Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

corra wrote:

― Anne Sexton

To Liverpool socialist MP Bessie Braddock, who told him, "Winston, you're drunk.":
Bessie, you're ugly. And tomorrow morning I'll be sober, but you'll still be ugly.

― Winston Churchill

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

In fairness, there are Muslim groups speaking out against the warrior readings of their sacred texts.  The Clarion Project has a page with a list.  Given how firmly tCP and its principal speak out against the aggressors, I think the list is reliable.  There's an interview by tCP with the principal of the Center for Islamic Pluralism which does not go in depth into why he (a Sufi) and others believe that the warrior reading of those texts is wrong.

To be truthful, no one of the general population understands the warrior unless of a class he brings material success to that population. "Warrior readings of islamic text" only brings to mind that personal Sharia does not demand it, and the idea of suicidal action for no material gain for anyone is "crazy,"  in the same way it was for the Allied soldier to storm the beaches of Normandy on D-day.

To defeat-- at  the very least slow down to ineffectual -- the islamic enemy we must seek out and destroy every muslim warrior on earth to show the general-population non-warrior muslim that it is indeed 'crazy' to fight the infidel. {Imagine a conclusion to WWII after an Allied defeat on D-Day.} There was a time, from WWII to the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan, when America sought out and fought on a strategic basis every socialist warrior until, we might have thought, socialism stood dead in the water. However, evil does not ever go away but rather dissipates for a while to regroup later. There has been that utopian streak in American consciousness's where there is an idyllic future in which evil has been eradicated and we can just relax to pursue the American dream of working hard, paying bills, and being charitable, but I'd like every muslim, catholic, and any sort of immigrant, who has some perverse notion that American culture is not born of a blessed blend of Aristotle and Protestant Christianity,  to read a user agreement and acknowledge understanding to faithfully uphold:

But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly.

53 (edited by njc 2016-06-17 11:01:17)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

That goes after one part of the chain.  The start of the chain is the ideal of violent jihad.  Discredit the idea and the problem fades away.

I watched Ryan Mauro, principal of the Clarion Project, try to speak to a town council not far from where I live.  A mosque was requesting variances to expand.  Mauro wanted to speak--on the record--with the information that the mosque's principal was listed as an unindicted co-conspirator in the 9/11 atrocity.  The schedule was manipulated to ensure that Mauro's statement could only be given on a 'to-be-continued' date when, with his full schedule, he could not attend.

Note that adults, with formed and secure world-views, are rarely indoctrinated.  The targets and victims are young people.  There are a lot of angles on this, including the idea that self-destruction expiates the sin of having enjoyed the forbidden pleasure being destroyed.

If we would regard ISIS and its sister organizations as states, even nascent and usurping states, we could take Newt Gingrich's recent suggestion that anyone who swears allegiance to such an entity has, by giving allegiance to a foreign power, forsaken his American citizenship.  (Note that Grant never addressed officers of the Confederacy by that name, because it would recognize that entity in law.  Letters demanding surrender were addressed to Commander of the Army now .....)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Charles F Bell wrote:

But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly.

So, you do agree with me that organized religion is the problem. Unfortunately, none of the major religions adhere to the philosophy set forth in the quote. You need only go to any denominational gathering or tune into any televangelist or any event where they offer up a prayer to confirm it. No, I don't really expect you to say so -- on the contrary, you'll most likely twist it around to say something else -- but you might try it in the hopes of giving me a heart attack. Take care. Vern

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

"With all thy getting, get understanding."  ---the KJV by way of Malcom S. Forbes.

"Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom."

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Charles_F_Bell wrote:
corra wrote:

― Anne Sexton

To Liverpool socialist MP Bessie Braddock, who told him, "Winston, you're drunk.":
Bessie, you're ugly. And tomorrow morning I'll be sober, but you'll still be ugly.

― Winston Churchill

Isn't that what I just said? Never mind. Your intellect is stunning. I have to back away and grab my shades when you enter the forums. TOO. BRIGHT. Etc.

57 (edited by njc 2016-06-17 22:36:28)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

corra wrote:
njc wrote:

"With all thy getting, get understanding."  ---the KJV by way of Malcom S. Forbes.

"Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom."

I think those are the same quote, from different versions.  If not, what is wisdom but a true understanding, of what can and should be done, as well as what is?  Practical wisdom is, after all, one of the four cardinal virtues, all of equal importance.

There are times to discuss the motives and purposes of your opponent in debate.  But the purpose should never be to cut off debate.  The proper way to close debate is to find stasis (with a short, hard 'a').  That's the place where you another your opponent can agree on the places where you disagree, and will not be convinced by debate.  If they are issues on which evidence might speak, so much the better.

58

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Fascinating essay by Lee Harris.  It's not the first place he's used this idea--the first place I saw it, years ago, was in the World-Historical Gamble essay.  But the idea that there is a force that cannot be bent to reason, driving non-Clausewitzean conflicts, is important enough that if it is true, there is no way to face the problem without acknowledging the idea.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

vern wrote:
Charles F Bell wrote:

But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly.

So, you do agree with me that organized religion is the problem.

Actually, I think you said white heterosexual male Protestant Americans is the problem, or was that someone to whose mind you have melded?

vern wrote:

Unfortunately, none of the major religions adhere to the philosophy set forth in the quote. You need only go to any denominational gathering or tune into any televangelist or any event where they offer up a prayer to confirm it. No, I don't really expect you to say so -- on the contrary, you'll most likely twist it around to say something else -- but you might try it in the hopes of giving me a heart attack. Take care. Vern

Matthew 6:6 within the first level of understanding means that followers of a minority faith should lie low and even be secretive, and if the God of that faith has any power to hear prayer, he will do so.  At a broader, second level understanding it means that faith does not require ostentation, and contrariwise puritans were sometimes rather showy about their lack of ostentation, so good at demonstrating their goodness, and the modern liberal, the social-justice warrior, has that annoying puritan inheritance.   Evangelism is different because of the proselytizing nature. Islam, requiring everyone in the world to be muslim, or die, or submit to lower status, is not evangelism but imperialism.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

That goes after one part of the chain.  The start of the chain is the ideal of violent jihad.  Discredit the idea and the problem fades away.

And that requires defining islam for what it is: an ideology for totalitarianism and imperialism.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

Fascinating essay by Lee Harris.  It's not the first place he's used this idea--the first place I saw it, years ago, was in the World-Historical Gamble essay.  But the idea that there is a force that cannot be bent to reason, driving non-Clausewitzean conflicts, is important enough that if it is true, there is no way to face the problem without acknowledging the idea.

Harris is wrong in the furtherance of his analysis, and it is better, if not complete, to view islam as a political movement and not a religion. In this country which tolerates a multiplicity of religions and political beliefs up to the point of conduct limits, there is actually no difference on whether a non-muslim views islam as a religion or a political ideology except for the fact this country has a culture of super-tolerance for religious beliefs over political beliefs, and the constitutional tests for government-religion interaction are more lax than for government-politics interaction. Harris wants to minimize the Pearl Harbor parallel [there's Shinto complicity, of course] when it is almost an exact match even if the strategy for war must be different.

Moreover, Harris, Dawkins, [the late] Hitchens, are atheists who believe in a squishy anarcho-socialist, materialist, anti-causality/pro-determinism fantasy ideology.

62

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Most of what I know of Harris is the World_Historical Gamble analysis.  It, and especially the Fantasy Ideology component of it, seem to me to address things not addressed elsewhere.  Whether they are correct or not is, of course, a different question.

It's true that Harris draws on an observation by Marx to illuminate part of the analysis.  But that component is small enough that it can be true even if Marx's larger analyses are false, even grossly false.

So, is Harris right, or near right, or right-as-far-as-he-goes, in his claims on the points of Fantasy Ideology and non-Clausewitean actors?   These seem to me to be his major contributions.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

Most of what I know of Harris is the World_Historical Gamble analysis.  It, and especially the Fantasy Ideology component of it, seem to me to address things not addressed elsewhere.  Whether they are correct or not is, of course, a different question.

It's true that Harris draws on an observation by Marx to illuminate part of the analysis.  But that component is small enough that it can be true even if Marx's larger analyses are false, even grossly false.

So, is Harris right, or near right, or right-as-far-as-he-goes, in his claims on the points of Fantasy Ideology and non-Clausewitean actors?   These seem to me to be his major contributions.

We have the benefit of hindsight unlike writing on the Iraq War in 2003 but (1) historical determinism is false; Marxian historical determinism is false and dangerous; (2) The Iraq War was simple - we were already in a state of normal-sovereign-territory war with Hussein's Iraq (it was 100% international-law legal - unlike Afghanistan), and it was the best (and still best) battleground to fight jihadists. 

In order to respond to our present crisis, we must begin by realizing that both the "liberal" concept of national self-determination and the "conservative" one of Realpolitik are no longer adequate to the historical actuality that is unfolding before our eyes. And they are obsolete for the same reason: the epoch of history governed by the principle of classical sovereignty is in the process of dissolution.

is false and dangerous.  Again, a sort of move to global anarcho-socialism (Soros - Open Society) but (like MArx) needs a ruling super-sovereign to arrange it.

64 (edited by vern 2016-06-20 13:19:57)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Charles_F_Bell wrote:
vern wrote:
Charles F Bell wrote:

But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly.

So, you do agree with me that organized religion is the problem.

Actually, I think you said white heterosexual male Protestant Americans is the problem, or was that someone to whose mind you have melded?

vern wrote:

Unfortunately, none of the major religions adhere to the philosophy set forth in the quote. You need only go to any denominational gathering or tune into any televangelist or any event where they offer up a prayer to confirm it. No, I don't really expect you to say so -- on the contrary, you'll most likely twist it around to say something else -- but you might try it in the hopes of giving me a heart attack. Take care. Vern

Matthew 6:6 within the first level of understanding means that followers of a minority faith should lie low and even be secretive, and if the God of that faith has any power to hear prayer, he will do so.  At a broader, second level understanding it means that faith does not require ostentation, and contrariwise puritans were sometimes rather showy about their lack of ostentation, so good at demonstrating their goodness, and the modern liberal, the social-justice warrior, has that annoying puritan inheritance.   Evangelism is different because of the proselytizing nature. Islam, requiring everyone in the world to be muslim, or die, or submit to lower status, is not evangelism but imperialism.

Just as I surmised, you like to try to twist things to your own interpretation, including the Bible and the Quran. The Bible and the Quran both can be used to call for war, or genocide if you will, for those who don't accept their view or what they construe to be their God's will. You can find most any position you wish if you look for it in and take things out of context in both the Bible and the Quran. You seem to be adamant that the Quran teaches nothing but hatred and killing of Christians and others. And you can probably find verses to suggest that just as you can in the Bible. In contradiction to your intolerant beliefs, here are a few verses regarding peace to go along with the fact that Islam itself is a word derived from peace:

“O You who believe! Enter absolutely into peace (Islam). Do not follow in the footsteps of satan. He is an outright enemy to you.” (Holy Quran: 2, 208)

“There is no compulsion where the religion is concerned.” (Holy Quran: 2/ 256)

“You cannot guide those you would like to but God guides those He wills. He has best knowledge of the guided.” (Holy Quran/28: 56)

“God does not forbid you from being good to those who have not fought you in the religion or driven you from your homes, or from being just towards them. God loves those who are just.” (Surat al-Mumtahana, 8)

“We have appointed a law and a practice for every one of you. Had God willed, He would have made you a single community, but He wanted to test you regarding what has come to you. So compete with each other in doing good. Every one of you will return to God and He will inform you regarding the things about which you differed.” (Surat al-Ma’ida, 48)

“God does not love corruption”. (Surat al-Baqara, 205)

There are so many errors and contradictions in the Bible, it is hard to believe anyone could actually follow it literally as the word of God regardless of what text is taken as gospel. Having not looked at the Quran as a whole I can only speculate that it would also have numerous errors, but regardless, any work which can be touted to kill Christians or others by taking words out of context is not something to be admired. -- PS: I suppose I should clarify that it is religious leaders and followers who use both the Bible and Quran to support evil causes that is the problem and not the books per se. -- Take care. Vern

PS: Edited to add missing words.

65

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Charles_F_Bell wrote:

... second level understanding it means that faith does not require ostentation, and contrariwise puritans were sometimes rather showy about their lack of ostentation, so good at demonstrating their goodness, and the modern liberal, the social-justice warrior, has that annoying puritan inheritance.   ...

Interesting.  A day or two ago I was mulling Haidt and Moral Foundations Theory.

Now, I've got a pair of dots to introduce, and then to connect.

A brief summary, backwards:  Haidt is a modern, social sciences academic who pulled the rug out from under himself.  To verify his ideas, he and his students devised a questionnaire.  Its most famous question is (paraphrased) "Your beloved dog has been hit by a car.  One of your children suggests eating it.  Do you think this is a good idea?"  But wait, there's more ...

Haidt and his students gave the questionnaire to a large number of people, asking also if they were liberal or conservative.  After they filled it out, they were given a second, identical copy, with the instructions that if they were liberal, they should fill it out as they believed a conservative would, and if they were conservative, they should fill it out as though a liberal would.

So ... how did liberals and conservatives do in answering in each others' shoes?  The liberals did poorly, with answer ranges all over the map.  The conservatives did well--not perfectly, but well.

Haidt was testing an idea with this: That there is a set of moral principles more or less common to human nature, and that conservatives care about one subset, and liberals care about another.  But here's the kicker, and Haidt has the numbers to back it: Conservatives care about all six of the categories that Haidt identified, and modern liberals only care about two--and cannot recognize the other four, so that any balancing of interests between their two and the other four looks to them like moral abdication.

The six foundations are

  • Caring vs. Harm

  • Fairness vs. Cheating

  • Liberty vs. Oppression

  • Loyalty vs. Betrayal

  • Authority vs. Subversion

  • Sanctity vs. Degradation

This is a capsule summary, and omits detail.  For example, Haidt links kindness with caring, and respect with authority.  (Haidt's work, and conclusions, are described in his book The Righteous Mind.)

Here's dot one: The Wikipedia article lists the last three of these as 'group-forming'.

Dot two is 'virtue signalling', which is succinctly captured here.  The idea is that many of the things the Left calls for are not based on moral analysis, but on the need to prove that they are Left-pure of heart.  Yesterday's Oppressed is today's Oppressor, and yesterday's Victim is today's Victimizer.  Celebrities charter wide-body aircraft to take their entourages to global warming conferences.  Concerts are given to help the poor when the real fix is fixing laws that prevent people from earning a living.

Dot connection:  Here's the kicker--virtue signalling is a loyalty mechanism.  It's an instinctive (or, as Haidt would say, intuitive) reaction, stemming from the way human nature works.

Even as they reject the virtues they don't understand, they are adhering to them.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:
corra wrote:
njc wrote:

"With all thy getting, get understanding."  ---the KJV by way of Malcom S. Forbes.

"Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom."

I think those are the same quote, from different versions.  If not, what is wisdom but a true understanding, of what can and should be done, as well as what is?  Practical wisdom is, after all, one of the four cardinal virtues, all of equal importance.

Proverbs 4:7 - “Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding.”

I was completing the quote you cited. You left off the first part.

67

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Thank you.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:

... second level understanding it means that faith does not require ostentation, and contrariwise puritans were sometimes rather showy about their lack of ostentation, so good at demonstrating their goodness, and the modern liberal, the social-justice warrior, has that annoying puritan inheritance.   ...

Interesting.  A day or two ago I was mulling Haidt and Moral Foundations Theory.

Now, I've got a pair of dots to introduce, and then to connect.

A brief summary, backwards:  Haidt is a modern, social sciences academic who pulled the rug out from under himself.  To verify his ideas, he and his students devised a questionnaire.  Its most famous question is (paraphrased) "Your beloved dog has been hit by a car.  One of your children suggests eating it.  Do you think this is a good idea?"  But wait, there's more ...

Haidt and his students gave the questionnaire to a large number of people, asking also if they were liberal or conservative.  After they filled it out, they were given a second, identical copy, with the instructions that if they were liberal, they should fill it out as they believed a conservative would, and if they were conservative, they should fill it out as though a liberal would.

[...]

So ... how did liberals and conservatives do in answering in each others' shoes?  The liberals did poorly, with answer ranges all over the map.  The conservatives did well--not perfectly, but well.

[...]

Haidt was testing an idea with this: That there is a set of moral principles more or less common to human nature, and that conservatives care about one subset, and liberals care about another.  But here's the kicker, and Haidt has the numbers to back it: Conservatives care about all six of the categories that Haidt identified, and modern liberals only care about two--and cannot recognize the other four, so that any balancing of interests between their two and the other four looks to them like moral abdication.

The six foundations are

  • Caring vs. Harm

  • Fairness vs. Cheating

  • Liberty vs. Oppression

  • Loyalty vs. Betrayal

  • Authority vs. Subversion

  • Sanctity vs. Degradation

This is a capsule summary, and omits detail.  For example, Haidt links kindness with caring, and respect with authority.  (Haidt's work, and conclusions, are described in his book The Righteous Mind.)

[...]

Dot connection:  Here's the kicker--virtue signalling is a loyalty mechanism.  It's an instinctive (or, as Haidt would say, intuitive) reaction, stemming from the way human nature works.

Even as they reject the virtues they don't understand, they are adhering to them.

As before, I think you are being led down the wrong path in this approach.  Start with Piaget and end with Pinker and Wilson and, well, that's still a start. The moral sense within the context of nature vs. nurture is nature.  Consider in the broadest possible way all the things all men, regardless of the societies in which they are situated, do and induce from that how and why an individual would evolve his mind around morality, rather than a more obvious deductive utility.

Here's a list:

http://www.mindmelding.com/Human%20Universals.htm

These are things evolution has given the human species in order to better survive.
It is a complex array of universals an individual must know without being able to know empirically himself.

I don't have an answer to why the leftist-liberal of today (i.e., stripped of any Christian base), virtually denying the existence of any objectifiable moral sense, still has such a high horse from which he pontificates.

69

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

To answer the last paragraph: Because people, with the exception of a few nihilists, need to find and understand a moral order in the world.

As to Haidt and Moral Foundations Theory being the wrong approach: Is that because they are in error?  Or because they are incomplete in some way?  Do they lack predictive power?  Are their answers likely to mislead?

My exerience of Engineering School,  many years ago, taught me that a given situation may be described by multiple levels of theory, each one more complete but also more difficult than the one before.  If circuit theory will provide an accurate description, you don't need to invoke transmission line theory--and transmission line theory will make it harder to grasp the system's behavior intuitively than the simpler theory.

70

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Charles_F_Bell wrote:

In order to respond to our present crisis, we must begin by realizing that both the "liberal" concept of national self-determination and the "conservative" one of Realpolitik are no longer adequate to the historical actuality that is unfolding before our eyes. And they are obsolete for the same reason: the epoch of history governed by the principle of classical sovereignty is in the process of dissolution.

is false and dangerous.  Again, a sort of move to global anarcho-socialism (Soros - Open Society) but (like MArx) needs a ruling super-sovereign to arrange it.

Sorry I missed this before.  There's no doubt that the idea is dangerous, but is it dangerous because it is false, or is it dangerous because it is true, or at least possible?  Non-state actors like Greenpeace, the Green movements at large, the Red Cross, Doctors without Borders, and shadowy actors like the movements that Soros finances are influencing events and infringing on state sovereignty.  The USSR poured billions into 'popular' movements around the world, and influenced events with horrible consequences, even (or especially) in the USA.

You probably don't like Philip Bobbitt's analysis (The Shield of Achilles) but it's hard to argue with his history.  The state as we know it, with rigid borders and full control of lands within them, came into existence over a century or two and while it is all we know, it is not all that has ever been.  And that means that when the circumstances that allowed it to be change, it will change.  The choice facing us is whether it changes by our choice, within the state system, or by the choice of its enemies, outside the state system.

I prefer to preserve and buttress the state system, but that will mean recognizing, acknowledging, understanding, and adapting to the things that threaten it.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:

In order to respond to our present crisis, we must begin by realizing that both the "liberal" concept of national self-determination and the "conservative" one of Realpolitik are no longer adequate to the historical actuality that is unfolding before our eyes. And they are obsolete for the same reason: the epoch of history governed by the principle of classical sovereignty is in the process of dissolution.

is false and dangerous.  Again, a sort of move to global anarcho-socialism (Soros - Open Society) but (like MArx) needs a ruling super-sovereign to arrange it.

Sorry I missed this before.  There's no doubt that the idea is dangerous, but is it dangerous because it is false, or is it dangerous because it is true, or at least possible?  Non-state actors like Greenpeace, the Green movements at large, the Red Cross, Doctors without Borders, and shadowy actors like the movements that Soros finances are influencing events and infringing on state sovereignty.  The USSR poured billions into 'popular' movements around the world, and influenced events with horrible consequences, even (or especially) in the USA.

You probably don't like Philip Bobbitt's analysis (The Shield of Achilles) but it's hard to argue with his history.  The state as we know it, with rigid borders and full control of lands within them, came into existence over a century or two and while it is all we know, it is not all that has ever been.  And that means that when the circumstances that allowed it to be change, it will change.  The choice facing us is whether it changes by our choice, within the state system, or by the choice of its enemies, outside the state system.

I prefer to preserve and buttress the state system, but that will mean recognizing, acknowledging, understanding, and adapting to the things that threaten it.

Anarchism, in the sense of deliberate lack of sovereign control, variously and usually ill-defined, is the worst of political delusions - you do know that Marxism is Anarchism? Islam is also Anarchism but by means of theocratic teaching of good people to do good things, so long as society gets rid of all those bad -- incorrigibly infidel -- people.

Re: The Shield of Achilles is a good example of: by remembering history, set out of context to the demands of the times, we condemn ourselves to try repeat it and fail. [see Mussolini]  Total War by nuclear weapons, for example, presents a moral issue not fathomable in Bronze-Age Ilium.

72 (edited by njc 2016-06-21 09:45:39)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

To answer the last paragraph: Because people, with the exception of a few nihilists, need to find and understand a moral order in the world.

C.S. Lewis addresses this whole issue in The Abolition of Man.  In part 2, he writes of people who, having discovered a single moral principle, use it to attack the rest of the fabric without which that principle cannot stand.

73

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

Marxism as preached by Marx may be true anarchism, but as a practical matter it cannot be implemented without rigid controls over individuals.  And also as a practical matter there are no shortage of people who enjoy inflicting such rigid control on individuals.  And so the nearest that it has ever been approached is in monastic communities where people are driven by and committed to a purpose beyond either themselves or their community.

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

vern wrote:
Charles_F_Bell wrote:
vern wrote:

So, you do agree with me that organized religion is the problem.

Actually, I think you said white heterosexual male Protestant Americans is the problem, or was that someone to whose mind you have melded?

vern wrote:

Unfortunately, none of the major religions adhere to the philosophy set forth in the quote. You need only go to any denominational gathering or tune into any televangelist or any event where they offer up a prayer to confirm it. No, I don't really expect you to say so -- on the contrary, you'll most likely twist it around to say something else -- but you might try it in the hopes of giving me a heart attack. Take care. Vern

Matthew 6:6 within the first level of understanding means that followers of a minority faith should lie low and even be secretive, and if the God of that faith has any power to hear prayer, he will do so.  At a broader, second level understanding it means that faith does not require ostentation, and contrariwise puritans were sometimes rather showy about their lack of ostentation, so good at demonstrating their goodness, and the modern liberal, the social-justice warrior, has that annoying puritan inheritance.   Evangelism is different because of the proselytizing nature. Islam, requiring everyone in the world to be muslim, or die, or submit to lower status, is not evangelism but imperialism.

Just as I surmised, you like to try to twist things to your own interpretation,

Yes.  You, on the other hand, give us the LIGHT and the TRUTH.  Shall you tell us there have not been over 28,000 attacks in  the name of {omitted} since 9/11/2001?

75 (edited by Charles_F_Bell 2016-06-22 09:12:24)

Re: Orlando:Nous avons tous assez de force pour supporter les maux d’autri

njc wrote:

To answer the last paragraph: Because people, with the exception of a few nihilists, need to find and understand a moral order in the world.

As to Haidt and Moral Foundations Theory being the wrong approach: Is that because they are in error?  Or because they are incomplete in some way?  Do they lack predictive power?  Are their answers likely to mislead?

My exerience of Engineering School,  many years ago, taught me that a given situation may be described by multiple levels of theory, each one more complete but also more difficult than the one before.

My experience with engineers is that they like to think a photon can be made to be a wave with good engineering. They also will read the preceding sentence in a literal way and go "Huh?"