. Is it my favorite thing that ever happened to our president? Absolutely.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UTtfVOyVsf0

    ReplyDelete
  3. answering DQ. "What are some helpful perspectives you take in difficult situations?"

    The perspective I always use is it could be worse, there is photo of a child who has no legs and I believe it is a she drew her legs in an extension to her legs in side walk chalk on the pavement. No matter how crappy my situation is, I still have my legs. Also I live in the greatest country on earth. If that doesn't come to mind I think about that if I fail, I can just keep trying my best.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think always having hope is really important. No matter what happens, we should always have hope. Some things will not go our way, but we should learn to persevere and move on.

      Delete
    2. https://justbetweenus.org/topics/hope-in-difficult-times/

      Delete
  4. Answering DQ " What do you currently have placed at the center of your life?"
    the center of life is absolutely school, furthering my education is the center of my life because the goal is to a medical doctor and that takes a lot of schooling. School comes first to further myself, making the sacrifice of my early 20's to be further educated is the center of life right now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kevin Hernandez Ovalle HO2
      I can relate to you Chance. With school and everything going on the best thing or purpose we can have at the center of our lives is our focus to our studies. Just like you I have a goal and I know if I focus on school and try my best I’ll be able to reap the benefits further along the way.

      Delete
    2. Hi, Chance. I too, have centered my life around school. I feel like most of us may think the same, to further our education and graduate. But I can agree, as I am pursuing a career in medical as well.

      Delete
    3. Madona Kozman9:51 PM CDT

      Section 13
      Same here! However, I still try to do other interesting activities so I won't get overwhelmed.

      Delete
  5. Answering DQ " Have you been using your imagination helpfully? Or has it been causing you stress?"

    I use mine for both as much as I hate to admit. For example I often imagine my end goal when experiencing stress. However this also transforms into a snowball of what happens if I fail and what I would do from there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kevin Hernandez Ovalle HO2
      I understand you Chance. I sometimes do that, but what I have used my imagination is for helpful outcomes. An example is that I currrently work at Subway. Just like any food restaurant there is a process they follow. Along the way I find shortcuts or easier ways to do something. That’s just an example, but I think all of us over-stress.

      Delete
    2. I try my best to use my imagination helpfully. I use it to look/imagine the best outcome. This allows me to push harder and strive to succeed. However, there are times when I do fail to use it helpfully.

      Delete
    3. https://scottjeffrey.com/use-your-imagination-create/

      Delete
    4. McKennah Campbell11:20 AM CDT

      Section 12
      I completely understand that. I tend to use imagination to help me achieve my goals, but when I come up short it ends up stressing me out more than anything.

      Delete
    5. Madona Kozman9:54 PM CDT

      Section 13
      I also tend to end up stressing when I set up high imaginations/goals.

      Delete
  6. Answering DQ"What principles would you put at the center of your life? From where could you derive them?"
    the first one would be honesty, because the bases of what people think of you and how they know you is an honest representation of yourself. the second principle is liberty, in the sense of the word I mean freedom within a society to act as one wants as long as he/she does not infringe on the freedom, safety, or privacy of others. Simply the soul's right to breathe.

    ReplyDelete
  7. (H02) What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?

    I find this argument to be illogical. The very meaning of the word "design" implies creativity and purpose. Therefore, it is impossible for something to have design yet not possess a designer. Even nature refutes such a fallacy. One cannot claim that something is designed and has a purpose without adhering to the progenitor of such a creation. So, one must either accept that there is design in nature, and therefore a cause behind such complexity, or claim that it isn't and the world contains no such design. In such a case, this means that we possess a flawed and false perception of the concept of "design" itself.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think the complexity of life only proves that there must be a designer. I do not think evolution is that perfect to make such an amazing world. I believe that there is some greater force in control.

      Delete
    2. http://www.gobible.org/study/72.php

      Delete
  8. Kevin Hernandez Ovalle HO2
    I get you Ethan. The definition in design states that it had to be built or made by someone. Therefore, all those people who state that the world has a unique and complex design, but state that there isn’t a creator or designer contradict their own statement. I personally believe the world has been designed; thus implying that their is a designer and creator whoever he or even she is.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Marie Hussels H0110:48 AM CDT

    Make Up Essay 500+ Words:
    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    I think people in those situations feel lucky but they also feel like they might not deserve the good fortune that their neighbors did not receive. Humans tend to feel small in the face of large natural disasters so they look to deities for hope as they face horrible tragedies. At the end of the day the only person we can truly protect is ourselves so we focus a lot on personal salvation. We feel helpless when we see others lose their lives in uncontrollable events so we search for some sort of control. By praising god people feel like they are not so helpless when it comes to the forces of nature. They feel as if they have been spared by a higher power and maybe they have or maybe they were just lucky.
    As humans we know so little about the world around us. In the grand scheme of things we are miniscule and very helpless. This is very hard for most people to accept. It is hard to accept that death could take us at really any moment in time. To alleviate the pressure of the world around us we look to things in higher power. We look for forces stronger than those of the world around us. We try to understand our mortality by looking for things bigger than us hoping we will get some sort of answer.
    To me this shows that religion and personal salvation are extremely important for people to feel as if they have meaning and worth in this world. It is so obvious how utterly helpless we are against the forces of nature around us. It is difficult for all of us to come to terms with the fact that our lives are really out of our hands and we could easily be wiped out by a simple natural disaster. I myself do not really participate in religion focused on personal salvation. I used to but after many years of trying to find peace in that I instead found that I felt better about my life and myself when I started just living each day in the best way I could. Everyone is different however and people should be able to participate in the things that make them feel stronger and happier in their lives. Humans are very pathetic in the grand scheme of things but it is important for all of us to live a life that fulfills us. Religions and personal salvations are a way for people to give their lives more meaning. The world around us is a scary place but we should all still continue to lead happy lives. Death is a definite but there is no need to rush death. Instead we can live each day in a way that fulfills us so that when death does arrive we do not feel as if there are still things that we need to accomplish.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Alt. quiz questions
    1. When did our country try to be a coast to coast theme park?
    80s and 90s
    2. what two boundaries were dismantled?
    entertainment and the rest of life
    3. what type of tea was born?
    reality
    4. where did people dress up as fictional beings?
    burning man.
    what became huge and quintessential to American culture?
    wrestling
    5. who was as close to superheroes as possible?
    pro athletes
    6. when did pro wrestling come out?
    1910-20s
    7. what kind of fans started a riot?
    wrestling fans
    8. where?
    New York
    9. why?
    they thought it was real
    10. how were the wrestlers described?
    héros and vilains
    11. when did wrestling start to come back?
    when tv became popular
    12. what did tv companies feel threatened by?
    Cable
    13. who made the WWF?
    Vince McMahon
    14. what did the WWF turn into?
    WWE
    15. what future president was in WWE?
    Trump
    16. who did he fight?
    McMahon
    17. what did he do to him?
    slap and body slam.
    18. where did trump get inducted to after?
    the WWE Hall of Fame
    19. what is the syndrome of wanting to be young forever?
    Kids R Us syndrome
    20. where did adults go to dress up in halloween costumes?
    burning man

    ReplyDelete
  11. 1030-10
    Alt quiz questions:
    1)When did Samuel Johnson meet Boswell?
    2)What would be the doctrine that thinks the world's salvation inevitable?
    3)What did James call Leibniz's theodicy?
    4)Who said, “we must cultivate our garden?”

    ReplyDelete
  12. PHIL 1030-009
    Discussion Questions:
    1. Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
    - Both things are reasonable. The sun could rise just like it has every day for as long as we know, but it is also reasonable to believe that destruction at the prick of a finger is possible. Mainly because no one really know how this world came to be and many people believe it just appeared. So, if something were to happen to make the world just appear, then something could just as easily happen to make it disappear. It is not necessarily objectionable. It can just been having a broad outlook on the possibilities.
    2. "The skeptic continues to reason and believe, even though he asserts that he cannot defend his reason by reason." 671 Does he then have a rational basis for his assertion?
    -Yes, because everyone believes in something, even skeptics. Also, a skeptic can not defend reason by reason, because by being a skeptic they can not have sound reason. By being a skeptic, they are saying they do not have sound reason.
    3. What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?
    - I do not really know my stance on this statement. However, I do feel like nature did not just come from thin air. It had to have come from somewhere, even if there is not one specific designer. And I do feel as if there can be complexity without a goal.
    4. Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    - I feel like freedom can be forced. For example, when someone gets kicked out before they can truly provide for themselves. Also, we are forced to obey law. Yes, that is a good thing, but it is still forced. We would be freer if the law didn’t compel us to pay our taxes, however that may not be a good things. If my neighbor got away with lawlessness I would fee betrayed by the people who are supposed to enforce the law.
    5. Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    - I think these people feel as if there is some higher power, because their lives were spared when they could have so easily been taken away. This says that human nature relies on something bigger and more powerful than just the human race.

    Comment:
    Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672
    in light of Boswell's last interview with Hume (see "Supremely happy"), on the cliche that "There are no atheists in foxholes."
    [We have insufficient experience of universes, to generalize an opinion as to their probable origins.]

    ReplyDelete
  13. Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?

    Yes it is reasonable to expect the sun to rise it has been so for countless years on this planet so why would you be led to believe otherwise? And humans are naturally greedy and selfish to some degree so yes some people would rather half the world burn than experience pain, because ultimately behind all the factors and reasons, we hold self preservation the closest to us.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What if we were to decide for ourselves that we are worth living? I know that you said that some people would want to watch the world burn because of selfish people, but where would that leave the others who want so desperately to live?

      Delete
    2. Madona Kozman2:51 PM CDT

      Section 13
      Would than decrease the chance that there is a 50 50 chance of either the end of the world or the sun rising!

      Delete
  14. If "whatever is, is right," is political reform or personal growth and change ever an appropriate aspiration? Does anyone ever really act as if they believe that this is the best of all possible worlds? What would you change about the world or your life, if you could?

    Yes of course reform can be the right choice humans make mistakes, so if what currently is, is wrong, then we can change it to make it right. Everyone has different opinions and ideas, and their own sense of justice. So if it turns out it is worse for the general public... Well in his or her eyes they are right. People do it all the time, believing in their own justice just like Hitler with his Aryan race or even America meddling in other countries. To is it is right. If I could change anything I would change fighting, we don't need to fight... If only everyone was more selfless and loving we wouldn't have wars and then we could focus on the greater things like exploration and colonization of space. But humans will always fight.

    ReplyDelete
  15. DQ 010
    I like the idea of deism, but I do not believe that the supreme being in that line of that could take the shape of any intelligent life as we know it. I feel that humans and other intelligent life on earth would be far too curious to not interfere. That does not disqualify the possibility of deism being true, I just feel that it puts a constraint on what their god could be.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    Yes, they are almost synonymous if something can be explained and has a cause, then there is way to justify why it is like that, or at least for somethings. Because we cant really justify why atoms exist they just do. For now, we are limited to what we can justify, but there is definitely justification for all things.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Alternate quiz questions:
    1) according to Andersen, what “became entrenched in academia” in the 1980s?
    A: relativism

    2) What activity was founded by a Manhattan actor who enjoyed “The Lord of the Rings?”
    A: Live Action Role Playing

    ReplyDelete
  18. What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?

    It's true as far as we onow, no one designed nature, it is designing and evolving itself making itself more and more complex everyday. There is no end goal for why nature does it, it just does because the smaller components do it to survive and adapt to each other, making nature self-adapting. It is marvelous, that something can be so complex, wild, consistent, yet a patron to only itself. Nature itself has no purpose, it only stems from the livelihood of it's ecosystem.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Section 13
      Yes! I love this. I have always said that maybe life is "predetermined" or "intelligently designed" but it doesn't have to be by a religious figure. Nature adapts and evolves itself, as do we and its amazing to see how it all works together.

      Delete
  19. Comment: [We have insufficient experience of universes, to generalize an opinion as to their probable origins.]

    I mean its true we do not have a lot of experience with the cosmos, however some explanation is better than none. As humans, we do what we can to learn, adapt, and evolve. We try to understand with what we got to understand it with, and either temporarily not permanently that.will be our logical explanation, because that's they only reason we can accept things, we need a logical explanation so although amateram of the universe, we do what we can to seemingly understand.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    Yes freedom can be forced, everyone is different, some may not enjoy freedom and even desire it even a little. If we didn't pay taxes we would think we were more free but ultimately in the long run we would lose freedom, why? Because the government needs money to function, without a government there is no general security, mandates, etc. The country would be chaotic and lawless. We would have no army because we can't fund one... We would then be more susceptible to invasion and rebellions form the inside due to lack of political infrastructure and guidance. People would do what they want and when they want to. No one would be safe, therefore no.one will be truly free. If my neighbor got away with crime, I would feel that why am I following these.laws if they can just break those rules, although depending of what... I'm not going to kill someone just because someone else did, although if someone got a free car because of it, I would then feel like why don't I get a car??

    ReplyDelete
  21. Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    Because they see it as a miracle or luck, they were lucky enough to survive a disaster with such a low survival rate, so they thank God because it is unfathomable that they could live otherwise, or maybe god tilted lady lucky in their favor. Even if their neighbors are dead, they will still thank God for "saving" them, because humans are selfish and focused on self-preservation, so naturally they would really only care if they lived for the most part. This shows that being the odd one out of a statistical bias, means we are the odd one out because God chose them, not because of the said statistical bias or by chance, therefore we thank our religion or our god for sparing us because we benefited depending on the odds. If you were unlikely to live but did, thank God for salvation, however if you were likely to live regardless, and did, you would not praise your god, why? Because you were probably going to benefit anyways, god had nothing to do with it, you were just naturally selected with no intervention.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Posting for Jesse Pohl
    Section 10
    MARCH 19 QUIZ: discussion questions-


    1) What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?

    So, if something is designed it must have a designer. This is weird because you can’t say that something was designed, especially something like nature, without a designer. Nature has much complexity, made for specific tasks. Soo it either is designed, or it isn’t.


    2) Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    Just because there is a logical explanation it doesn’t mean something is justified. Just because you can explain something doesn’t mean its justified. It just means you did something and can explain it or you somehow researched something and you learned about something and can talk about it. Explanations are just that explanations, a description, they aren’t justification.

    3) Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    I don’t think it makes sense with the definition of freedom if you force it. I guess we would be freer without laws… to an extent. I would be terrified if some people I know could get away will lawlessness…. most of the law-abiding citizens, I feel, would agree. So, maybe we would be/feel less free because we are probably living our lives hiding or in fear.

    Alt. Quiz Questions:
    1) Who was Sam Johnson’s sidekick?
    2) Who is this line attributed to: “Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do”?
    3) Rousseau’s mistress had an affair with who?




    MARCH 21 QUIZ:

    Alt. quiz questions:

    1) Who came up with the idea called categorical imperative?
    2) Who wrote “The World as Will and Representation”?
    3) Who was the child prodigy that later became associated with the principle of ‘the greatest happiness of the greatest number’?
    4) What is the subtitle of William Davies’ book?
    5) What was the name of Hegel’s book that was published in 1807?
    6) Who wrote “Elements of the Philosophy of Right”?
    7) Bentham’s body was dissected by who?
    8) What did Kant believe was the central duty of the government?
    9) In the video about Hegel, what was the third lesson?
    10) What does Le Zum Leben mean?
    11) What is the name of the book that was published in 1793 that Kant wrote?
    12) Where is the Hudson Yard real estate project?


    ReplyDelete
  23. Sect. 10
    Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?

    I think its reasonable to expect another day to arrive and quite objectional to prefer that half the World not last.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree that it is reasonable to expect another day, as I myself think like that. I always try to be positive, and not think that the world could end at any moment.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:18 PM CDT

      Section 11 Micah Chapman
      I don't necessarily want to assume the sun will rise or at least that id be alive to see it. We as a people are not guaranteed a single day.

      Delete
  24. Sect. 10
    Comment: "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672

    Because of the following of religion, people tend to put their beliefs into religion and take it very seriously. Followers of Philosophy understand that it is a viewpoint of life and not to be taken as a way of life. If religion is incorrect then their beliefs will be more drastically ruined.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Madona Kozman2:54 PM CDT

      Section 13
      I think you have a good point here.

      Delete
  25. 010
    DQ: I think it is human nature to think of yourself before others and thats why people thank god for their own personal fortune.
    DQ: I prefer to think of explanation and justification as different things entirely. I don't think that anything is 100% justified because I believe every problem has a multitude of solutions.
    DQ: I dont think that anyone believe that their own life is the ideal life. I think I would mainly change things about myself rather than the outside world which I am thankful for because that seems to be more realistic.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Sect. 10
    If "whatever is, is right," is political reform or personal growth and change ever an appropriate aspiration? Does anyone ever really act as if they believe that this is the best of all possible worlds? What would you change about the world or your life, if you could?

    I think personal growth should satisfy a person to their liking, not somebody else's. I don’t think anyone acts that this is the best of possible worlds, because humanity is flawed. If I could change the world, I would try to lesson the power of religon and make science more important.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Sect. 10
    Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    I don’t think there is justification for everything, only simple facts that things simply occur.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Madona Kozman2:53 PM CDT

      Section 13
      Would that be put under the category of "common sense"?

      Delete
  28. Sect. 10
    What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?

    I think the complexity of nature suggests that there must be a form of intelligence behind it all. I don’t think it happend without a goal. If it did, it is weird and grand.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Sect. 10
    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    I think freedom occurs with a set of general rules that must be followed by those who want to do what they want to do. These rules can be forced and the outcome, freedom, follows. I would be angered by a neighbor who would not have to abide to societal rules, because it could mean danger for me.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Sect. 10
    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    I think survivors praise God because they can’t understand that they may have simply been in the right place at the right time. I think it suggests that humans need a being to blame for inexplainable occurrences.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:15 PM CDT

      Section 11 Micah Chapman
      I think that they art actually grateful to survive that experience.

      Delete
  31. Lesley Walker – Section 10

    Comment : Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    I don’t think that just because there’s an explanation or reason for everything that there is also justification. Murder, for instance, can have a reason or explanation, but that doesn't mean that it is justifiable to do so. I think that idea of if there's an explanation, then there's justification is bad way to look at things.

    Comment : Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    I think in a way freedom can be forced, but I think it is more on a “I will make it your idea” level. I think if we didn’t have laws and different things to keep people accountable, we would be less free, and more chaos would happen in the world. I think laws are a good thing, even if we don’t always agree with them, there is usually a bigger picture reason for why it is in place. But I think that laws and regulations, and things like taxes, should be reevaluated frequently to keep things in balance and with current times.

    Comment : Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    In these situations, I think that a lot of people turn to “God” as there way of explaining and justifying things that just happened. I think a lot of times “unfaithful” people will all of a sudden have faith in a higher power because of a traumatic experience, but then go back to their ways of not believing when things go back to normal.

    Essay : Voltaire Quote

    While reading over the blog, I was intrigued by the Voltaire quote “‎Life is a shipwreck, but we must not forget to sing in the lifeboats.” I found this quote to be somewhat amusing because it’s a perfect analogy for life. Even when things are going up in flames and it seems like everything is going wrong and falling apart, you have to find a way to make the best of it and find the silver lining to get out of it. I think that him saying “sing in the lifeboats” is a way of saying that if you can find a way to make the best out of a bad situation, and not let it consume you, then it isn’t the end, you’re in a lifeboat, not dead. And I think that’s an important thing to recognize. We easily get caught up in the minor disasters of life and let it drag us down, thinking it’s going to be the “be all end all” to things, when it turns out that it’s just a minor setback. I read something once that talked about how if we only knew how insignificant the things we are stressing about now end up being in life. How when we look back at things we don’t even remember what was so bad about it, because we made it, and we kept moving forward. It’s hard to not let the “shipwrecks” cause chaos in our lives, but I think when we make the best of it we end up seeing that it usually isn’t as bad as we first thought it was.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Phil-10
    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    I think people who survive natural disasters that praise god for sparing is somewhat reasonable for surviving a dangerous encounter, which provoke thinking about life and decisions. However, praising has become more to seek self appreciation, which seems to be seeking more personal benefit. So, neighbors may not matter. In this case, human nature and religion has a selfish undertone as to seek personal gains first and others later.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Pablo,

      I appreciate the way you worded this sentence: "In this case, human nature and religion has a selfish undertone as to seek personal gains first and others later." Really puts things into perspective.

      Section 13

      Delete
    2. Madona Kozman6:31 PM CDT

      Section 13
      I think that selfishness is simply a part of humans in general and I don't see how it connects to religion.

      Delete
  33. Riley Fox12:23 PM CDT

    DQ:

    "Do you think we should attempt to balance personal freedom with the public interest? "

    I think the better question is to be asked how much would privacy would you sacrifice to establish your public security and well being?

    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    I feel like the other individual would be shunned by a law abiding society. Lawlessness in an order state causes chaos etc.

    "Do you like Deism"
    Can't be proven wrong since it always places God one step beyond the ability to investigate, with a non-personal God who doesn't interfere with the workings of the natural world, and who isn't accredited with past events, miracles, or other actions which can be dis-proven. But there is no evidence to back up this stance.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Daniel Dupuy Section 12
    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?

    I think freedom cannot be forced, that's completely up to us how free we want to live and at what terms. We would be more free if the law didn't compel us to pay taxes and behave lawfully, however i think that would be very scary and there wouldn't be any government or safety in the country. I would be a bit upset if my neighbor would get away with lawlessness but as long as it is not directly affecting me, i don't care.



    Do you like Deism? Is it more defensible, against charges of divine indifference, than mainstream theism?
    I do like and prefer Deism over another religion or belief because it is more realistic than some religions.

    https://www.britannica.com/topic/Deism

    ReplyDelete
  35. Section 12

    DQ: Do you like Deism? Is it more defensible, against charges of divine indifference, than mainstream theism?

    I don’t personally believe in god, however, Deism makes a bit more sense to me than mainstream theism. The mainstream god is supposedly all good, all powerful and completely interested in our lives. It doesn’t make sense that there would be so much suffering in the world if this were to be true. However, this isn’t a problem in Deism if you believe that god is powerful (created the universe), but isn’t hands on or interested at all in your personal lives. Suffering, then, doesn’t conflict with the belief in god.

    DQ: Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    I think praising god for sparing you over others insinuates that he cares more about your survival and wellbeing than those who did not survive. Because of that, I think it would be better to recognize the “miracle” as luck instead, and be grateful for the fact that you happened to be in the right place at the right time. I don’t think that this insinuation is intentional when people feel this way, however.


    COMMENT: Here is a video about Voltaire, if anyone is interested.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAzKGkTIKpg

    ReplyDelete
  36. Section 13: DQ: Was Voltaire's play an example of "cultivating your garden"? What other examples can you think of?

    Yes. Voltaire’s play was a group of individuals calling out the hypocrisy of blind faith in the only way that the message would actually be accepted and listened to during the period. To sit by idly when you have the power to better situations or help others is selfish and wrong, cultivating your garden is doing your part to create something better for everyone.

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  37. Section 13
    DQ: Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
    No, it’s not logical to assume there is a justification. Most of the time there is intention and planning involved in just about everything, but sometimes things just happen because certain factors came together with no plan or intention at all. No reason to over think it.

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  38. Section 12
    Cameron Ghalami
    1. Do you think that in some instances, telling the truth can be wrong? What draws the line between when and when not to tell a lie; or, do you feel that people should always be truthful?
    2. Has anyone watched the Netflix show "The Good Place"? .. One of the main characters is an ethics philosopher and the show does a pretty funny job at explaining the writers view on the "when and when not to lie" dilemma
    3. https://youtu.be/Qc8BplPGLBg

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  39. Ruj Haan8:27 AM CDT

    Section 13
    -Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    Freedom has a different meaning for each individual and it can’t be forced.

    -Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
    Explanation and justification are two different things but they are connected to one another. An explanation shows properties of an object but justification is the proof of something. There is not a justification for every explanation.

    -Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
    Yes, we are so used to seeing the sun rising the next day that we don't even think about it not rising. There are certain things in life that occur so often which become normal to us and we don't think it will happen differently.

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  40. Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    - Im not sure if freedom can be forced or not.. thats a difficult concept to comprehend. I guess in some peoples eyes, we would be more free if we didnt have taxes or laws. I suppose they would be right if we acted like wild animals, but humans are worse than wild animals. we wouldnt kill to eat, we would kill for fun so I think we are more free with laws because we have less fear allowing us to be free.

    Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
    If it's a good explanation.

    -Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
    It would be unreasonable to not expect the sun to rise tomorrow.
    section 13

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  41. McKennah Campbell11:17 AM CDT

    Section 12
    Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?

    I expect it to be reasonable to believe that the sun will rise tomorrow because life is too short to live in constant anxiety that there is no hope for tomorrow. I believe you should live as if today was your last day, but expect there to be tomorrow, so in the case that there isn't, at least your last day was enjoyable.

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  42. 13
    Comment: "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672

    Interesting statement. I see why it could have been said, philosophy is something that is constantly refuted and argued about, with everyone trying to find wisdom or the best way to live. With religion argument is frowned upon people believe what they are told to believe within their religion. That being said an error in religion would be dangerous because it would be less likely to be refuted by the followers.

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  43. What do you think of Rousseau's "noble savage"? 693

    I think he is a lot closer to the mark than Hobbes was. I agree with Rousseau people are generally good.

    13

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  44. 13
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ompOYryyfiw

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  45. Section 13

    Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
    - I think if you don't live everyday thinking that the sun will rise tomorrow, you're living a kind of depressing life. Which can contradict withe saying "live each day like its your last," but you can expect the sun to rise tomorrow and also live each day to its fullest.

    Even if theres a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that theres a justification?
    - Technically, if there is a good and logical explanation for something, you don't always need justification.

    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    - Having no kind of law would be detrimental to any society. If I knew people could get any with anything, I would be sent into a state of constant fear. I think there always needs to be a law and punishment for wrongdoings.

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  46. Anonymous12:14 PM CDT

    Section 12
    We have insufficient experience of universes, to generalize an opinion as to their probable origins.
    - Complete agree with this statement.
    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    - Freedom can not be forced, everyone has freedom but it is up to the individual to actually allow themselves to be free.We would have more and less to a certain extent, because everyone then would be able to do as they wish but it would get to the point in where others in society would feel as if they could not go out without being scared of what may happen; which to an extent is not freedom.Fear, unsafe, with less trust of the person living next to me.

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  47. Section 12
    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    If I am reading and understanding this question, it sounds like to me humans are selfish in their own ways. I don't have many beliefs in religion, so I guess humans thank God because they are so thankful to be alive.

    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    I think you can? Also, I don't know. If I told someone to go out and do whatever they want and I forced them to go out and do whatever they want, that would be forcing them to do something, but not necessarily freedom. So, that answers my question, I don't think freedom can be forced on someone.

    Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?
    I don't see anything wrong with expecting the sun to rise tomorrow.

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  48. Riley Fox12:56 PM CDT

    DQ:

    "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous."

    Do we mean instances in which religion contradicts evident reality, such as counterfactual claims about the history of the physical universe? Or do we mean instances in which a religion is internally inconsistent, in which its own assertions violate one another? Or do we mean errors in interpretation, as when someone suggests that “jihad” means the slaughter of innocents?

    Many of these last errors, interpretive errors, result from texts remaining the same as culture evolves through centuries, so that what is reasonable to infer in one century is unacceptable in another; does Hume consider these to be a special class of error?
    The answer seems obvious to me: philosophy for some time has been in the habit of trafficking in the arcane and the pedantic, matters of import to few and emotional resonance to fewer. Religion, and now ideology, are where meaning is molded and made manifest in human life; when they are corrupted, as they often are, the consequences are serious.

    People live and die and kill and love for their beliefs.

    "Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?"

    There may not be an "obvious" explanation to a situation, but there is surely an explanation to everything, which is hidden.But in reality there is always something between the lines. And there is an explanation for everything. But in order to understand it, we need to see both the sides of the coin and not just our side. It simply depends on how far you can see and what is your level of acceptance.

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  49. 12
    Can freedom be forced? Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    Freedom can be forced but that is also called neglect. The existence of law does not inherently endanger freedom nor does it protect freedom, but law can be crafted to do either of those things. If there was no written law then we would fall back onto the unspoken rules of society and so there would not be many ways for your peers to totally get away with lawlessness.

    Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
    No. There are many things that lack justification and can still be explained with logic. The two concepts are not synonymous.

    What's your reaction to the claim that nature is full of design without a designer (as reflected in the eye), complexity without a goal, adaptation and survival without any ulterior purpose? Is this marvelous or weird or grand (as in "grandeur") or what?
    The claim makes sense to me. It does not seem weird or grand it is simply natural. It may be difficult to understand but that is the way our universe exists.

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    1. Section 13
      I really like what you said about forcing people to be free is also called neglect. This is like not having any laws to protect the people; even though it would be more free, the government would be neglecting their responsibility to keep the country safe.

      Delete
  50. Section 13 Katelyn White
    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?

    A huge part of the Christian religion is trusting God to have a greater plan that involves when your life will end, so I think it comes from a gratefulness that their time isn't up yet. They believe that it was their neighbor's time to go, but they still have time left and they should be thankful for it.

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  51. Section 13

    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes, etc. so frequently praise God for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    - I think when people survive things like that I think they just praise God thanking him for having mercy on them. It's an innocent faith based decision and I don't think it says anything negative about human nature.

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    Replies
    1. Madona Kozman6:27 PM CDT

      Section 13
      I agree!!

      Delete
  52. Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?
    If everything has an explanation, not everything needs justification. We can take world war 2 for example. The United States dropped two atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Truman's government had an explanation for the bombings, hoping that this would end the war. But can we justify the bombing of innocent civilians with atomic weaponry.
    Just because we can explain the reasoning behind something, doesn't necessarily mean that there needs to be justification.

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  53. Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    I think it has to do with human greed as to why we praise god for saving us. It's in our nature to want the best for ourselves even if it means others are put down. Religion shouldn't be involved in personal salvation and greed but it often is and it can't be helped. People thank god for their personal fortunes but don't want to thank god for their misfortunes as well.
    People don't think god would do something bad to them but when something bad happens they always question why is god punishing them. Yet when they survive a flood, earthquake or tornado you don't see that as a punishment yet you thank god for letting you survive.

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  54. Anonymous12:45 PM CDT

    Why do you think people who survive earthquakes, floods, tornadoes etc. so frequently praise god for sparing them, even or especially when their neighbors are not so fortunate? What does this say about human nature and religion focused on personal salvation?
    I think it's partly to actually praise God for saving them, but to also show that they were faithful even when they could've died. I think them focusing on their person salvation causes them to lose perspective on the salvation of other

    Cody Maness Section 11

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    1. Anonymous3:13 PM CDT

      Section 11 Micah Chapman
      I think that they are legitimately thankful to survive that traumatic experience.

      Delete
  55. Anonymous12:50 PM CDT

    Would we be more free or less, if the law didn't compel us to pay our taxes and behave lawfully? How would you feel, as a law-abiding citizen, if your neighbor could get away with lawlessness?
    We would be less free. I generally prefer to be free from being stabbed or robbed. I would feel very concerned and worried if my neighbor could be lawless. It would be immensely unfair and worrying to not follow the same rules

    - Cody Maness Section 11

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    Replies
    1. Madona Kozman6:23 PM CDT

      Section 13
      I believe that people will be more free, but also more aggressive. Without rules, a lot of people will turn into animals.

      Delete
  56. Madona Kozman9:45 PM CDT

    Section 13
    https://www.ukessays.com/essays/philosophy/humans-are-selfish-by-nature-discuss-philosophy-essay.php
    That is an article explaining how humans are selfish in nature

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  57. Logan Taylor Section 1110:16 PM CDT

    Who was James Boswell's Best Friend?

    Who said, "The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears it is true."

    Who raised the basic objection to Leibniz's "fantastical" scheme of windowless monads

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  58. Brandon Beech11:02 AM CDT

    DQ: Is it reasonable to expect the sun to rise tomorrow, or "to prefer the destruction of half the world to the pricking of my finger?" Is it objectionable?

    I believe it is reasonable to expect the Sun to rise tomorrow. This is because we have seen it rise and set for thousands of years and so other than habit, we have no empirical evidence to suggest otherwise. Even if it were not going to rise tomorrow, we would have no way of knowing or preparing for it, thus detracting the usefulness of this knowledge. Without scientific evidence of any sort, this does not seem to me objectionable at this point.

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  59. Brandon Beech11:05 AM CDT

    DQ: Comment: "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672

    This does not seem to be true in my estimation. Errors in religion are certainly dangerous, but errors in philosophy can be equally dangerous. Our philosophy drives our beliefs, behaviors, and actions. If any philosophy were to suppose living is altogether pointless, then that could have very dangerous consequences.

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  60. DQ: Even if there's a logical explanation for everything, does it follow that there's a justification?

    I think it depends on the meaning of justification. Sometimes justification can be explained as a factor having to do with religion while others require physical justification for the greater good on earth. Justification seems as though interpretatively it can be relative, which is a danger unto itself. But, explanation does not require justification.

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  61. "The skeptic continues to reason and believe, even though he asserts that he cannot defend his reason by reason." 671 Does he then have a rational basis for his assertion?
    It seems like he's ignoring the definition of skeptic.
    Comment: "Generally speaking, the errors in religion are dangerous; those in philosophy only ridiculous." 672
    Religious issues often culminate in war and death, whereas philosophical issues culminate in argument and debate.

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  62. Cody Maness12:36 PM CDT

    Have you encountered or directly experienced an event you would consider a "miracle" in Hume's sense of the term? Was it a "miracle on ice" when the U.S. beat the U.S.S.R. in 1980? Is it a miracle that K.C. almost won the World Series? Is it a miracle that you and I are alive? Do we need a better word for these events?
    I have not experienced a miracle. It was not a miracle the US beat the USSR. It was the actions of their leaders that lead to their victory or defeats. It was not a miracle that K.C. almost won the world series. The one thing I think would be close to a miracle is life. It is an incredibly rare and unique thing.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:41 PM CDT

      Cody Maness Section 11

      Delete
  63. Cody Maness12:40 PM CDT

    Here's a great video on Rousseau and the Social Contract:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvjrE5nc4xs

    - Cody Maness Section 11

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