Up@dawn 2.0

Friday, February 28, 2020

Quiz Mar 5

LH
1. What did Machiavelli say a leader needs to have?

2. Machiavelli's philosophy is described as being "rooted" in what?

3. The idea that leaders should rule by fear is based on what view of human nature?

4. Life outside society would be what, according to Hobbes?

5. What fear influenced Hobbes' writings?

6. Hobbes did not believe in the existence of what?

JW
7. Belloc says that "no one should attempt great efforts without" what?

8. Where does Belloc realize he is after the fog has cleared?


FL
9. Where was the New Age philosophy/lifestyle invented?

10. What central New Age tenet did Jane Roberts "channel," and from whom?

11. What "sudden and enthusiastic embrace" helped turn America into fantasyland?

12. What bestseller whose popularity announced the mainstreaming of fantastical beliefs did Andersen's mother read?




Thomas Hobbes was a 17th-century English philosopher who is on hand to guide us through one of the thorniest issues of politics: to what extent should we patiently obey rulers, especially those who are not very good – and to what extent should we start revolutions and depose governments in search of a better world?

Hobbes’s thinking is inseparable from one major event that began when he was 64 years old – and was to mark him so deeply, it coloured all this subsequent thinking (remarkably he died when he was 91 and everything he is remembered for today he wrote after the age of 60).

This event was the English Civil war, a vicious, divisive, costly and murderous conflict that raged across England for almost a decade and pitted the forces of King against Parliament, leading to the deaths of some 200,000 people on both sides.

Hobbes was by nature a deeply peaceful and cautious man. He hated violence of all kinds, a disposition that began at the age of four, when his own father, a clergyman, was disgraced, and abandoned his wife and family, after he’d got into a fight with another vicar on the steps of his parish church in a village in Wiltshire.

The work for which we chiefly remember Hobbes, Leviathan, was published in 1651. It is the most definitive, persuasive and eloquent statement ever produced as to why one should obey government authority, even of a very imperfect kind, in order to avoid the risk of chaos and bloodshed... (SoL, continues)






CHAPTER 6. CURRICULUMPOLITICAL THEORY
Machiavelli's Advice for Nice Guys

Machiavelli was a 16th-century Florentine political thinker with powerful advice for nice people who don’t get very far. His thought pivots around a central, uncomfortable observation: that the wicked tend to win. And they do so because they have a huge advantage over the good: they are willing to act with the darkest ingenuity and...

CHAPTER 6. CURRICULUMPOLITICAL THEORY
Niccolò Machiavelli

Our assessment of politicians is torn between hope and disappointment. On the one hand, we have an idealistic idea that a politician should be an upright hero, a man or woman who can breathe new moral life into the corrupt workings of the state. However, we are also regularly catapulted into cynicism when we realise...

DQ

  • Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?
  • Do you agree with Hobbes that, left to our own devices and without the authority of the state and its institutions and laws to govern us, we would create a "war of all against all"?
  • Is there a sharp difference between writing well and thinking logically? Why do you think so many scholastic/medieval philosophers were poor writers? How can you become a better writer and clearer thinker?
  • Was Machiavelli right, about how power works in the real world?
  • If European explorers like Vespucci understood that European knowledge was at best incomplete, at worst just wrong, why were so many of them still so confident that the natives they encountered in the New World were sub-human? Why in general are humans still so quick to denigrate those who are different, or who have different customs?
  • Is there any proper place for astrology and magic in the modern world?
  • COMMENT: 'The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read." -Mark Twain. 
  • It's been estimated that the average social media user could read 200 books in the time they spend online. What would they gain? What would they lose? What's the right balance?
  • Do you trust your own conscience and experience more than that of religious leaders like the Pope? Why? 441
  • Does knowledge need foundations? Why or why not?
  • Can you agree with Machiavelli about leadership without being a sexist or an autocrat?
  • Are people fundamentally selfish, in your experience? Are you? Can selfish people change?
  • What memorable hiking experience have you had? Tell us about it!
  • Our JW author emphasizes the importance of beginning any great effort under the right circumstances. Do you have a similar opinion? What do you make sure to do before you begin a signficant task?



Old posts-

Machiavelli & Hobbes, Osgood & Scully

What a memorable weekend, beginning Friday night with Ron Howard’s Eight Days A Week at the Belcourt. The lads from Liverpool are timelessly, endlessly inspiring. Opie still impresses too.
Then there was Saturday’s superior sushi at Sonobana. Try the crawdad roll, if you go.
Yesterday’s departure of two grand old men, honeyed voices of the airwaves I’ve been making a ritual point of hearing my entire adult lifetime, was even more moving than anticipated: Charles Osgood, from Sunday Morning, and Vin Scully, from the Dodgers. Two more exemplary long lives for my collection, two more ringing endorsements of Theodore Geisel’s smart optimism: “Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.” See you on the radio, Charley. And a very pleasant good evening to you, Vin. It’s been good to know you both, though of course we’ve never actually met. The connective power of broadcast speech outpaces mere proximity, and shrinks the planet in the best way.
The lives they’ve lived stand as a strong rebuke to the low estimation of humanity we find in today’s CoPhi philosophers, a pair of Power Politics proponents who expected the worst from people.
Italian Niccolo Machiavelli was all about appearances. He admired lions and foxes but seems in many ways to have been more like a chameleon, changing colors and stripes to suit situations, procure patronage, and manipulate people. Really, though, only the human animal is capable of the kind of duplicity and means-end rationalization he urged. Russell liked him more than I do, for his absence of “humbug.” If “success” in a leader means simply staying power, a talent for deception, and a mania for winning, I vote for failure.
Brit Thomas Hobbes (“Tommy,” my first PoliSci prof familiarly named him, “mainlining on utopia”) was a peripatetic who derived great energy from his daily perambulations. Frederic Gros doesn’t tell us that in his little “Energy” chapter, but Hobbes would certainly have agreed that the solid support of earth under foot makes realistic alliance with the pull of gravity. He thought we ought to build similar stability into our public institutions.
“He would go out for a long walk every morning, striding quickly up hills so as to get quickly out of breath” and to get ideas, which he preserved by extracting a quill from his walking stick. He seems to have been hail, healthy, hardy, and happy, living into his 90s (but not an optimist). Not the guy you’d expect to stump for a maximum state like his awe-inspiring mortal God “Leviathan.”

Hobbes was a “rigid determinist” but something got him up and going each morning, out into the English countryside. Did it really feel involuntary? Does it? Not to me.
He didn’t find any intrinsic  difference between religion and superstition, but thought the former might have its uses for the state. Like everything else, legislation governing what belief and conduct to allow in “utopia” is supposed to make life (not people, contrary to what a student once told me) less nasty, brutish, and short. Hobbes had nothing against vertically challenged individuals.
It’s a good day to be thinking about what qualities we desire in our leader and our nation. I’m not holding my breath for an edifying debate tonight, but as Mr. Osgood always said: “we’ll be watching.” Too bad he and Vin aren’t on the ballot. As Vin once said, we’re all “day to day.”
6 am/6:40, 67/74/51, 6:36

Hobbes “walked much and contemplated”


Machiavelli and Hobbes are on tap in CoPhi today. Students often come to them already intrigued with the former but unaware of the latter, though both their names have become adjectival terms of notoriety. Beware Machiavellian politicos and their ends-justify-the-means mentality, we all seem to have been forewarned, and beware Machiaveliian schemers generally. But while the last century spawned chilling examples of totalitarianism and its murderous toll, fewer of us have been alerted to the dangers of the Hobbesian superstate.
The explanation could have something to do with the evident sweetness of temper of “Tommy” Hobbes (as my old poli-sci prof at UMSL called him), who envisioned Leviathan but exemplified something more like the lamb in his personal conduct and bearing. Simon Critchley’s Book of Dead Philosophers offers an endearing glimpse of a true English eccentric. He “avoided excess ‘as to wine and women’ and stopped drinking at age sixty,” he “walked vigorously every day to work up a sweat… and expel any excessive moisture,” he sang “prick-songs” late at night to stimulate his lungs and lengthen his life.
My favorite thing about Hobbes remains, naturally, his peripatetic nature. He walked to work up a sweat but also to stimulate ideas, which he’d interrupt himself long enough to record by disengaging the quill from his walking stick. “He walked much and contemplated,” says Aubrey’s Life, “and he had in the head of his cane a pen and ink-horn, carried always a note-book in his pocket, and as soon as a thought darted, he presently entered it into his book, or otherwise he might perhaps have lost it.”
Another explanation of the failure of “Hobbesian” to convey the menace it might is, of course, a certain sweet-natured cartoonish tiger-cat who resisted his namesake’s “war of all against all.”
Image result for hobbes

Machiavelli, & civil disobedience

Mistrust, suspicion, refusal to really listen to others: these are symptomatic features of the world as Machiavelli (and Hobbes, coming next) knew it, a world full of testimonial injustice. Not to mention intrigue, plot, war, and violence. The more things change...

Niccolo Machiavelli praised virtu’ in a leader: manliness and valor are euphemistic translations, ruthless efficiency might be more to the point. The intended implication of "manly" is not so much machismo as hu-manity, with a twist. Machiavelli's manly prince judiciously wields and conceals the guile of the fox and the brutality of the lion, all the while brandishing an image of kindhearted wisdom. A wise prince, he said, does whatever it takes to serve the public interest as he sees it. But does he see it aright? Hard to tell, if you can’t believe a word he says. But Skinner and others think he's gotten a bad name unfairly. (See videos below.)
A new detective mystery starring Nicco has recently been published, btw, and was featured on NPR. “What would happen if two of the biggest names of the Renaissance — Niccolo Machiavelli and Leonardo da Vinci — teamed up as a crime-fighting duo?” Beats me, may have to read The Malice of Fortune. One of our groups, I think, is doing a midterm report on Superheroes & Villains. Room for one more?





I'm a bit puzzled by the sentimental fondness some seem to feel for "machiavellian" politicians. Haven't we had enough of those? Wouldn't we rather be led by Ciceronians and Senecans and Roosevelts, evincing qualities of compassion and (relative) transparency? Don't we wish them to affirm and work for the goals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Eleanor's great post-White House achievememt?



But, Bertie Russell agrees that Machiavelli has been ill-served by invidious judgments that assimilate him to our time's conventions and accordingly find him objectionable, instead of appreciating his fitness to live and serve in his own day. Russell praises his lack of "humbug." Give the devil his due.

“I never say what I believe and I never believe what I say,” declared Machiavelli. “If I sometimes say the truth, I conceal it among lies”... more»

Hobbes


“Hobbes was fond of his dram,” sang the Pythons. But he was fonder of his stick. His walking stick. (See below.)

I was amused when my old friend said he’d just spent five weeks in Britain and came away with nothing more philosophical than a visit to a castle where Hobbes had tutored. My colleague answered rightly by noting that an ancient English castle’s more likely to stimulate the philosophical imagination than is a dusty library in Tennessee. But in any event, Hobbes is a fascinating and over-maligned figure whose steps I look forward to tracking. As I wrote for students awhile back,

Thomas Hobbes is one of my favorite “authoritarians”: a walker who kept an inkwell in his walking stick, hehobbes-walking-stick lived to 91 in the 17th century and believed humans could be saved from themselves with the right kind of contract. Contrary to a student essay I once graded, he did not say pre-social contract humans were “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”

Hobbes did say that’s what it would be like to live in a “state of nature,” without civil authority or police or government to keep the peace and impose order. It would be a “war of all against all.” If you don’t agree, asks Nigel Warburton in his Little History, why do you lock your doors? 

Not, surely, because you think everyone’s out to get you. But it only takes a few miscreants, doesn’t it, to create an atmosphere of paranoia and mistrust?

I’d like to think Hobbes might reconsider the extremity of his position, were he transported to our time. On the other hand, we might reconsider the benignity of ours, were we transported to his. Those were tough times: civil war, a king executed, murderous politics, etc. How much freedom would you trade for peace and safety, if there were no other way to  secure it? How much have you? How secure do you feel? Still relevant questions in our time, and Hobbes’s answers were extreme indeed. But he was no monster, he was a peace-seeker and a civilizer. Most walkers are.

But, would life in a state of nature really be as bad as Hobbes thought? Most of us find most people less than totally distrustful, hostile, aggressive, and  vicious, most of the time. On the other hand, we’re most of us hardly “noble savages” either. Civilization and its discontent-engendering institutions account for a percentage of everyday bad behavior, but surely not all of it.
The Hobbesian threat of insecurity and fear of violent death, in our time, may be great enough for most people to override their desire for personal freedom. Is safety more important than liberty? “Better red (or whatever) than dead?” Better to have government snoops monitoring your calls, emails, etc., than… than what, exactly?
Even if you agree with Hobbes that humans left to themselves would revert to base, aggressive, instinctive behavior, you may still also hesitate to agree that the only corrective for this condition is an all-powerful and authoritative central state. You may prefer not to concede the mechanistic, material model of humans as incapable of changing, of choosing to become more kind and compassionate, less fearful and selfish. You may hold out for a species capable of rewriting its default programming.
Speculations about human nature as inherently good or bad have always slighted the individuality of persons, absorbing it in abstractions about universal nature. We should seek instead to grasp the particularity of our separate natures. Our separate plural natures.
“Common sense” gets things wrong often enough and egregiously enough – the flatness of earth, the rectitude of slavery, etc.? – to give serious pause. Uncommon sense is in shorter supply, and greater demand.
Finally today: Descartes’ dreams of reality and appearance, and ours. Mine are not usually so lucid, but others say otherwise of theirs. Is it really possible to alter the “real world” by controlling your dreams? I’m skeptical.
And can someone please explain “Inception” to me?

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

But first a word about what really matters: health. Though I complain often enough of the sorts of aches and pains common to members of my (Eisenhower-era) demographic, I'm rarely bedridden with illness. So, when I'm driven to my sickbed for an entire night and day and night, as I was between Saturday and Monday, it's a bit of a shock and (in retrospect) a welcome reminder. "Keep your health," William James wrote to his English pragmatist friend Schiller, "it's better than all the truths in the firmament." All else is bonus. I'm running on fumes and yesterday afternoon's half-bowl of chicken noodle soup so far today, but I'm up and running. That really does matter, way more to me today than Machiavelli ever did. But I'll try to fake it.

Mistrust, suspicion, refusal to really listen to others: these are symptomatic features of the world as Machiavelli (and Hobbes, coming next) knew it, a world full of testimonial injustice. Not to mention intrigue, plot, war, and violence. The more things change...


Niccolo Machiavelli praised virtu’ in a leader: manliness and valor are euphemistic translations, ruthless efficiency might be more to the point. The intended implication of "manly" is not so much machismo as hu-manity, with a twist. Machiavelli's manly prince judiciously wields and conceals the guile of the fox and the brutality of the lion, all the while brandishing an image of kindhearted wisdom. A wise prince, he said, does whatever it takes to serve the public interest as he sees it. But does he see it aright? Hard to tell, if you can’t believe a word he says. But Skinner and others think he's gotten a bad name unfairly. (See videos below.)
A new detective mystery starring Nicco has recently been published, btw, and was featured on NPR. “What would happen if two of the biggest names of the Renaissance — Niccolo Machiavelli and Leonardo da Vinci — teamed up as a crime-fighting duo?” Beats me, may have to read The Malice of Fortune. One of our groups, I think, is doing a midterm report on Superheroes & Villains. Room for one more?

I'm a bit puzzled by the sentimental fondness some seem to feel for "machiavellian" politicians. Haven't we had enough of those? Wouldn't we rather be led by Ciceronians and Senecans and Roosevelts, evincing qualities of compassion and (relative) transparency? Don't we wish them to affirm and work for the goals of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Eleanor's great post-White House achievememt?

But, Bertie Russell agrees that Machiavelli has been ill-served by invidious judgments that assimilate him to our time's conventions and accordingly find him objectionable, instead of appreciating his fitness to live and serve in his own day. Russell praises his lack of "humbug." Give the devil his due.

“I never say what I believe and I never believe what I say,” declared Machiavelli. “If I sometimes say the truth, I conceal it among lies”... more»



The political philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli wrote “The Prince” as a manual on leadership and governing during the late Italian Renaissance, ...

Five centuries after “The Prince” was written, visiting spots in and around Florence that track the arc of Machiavelli's life.


Looking for a firm modern presidential declaration of anti-Machiavellian sentiment? Jimmy Carter said: "A strong nation, like a strong person, can afford to be gentle, firm, thoughtful, and restrained. It can afford to extend a helping hand to others. It is a weak nation, like a weak person, that must behave with bluster and boasting and rashness and other signs of insecurity."

We're talking civil disobedience too, today. Again Nigel slights the Yanks, in not mentioningThoreau. “If the machine of government is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law.” And,
Unjust laws exist; shall we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once? Men generally, under such a government as this, think that they ought to wait until they have persuaded the majority to alter them. They think that, if they should resist, the remedy would be worse than the evil. But it is the fault of the government itself that the remedy is worse than the evil. It makes it worse. Why is it not more apt to anticipate and provide for reform? Why does it not cherish its wise minority? Why does it cry and resist before it is hurt? Why does it not encourage its citizens to be on the alert to point out its faults, and do better than it would have them?
So, here's my Discussion Question today: Have you ever engaged in an act of deliberate law-breaking, in order to challenge what you considered an unjust law? Are there circumstances in which you would do so? Would you risk arrest on behalf of social justice, climate change, or anything else? Will you at least support those who do? Are you a compliantist, a gradualist, or a transgressive reformer?

Russell, incidentally, himself a civil disobedient in the great tradition of Socrates, Gandhi, King, et al - ("On April 15 1961, at the age of 89, Bertrand Russell gave a speech calling for non-violent civil disobedience in his campaign for British unilateralism, i.e. to get Britain to unilaterally give up its nuclear weapons and membership in NATO") - gives Thoreau only passing attention as an American representative of the romantic movement of the 19th century.

32 comments:

  1. Do you trust your own conscience and experience more than that of religious leaders like the Pope? Why?
    I personally do trust my own conscience and experience, mostly because it helps my own comfort. Religious leaders speak to everyone, however my own experiences are mine. There has also been a various number of religious leaders who weren't very honest, so I would question them more than myself.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It's been estimated that the average social media user could read 200 books in the time they spend online. What would they gain? What would they lose? What's the right balance?
    I believe they would gain a lot more than lose. Most would probably improve their reading, and time management, however maybe some might lose the ability to connect with people as often. I think the right balance would be not spending time online whenever bored,and spending time online when needing to connect with others and actually gaining information for yourself.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:01 PM CDT

      I agree with what you've said, I think that we should limit our time on our phones and pick up a book. It would help our reading skills greatly and its a great way to spend quiet time instead of staring at a screen. I also like the idea of being able to connect with people. Today, this is the only way we know of connecting with friends and family.

      Delete
    2. I def agree we should not just be online when bored but when we have a purpose to be on it.

      Delete
    3. I agree with you, all my life I have chosen to spend time online over reading a book. It never affected my schooling but I agree that it would have increased my reading skills.

      Delete
  3. Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?
    I believe it depends on the situation, however at the same time this could go wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I disagree because telling the truth might cause a ruckus, but lying and possible being exposed could be more damaging. People tend to question everything they don't see for themselves, so lying to people who are naturally curious would be fatality.

      Delete
    2. I agree with you. It is all situation dependent and depends on which route would be best to take in that instance.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous3:05 PM CDT

      I also agree with you, I feel that it all depends on the situation but personally I would rather hear the truth than comforted with a lie.

      Delete
  4. Are people fundamentally selfish, in your experience? Are you? Can selfish people change?

    Im my opinion , yes, people are fundamentally selfish. I have met, seen, and been fundamentally selfish for almost really no reason at all. Once seen two homeless man steal from another homeless man, which in my opinion is weird because they are all homeless.I found it to just be the selfishness they feel when seeing someone at the same status of them having, they then stole what made that person"better" than them. I am a bet selfish especially if i feel like I'm not doing good enough or feel like giving upon something. Of course selfish people can change. They can become extremely selfish or self aware and not so selfish. Yet i feel that everyone has some sense of selfishness in them , its almost as if it is a human trait.

    ReplyDelete
  5. What memorable hiking experience have you had? Tell us about it!

    My most memorable hiking moment was literally my only hiking moment in my life. A trail near Belmont University is where my friends and i went to during our summer before fall semester started. it was a fun walk because we were all excited and hype on caffeine. Very hot and sweaty feeling the lazy calf muscle pump through the trail was the most annoying thing ever. The bugs and birds chirping and flying past us randomly throughout the day made me uneasy, even though we were in no place of danger, i was queasy. I don't do a lot of pace changing walks. Although it was a new thing that made me sweat but was fun to enjoy with my friends.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Alexis Mahon9:43 PM CST

    COMMENT: 'The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read." -Mark Twain

    I wholeheartedly agree with Mark Twain. First of all, reading is definitely a privilege that is free to everyone, but not enough people take advantage of it. Reading is knowledge, and knowledge is power. Therefore, a person who has the ability to read but chooses not to is the equivalent of someone who relinquishes his source of power.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I really like that quote, I agree with it!

      Delete
  7. Do you agree with Hobbes that, left to our own devices and without the authority of the state and its institutions and laws to govern us, we would create a "war of all against all"?
    Yes. With all of the petty squabbling that is done on social media and the amount of people who get offended easily or are quick to anger, it would end in war.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I also agree with this. I think people 99% of the time want what's best for them. Unfortunately this is the world we live in.

      Delete
    2. Yes, I believe without some sort of authority the world would go mad. It would give people with ill intentions more room to execute their wrongdoings.
      Section 6

      Delete
  8. Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?
    I believe that there are only certain times where this could be applicable. The truth could cause panic or outrage when the best thing to do is have a cool head.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree with you as well. I do think that in this case, someone should also be aware of the lie, in order to make sure that it's just for the purpose of preventing an outrage.
      Section 5

      Delete
  9. Joseph Cooper #11

    Is there a sharp difference between writing well and thinking logically? Why do you think so many scholastic/medieval philosophers were poor writers? How can you become a better writer and clearer thinker?

    There is not sharp difference between the two as one is required for the other for certain en devours, but writing certainly comes with more rigidity, as you must account for questions readers will not be able to ask in the moment.You need to elaborate in a concise manner complicated material, so it can be difficult to present everything. The best thing one can do to improve is share with others both in writing and verbally and accounting for the more complex issues will come naturally.

    Does knowledge need foundations? Why or why not?

    Yes, knowledge is something that builds on itself. By understanding addition one can understand multiplication, one is essential in one its own but also adds context to the other.

    Are people fundamentally selfish, in your experience? Are you? Can selfish people change?

    It's the pessimist in me that dictates that I assume the worst in those around me most of the time. When given the opportunity I see people will more often than not take care of themselves first then worry about around them. I try to fight this instinct, but it can be difficult. A way I do that is try empathetic practices where I look at the problem from all perspectives.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?

    I think, morally, I agree. Panic is like wild fire. People begin to act spontaneously when panic spreads, stealing and hurting others for their benefit. I think in this scenario everyone wins. Ignorance is bliss sometimes and I stand by that. That being said, if it is a crucial issue, I hope they are working in the background to fix it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree to an extent. It depends on what the issue is about. There should be a fine line about what needs to be known or unknown. If the leader uses this tactic too much, his power will be abused. I think this might allow someone who is more power hungry to take too much control.
      Section 6

      Delete
  11. Is there a sharp difference between writing well and thinking logically? Why do you think so many scholastic/medieval philosophers were poor writers? How can you become a better writer and clearer thinker?

    I think definitely. Personally, I struggle with English papers. English is simply a subject that I am not interested in. I think having logical thoughts, but not being able to put them into words is a problem many people have. I'm personally not sure how one would become a better writer, but becoming a better thinker, I believe, comes with more knowledge and awareness of our world.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree. I believe you can think logically and not be able to transfer it to paper in the same fashion. To become a better writer I would either write as much as a could and sort out the important parts later, or I would create a draft. To become a clearer thinker you could really focus on one part of a problem at a time, and not let your mind wander uncontrollably.
      Section 6

      Delete
  12. Anonymous2:55 PM CDT

    DQ: What memorable hiking experience have you had? Tell us about it!

    The most memorable hiking experience I have had is when I took a weekend trip to Gatlinburg. I decided to hike a trail called Rainbow Falls, it was 3 miles to the waterfalls and 3 miles back down. The hike was very challenging because of the steep incline and the rushing rivers you had to cross to reach the top. I enjoyed the hike because of how rewarding it felt to have hiked such a challenging trail.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous2:58 PM CDT

    DQ: Are people fundamentally selfish, in your experience? Are you? Can selfish people change?

    I think that people are wired to be fundamentally selfish. We as humans, have to be selfish to an extent in order to protect our selves at times. If we did not have any selfishness we would likely not survive in certain situations. Personally, I can be selfish and i can acknowledge that. I think that selfish people can change but I think that deep down we will all have a sense of selfishness.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree with you. There is a certain amount of selfishness people need. Being selfish allows you to decide on what is best for you, which in terms we all seem to be wanting to do to better our own future/life.

      Delete
  14. Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?

    It is really hard to give a pinpoint answer, because lying may sometimes be the best solution. Even today people believe that the government is hiding things from them. I am sure they find themselves asking this question all the time. Just looking at how people react to the Corona Virus is crazy, one can only imagine the people's reaction to something worse. So I see why leaders ask themselves this.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Do you agree with Hobbes that, left to our own devices and without the authority of the state and its institutions and laws to govern us, we would create a "war of all against all"?

    I agree. Even today with authority people already steal, murder, and etc. Fights between people would not end until one dies since there are no consequences.

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  16. Do you agree with Machiavelli that it's okay for a leader to lie if he perceives it to be in the best interest of his people?

    I think it is a politician's responsibility and obligation to be truthful, regardless of the subject-- however, ALL politicians lie. It is up to us to trust, but verify their statements. Politicians get away with lies because we let them. I think that many politicians lie for personal gain-- more votes from the people. Whether you agree with Machiavelli or not, lying leaders will still exist. It is up to the people to respond accordingly, or not respond at all.

    In some extreme cases, these lies can be dangerous. For example, not too long ago Trump compared the Coronavirus to "the common cold". Awareness is a lifesaver during this pandemic. We should not be fearful, but we need to know the facts in order to lessen the consequences.

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    1. #5
      I totally agree with you, we often get lied too even though we may all agree that a leader should be truthful most of the time. It is definitely your own responsibility to determine whether the leader is truthful or not.

      I have 2 whole runs for this week.

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  17. #5

    "Are people fundamentally selfish, in your experience? Are you? Can selfish people change?"

    I think everyone is slightly fundamentally selfish, some more than others. I know I can be selfish. But most of the time, I'm able to put my feelings aside and let things be the way that they are. I believe it's possible to become less selfish if the person truly wants to be.

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