A daily dose of philosophical food for your noodle... bacon for your brain!
Showing posts with label Philosophy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philosophy. Show all posts

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Video: What's Wrong with Being Pragmatic?

By Diana Hsieh

In Sunday's Philosophy in Action Webcast, I discussed being pragmatic. The question was:

What's wrong with being pragmatic? My dictionary defines being pragmatic as "dealing with things sensibly and realistically in a way that is based on practical rather than theoretical considerations." What's wrong with that, if anything? Is that the same as "pragmatism"?
My answer, in brief:
Pragmatism is a philosophic view that rejects thinking long-range and on-principle in favor of short-term expediency. However, many people just use the term to mean "practical," and others are honestly confused by all the bad theories and principles rampant in the culture.
Here's the video of my full answer:
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Join the next Philosophy in Action Webcast on Sunday at 8 am PT / 9 am MT / 10 am CT / 11 am ET at www.PhilosophyInAction.com/live.

In the meantime, Connect with Us via social media, e-mail, RSS feeds, and more. Check out the Webcast Archives, where you can listen to the full webcast or just selected questions from any past episode, and our my YouTube channel. And go to the Question Queue to submit and vote on questions for upcoming webcast episodes.

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Monty Python: Argument Clinic

By Diana Hsieh

Ah, this seems a tad too familiar:

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Two Tidbits on Life from Steve Jobs

By Diana Hsieh

In this brief clip from a 1995 interview, Steve Jobs speaks about the importance of living a life that's fully your own, rather than accepting limits imposed by others. Implicitly, he's drawing on the distinction between the metaphysically given and the man-made:



Here's another short clip from the same interview on the importance of being willing to act in pursuit of what you want. I love the benevolence in the initial discussion of asking for and giving help!

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Monday, October 3, 2011

The Oddity of the Falling Slinky

By Diana Hsieh

This floating slinky effect is pretty awesome, but the discussion of it in terms of "information" and "knowledge" makes me cringe! There's no knowledge involved whatsoever! Instead, the removal of the upward force of tension does not happen instantaneously, but rather requires some time to propagate, due to the structure of the slinky.



Via Gizmodo

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Friday, August 26, 2011

Videos: Friendships Despite Philosophic Disagreements

By Diana Hsieh

In Sunday's Rationally Selfish Webcast, I discussed two questions on maintaining friendships despite philosophic disagreements.

The first question was:

How can I maintain my integrity in friendships with people of opposite philosophic views? I struggle to keep good relations with family and friends who support our current political system in which some people are helped at the expense of others, which I regard as slavery. They support ObamaCare, EPA restrictions, and welfare programs. Through years of caring discussions, I realize that they do not hold the individual as sacred but instead focus on what's best for "the group." At this point, I often feel more pain than pleasure being with them, even though we have many other values in common, yet I hate to cut them off. How can I maintain good relationships with them -- or should I stop trying?
Here's the 9-minute video, now posted to YouTube:



The second question was:
Should I terminate friendships with people who steal music and other intellectual property from the internet? I don't know a single person who doesn't steal something off the internet. I used to do this myself, but stopped when I realized it was wrong and why. Normally, I would cut off contact with anyone who violates rights, because that's worse than just holding wrong ideas, but the activity is so prevalent now that doing so would end my social life. Even now, my clear moral position strains my friendships. So what should I do?
Here's the 7-minute video, now posted to YouTube:

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Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Video: What's Wrong with the Ideal of Moderation

By Diana Hsieh

In Sunday's Rationally Selfish Webcast, I discussed what's wrong with the standard calls for "moderation," including in diet. Here's the 17-minute video, now posted to YouTube:

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Monday, March 21, 2011

Brad Thompson on Neoconservatism

By Diana Hsieh

Brad Thomson's critique of neoconservativism has been featured in an online roundtable on Cato Unbound. I've not yet had time to read the essays myself. However, I was very much impressed with Dr. Thompson's OCON lecture on neoconservatism some years ago. Based on the abstracts, I expect the responses to be of varying quality.

Below are Dr. Thompson's article and the responses, with abstracts. More -- particularly Dr. Thompson's responses -- will be posted soon. You'll be able to find that at Cato Unbound.

  • Neoconservatism Unmasked by C. Bradley Thompson.
    Neoconservative intellectuals often describe themselves as having a particular mode of thinking — maybe even just a “mood.” C. Bradley Thompson argues that neoconservatism is much more than that. Its key philosophical inspiration of comes from Irving Kristol, and particularly from Kristol’s engagement with the philosopher Leo Strauss. Thompson argues that, under Straussean influence, neoconservatives champion the rule of a philosophically cunning elite over a population that will never be able to understand their intellectual masters. Instead, the populace is steered toward self-sacrifice, war, and nationalism — as well as a set of religious and moral beliefs that the elites in no way share. Such a doctrine, Thompson charges, points disturbingly toward fascism.
  • Neoconservatism, Leo Strauss, and the Foundations for Liberty by Douglas Rasmussen.
    Douglas Rasmussen argues that post-Lockean natural rights theory does not entail nihilism, as Strauss seems to have feared. A further error of Straussean neoconservatism, Rasmussen argues, is that it often conflates society with the state. Although the members of a civil society may rightly desire that society’s continuance, it does not follow that the state must coerce people into being good. Statecraft is not soulcraft; governing consists of setting ground rules that leave individuals free to seek the good.
  • The American Roots of Neoconservatism by Patrick J. Deneen
    Patrick Deneen disagrees that neoconservatism is alien to the American political tradition. In particular, founders such as James Madison and Alexander Hamilton envisioned politics as a realm where men of extraordinary wisdom and talent would shape the course of the new nation. The idea that commerce may corrode the morals is certainly present at the founding, as are civic virtue, self-sacrifice, and concern for the public good, the latter to be divined by wise statesmen. The neoconservative claim to Americanism is as strong, if not stronger, than Thompson’s preferred libertarian ideology
  • Strauss and National Greatness by Damon Linker
    Damon Linker argues that, although Thompson’s treatment of neoconservatism has considerable value, he errs in his characterization of Leo Strauss and his followers’ political theory. Strauss was an Aristotelian, Linker argues, and Aristotelian political thought is comparatively benign. Linker also argues that national greatness conservatism—a staple of today’s neoconservatives—is a 1990s addendum to the philosophy with little relation to Strauss, Irving Kristol, or the other early lights of neoconservatism.
Enjoy!

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Friday, March 18, 2011

Bob Pasnau on Studying the History of Philosophy

By Diana Hsieh

Bob Pasnau -- noted medieval scholar in my own CU Boulder Philosophy Department and generally awesome guy -- makes a compelling case for young philosophers specializing in the history of philosophy. Here are a few choice quotes:

The discipline of philosophy benefits from a serious, sustained engagement with its history. Most of the interesting, important work in philosophy is not being done right now, at this precise instant in time, but lies more or less hidden in the past, waiting to be uncovered. Philosophers who limit themselves to the present restrict their horizons to whatever happens to be the latest fashion, and deprive themselves of a vast sea of conceptual resources.

...

Despite the above list of names, many philosophers today are presentists - they think that the only philosophy worth reading has been written in the last 100 years, if not the last 30 years. This attitude is hard to justify. The historical record shows that philosophy - unlike science and math - does not develop in steady, linear fashion. Perhaps the very best historical era ever came at the very start, in Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. If that was not it, then one has to wait some 1600 years, for the century from Aquinas to Oresme, (Who's Oresme?, you may ask. Exactly.) or wait 2000 years, for Descartes through Kant. I'm leaving out important figures, of course, but also many quite fallow periods, even in modern times. Maybe subsequent generations will judge 2011 and environs as the highpoint up until now of the whole history of philosophy, but I wouldn't bet on it. Every generation of philosophers has been equally prepossessed by its own ideas.

Of course, I am no more capable than others of judging my own times, but certainly I am not alone in feeling some amount of dissatisfaction with the way philosophy looks today. Tyler Burge nicely expresses my own worries when he remarks, in the preface to his recent book, that "if philosophy is not to slide toward irrelevance and become a puzzle-game-playing discipline, good mainly for teaching the young to think clearly, some central parts of philosophy must broaden their horizons." Burge mainly has in mind science as a broadening influence; I think the history of philosophy can play a similar role. Although a background in the history of the subject is obviously not a prerequisite for doing deep and original work, it helps, and I fear the discipline's present collective neglect of its past contributes to its often insular character.
Personally, I was always far more interested in the history of ethics than in contemporary ethics -- for many of the reasons that Pasnau discusses here. While the history of ethics is taught (somewhat), philosophy departments don't recognize a research specialty in the history of ethics, except for ancient ethics. The history of philosophy, with the exception of ancient philosophy, is focused on metaphysics and epistemology. So if you write a dissertation on the history of ethics, the standard result is that ethicists will regard you as a historian and historians will regard you as an ethicist, such that you'll have a devil of a time getting a job. (That happened to one of our sharpest and most talented professors at Boulder.)

In academia, my two favorite areas of philosophy for study and teaching were philosophy of religion and the history of ethics. I just loved to dive into the ethical texts of the great figures in the history of philosophy -- Kant, Hume, Mill, Aquinas, the early Christians, the Stoics, the Epicureans, and of course, Aristotle -- so as to develop a clear view of their ethics. That's something that I hope to return to doing soon, in some form.

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Open Thread on Induction

By Diana Hsieh

In the comment thread on The Resignation of John McCaskey: The Facts, some people expressed an interest in discussing the questions about induction raised by David Harriman's book, The Logical Leap: Induction in Physics. Yesterday, I said that people were welcome to discuss that in that comment thread. However, given that that post has over 200 comments, I realized that it would be better to simply create an open thread for that topic.

Hence, this post. As with the post on the facts of Dr. McCaskey's resignation, I expect any commenters to adhere to high standards of civility, even when in violent disagreement.

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Friday, October 15, 2010

Amit Ghate at PJM: Values and the Defense of Freedom

By Paul Hsieh

On October 9, PajamasMedia published Amit Ghate's OpEd, "Values and the Defense of Freedom".

In it, he responds to the question, "Is faith necessary for defending natural rights, or is reason sufficient?" Here is the opening:

In the wake of the recent Values Voter Summit, a worrisome question arises: will the Tea Parties or a reformed GOP be able to champion limited government and fiscal responsibility, without also importing the religious right’s so-called "social values"?

HotAir's Allahpundit raises this issue, noting that speakers at the summit repeatedly asserted the idea that limited government must ultimately be based on religious beliefs -- on the existence of a "Big God." Uncomfortable with these assertions and searching for a better, secular defense of freedom, Allahpundit asks how Objectivists (adherents of Ayn Rand's philosophy) would respond.

It's a perceptive question. Though many recognize Rand as a stalwart defender of freedom, few appreciate how radically her defense differs from that of traditional religionists. Key to her innovative approach is an original conception of values and morality -- one which ultimately puts her at odds with much of the religious program...
(Read the full text of "Values and the Defense of Freedom".)

Congratulations, Amit!

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Thursday, July 15, 2010

What Is Philosophy?

By Diana Hsieh

[This post was originally written for Modern Paleo.]

Lately, I've begun re-reading Leonard Peikoff's book Ominous Parallels. In the second chapter, I was struck by the clarity of his explanation of what philosophy studies. People are often baffled by the very subject of philosophy: they confuse it with religion, psychology, or anthropology. When teaching introductory philosophy courses in graduate school, I always spent a class or two on philosophy itself, so that my students wouldn't be utterly confused about the purpose of the course.

So for anyone not quite clear, these paragraphs might be illuminating:

Philosophy is the study of the nature of existence, of knowledge, and of values.

The branch of philosophy that studies existence is metaphysics. Metaphysics identifies the nature of the universe as a whole. It tells men what kind of world they live in, and whether there is a supernatural dimension beyond it. It tells men whether they live in a world of solid entities, natural laws, absolute facts, or in a world of illusory fragments, unpredictable miracles, and ceaseless flux. It tells men whether the things they perceive by their senses and mind form a comprehensible reality, with which they can deal, or some kind of unreal appearance, which leaves them staring and helpless.

The branch of philosophy that studies knowledge is epistemology. Epistemology identifies the proper means of acquiring knowledge. It tells men which mental processes to employ as methods of cognition, and which to reject as invalid or deceptive. Above all, epistemology tells men whether reason is their faculty of gaining knowledge, and if so how it works--or whether there is a means of knowledge other than reason, such as faith, or the instinct of society, or the feelings of the dictator.

The branch of philosophy that studies values is ethics (or morality), which rests on both the above branches--on a view of the world in which man acts, and of man's nature, including his means of knowledge. Ethics defines a code of values to guide human actions. It tells men the proper purpose of man's life, and the means of achieving it; it provides the standard by which men are to judge good and evil, right and wrong, the desirable and the undesirable. Ethics tells a man, for instance, to pursue his own fulfillment--or to sacrifice himself for the sake of something else, such as God or his neighbor.

The branch of philosophy that applies ethics to social questions is politics, which studies the nature of social systems and the proper functions of government. Politics is not the start, but the product of a philosophic system. By their nature, political questions cannot be raised or judged except on the basis of some view of existence, of values, and of man's proper means of knowledge.
Of course, the best overall introduction to philosophy is Ayn Rand's essay "Philosophy: Who Needs It?" in her anthology Philosophy: Who Needs It. Nothing beats that.

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Monday, July 5, 2010

Questions on Philosophy

By Diana Hsieh

Some FormSpring Questions and Answers on philosophy:

Would you agree with the Ancient Greek notion of the Dialectic, the idea that the only way to really grasp knowledge (at least of philosophy) is by a process of Dialectic intercourse?

No. (Dialectic is a somewhat fuzzy notion, but I'll take you to mean that good philosophy requires discussion of those ideas with other people.)

Discussion is often helpful in philosophy, as with other intellectual work. However, the most crucial need is to put your ideas into some objective form, such as by writing them down. That also happens in discussing ideas with other people, with some other lesser benefits (and costs) too. That's why discussion with other people is often so helpful to us. Still, it's not the only means to the end, nor always the best.

Personally, I like to mostly write, then discuss when I hit some tricky part that I can't quite sort out in my own head. Normally, Paul is my victim ... er, the lucky man. I wasn't able to use him in that way with my dissertation though. He wasn't following my work, and my problems were simply too intricate for him to examine without tons of background context. So I did that whole work almost entirely alone, except with some occasional input from my advisor.

Now that I think about it ... perhaps the ancients were such advocates of discussion because they weren't able to write so easily as we are. For them, discussion might have been the best way making ideas objective during the process of refining and clarifying them. That's pure speculation, of course. Maybe I'll ask Robert Mayhew or John Lewis about that.

What is your opinion of Robert Kane from an objectivist perpsective?

I've read some of Robert Kane's work, but not a ton.

My basic view is that he's wrong about indeterminacy as the foundation of free will, but that he's honestly trying to defend the fact of free will. Given the compatibilist nonsense that so fashionable in metaphysics these days, I appreciate that! Plus, if I recall correctly, some of his critiques of compatibilism and determinism are pretty good. Oh, and he's a clear writer. That's a huge bonus.

Do you expect that Harry Binswanger's upcoming book is going to finally put the philosophy of mind issue to rest?

No. Like Leonard Peikoff, I don't think that philosophy can give definitive answers to most of the thorny issues raised in philosophy of mind. At most, philosophy can rule out some false views, such as materialism or substance dualism.

[In the Facebook comments, a philosopher I know posted the following useful remarks:

a) Dr. Binswanger's book isn't really about philosophy of mind--it's about epistemology--so the main reason not to expect much from it on this topic is simply because it's not his focus. But, by the way, the few places where he does deal with "philosophy of mind" issues are, I think, clarifying and on the whole good.

b) If philosophy can't give answers to thorny issues raised by philosophy of mind, then those issues are of course not really philosophical issues, but scientific ones. Here I imagine you mean questions about what is the precise nature of the interaction between the body and the mind. I agree that this is not a philosophic question, but a scientific one. But in my study of contemporary philosophy of mind (of which I did a fair amount for my dissertation), most of the issues I encountered were philosophical. In my opinion, most contemporary philosophers of mind have distinctively philosophic confusions about the relationship between philosophy and science, especially about the role of science in understanding metaphysics. Just in case anyone's interested, I comment extensively on this topic in chapter 3 of my dissertation.
I'm glad to hear about (a) and I agree with (b).]

Why is measurement omission a necessary part of concept formation? If the first step is to group things by similarities, and the measurements are *not similar*, then aren't the measurements already omitted by default? Why have a whole separate step?

What makes two things similar but not identical is a difference in measurements. So to see them as similar requires (implicitly) omitting measurements, and then that's captured in the formation of the concept.

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Thursday, July 1, 2010

PJTV: Thompson on Neoconservatism

By Paul Hsieh

The June 26, 2010 episode of "Front Page" on PajamasTV features Professor C. Bradley Thompson of Clemson University discussing his new book on neoconservatism.

PJTV3808

(Click on the image to watch the video.)

Yaron Brook and Terry Jones provide additional commentary.

You can order the book (co-authored by Thompson and Brook) via the Ayn Rand Bookstore at: Neoconservatism: An Obituary For an Idea. The OCON lecture was also quite excellent.

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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Active Mind

By Diana Hsieh

[This post was originally written for Modern Paleo.]

In our modern culture, many people adopt a rigid, rule-bound approach to their lives: whatever they learned from their parents, their preacher, and their peers must be the right way, and that's the end of the story. They're unwilling to question their assumptions; they often can't even see that alternatives to those assumptions exist. On the other hand, many people reject that kind of stagnation in favor of acting on the range-of-the-moment. They act based on their gut feelings, i.e. their raw emotions.

These two approaches to life are wrong, often disastrously so. Yet they're not as different as you might think. Both approaches reject reason: they deny paramount importance to human life of rational identification and evaluation of the facts. The people who adopt them seek to coast through life without the effort of understanding the world in which they live. Those often pay a very steep price for that in the form of abandoned dreams, wrecked relationships, and emotional turmoil.

Two years ago, when I began peeking my nose into the uncharted waters of the paleosphere, I was impressed to find that a better approach was pretty common. By and large, people were willing to check their assumptions. They did not submit their judgment to the government and its lackeys, nor blindly follow the advice of their doctors. They were willing to test their theories against the facts of biochemistry, quality medical studies, and their own n=1 experiments. They wanted to know the truth, even if that meant rejecting seemingly universal beliefs about hearthealthywholegrains and arterycloggingsaturatedfat. They wanted to identify general principles, and then practice them, so as to live better.

Basically -- although not universally, of course -- I've been impressed with the "active minds" that I've found in the paleosphere. An active mind isn't an "open mind," nor a "closed mind," as Ayn Rand explains:

[There is a] dangerous little catch phrase which advises you to keep an "open mind." This is a very ambiguous term--as demonstrated by a man who once accused a famous politician of having "a wide open mind." That term is an anti-concept: it is usually taken to mean an objective, unbiased approach to ideas, but it is used as a call for perpetual skepticism, for holding no firm convictions and granting plausibility to anything. A "closed mind" is usually taken to mean the attitude of a man impervious to ideas, arguments, facts and logic, who clings stubbornly to some mixture of unwarranted assumptions, fashionable catch phrases, tribal prejudices--and emotions. But this is not a "closed" mind, it is a passive one. It is a mind that has dispensed with (or never acquired) the practice of thinking or judging, and feels threatened by any request to consider anything.

What objectivity and the study of philosophy require is not an "open mind," but an active mind--a mind able and eagerly willing to examine ideas, but to examine them critically. An active mind does not grant equal status to truth and falsehood; it does not remain floating forever in a stagnant vacuum of neutrality and uncertainty; by assuming the responsibility of judgment, it reaches firm convictions and holds to them. Since it is able to prove its convictions, an active mind achieves an unassailable certainty in confrontations with assailants--a certainty untainted by spots of blind faith, approximation, evasion and fear. (Philosophy: Who Needs It)
Personally, I'm always on the lookout for ways in which I might have a closed mind or an open mind rather than an active mind. I try to ask myself why I think and act as I do, particularly as concerns cultural norms. Is some practice just tradition -- or does it make rational sense? I know that when I've been able to do that, I've reaped huge rewards. For example:
  • If I'd not been willing to question my assumptions about diet, I'd still be eating wheat, sugar, and other forms of junk food. I'd be bouncing between blood sugar highs and lows. I'd be obsessively thinking about the cookies in the pantry. I'd be slowly packing on the pounds, year after year. My liver would be getting ever-fattier, and I'd slowly ease my way into type 2 diabetes.
  • If I'd not been willing to question my assumptions about shampoo, I'd still be frustrated with my limp, dull hair. Instead, my hair is soft, well-bodied, and easy to manage. I'm unhappy with my haircut right now, but I've finally got my no-poo system working well. (I'll post more on that later.)
  • If I'd not been willing to question the quasi-socialist political views of my youth, I'd be cheering on the government takeover of the economy initiated by Bush and hastened by Obama. (EEEK!)
  • If I'd not been willing to question my assumption that my friend Paul was just too old for me due to our 13-ear age gap, I'd not had the best eleven years of my life as his wife! (He looks the same age as me now; that's a blessing and a curse!)
Life -- in the fullest sense of that term -- requires an active mind. There's no way around it.

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Monday, May 24, 2010

Questions on Philosophy in Business

By Diana Hsieh

Some FormSpring Questions and Answers on philosophy in business:

It's hard to be pro-business since few (none?) are actually in favor of freedom and individual rights, but rather lobby to twist big government to their purposes which mostly conflict with individual rights. Thoughts?

I'm pro-business for the awesome products they produce that make my life better -- not for their politics, nor for their pull-peddling.

Sadly, it's not reasonable to expect businesses to be any better than the culture as a whole. And the culture is solidly behind a mixed economy.

Why don't companies/firms hire staff philosophers?

Most philosophers would be destructive to business, as they're hostile to the self-interested pursuit of profit.

Good philosophers could be useful, but likely only as occasional consultants, not full-time employees. However, most businessmen today are extremely pragmatic and somewhat altruistic, so they wouldn't see the value in a principled approach to business.

Can you think of a good, specific example of how a consulting philosopher might be of value to a business? Especially assuming the business owner was already an Objectivist and had a basic grasp of rational selfishness and the danger/evil of altruism.

The fact that a business owner is an Objectivist doesn't mean that he will create a corporate culture that supports the virtues. (For an example of what that looks like, see what John Allison did with BB&T.)

A philosopher could help do that. It's not trivial, for example, to see what justice requires in compensation. Or whether the business should be involved in charity. Or how to deal fairly with an employee suffering from personal problems. Or how to maximize productivity. Or how to ensure that employees are rewarded for facing problems rather than evading them.

Via the Ayn Rand Institute, Objectivist intellectuals have done that kind work with Hutchinson Technologies; they've put together training seminars and the like for management.

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Monday, February 15, 2010

Volition in Animals

By Diana Hsieh

I'm always amazed that Conrad seems to take an instant liking to some dogs at the dog park, and an instant dislike to others. However, this story of instant love between an oragutan and a dog takes the cake:



Unlike my friend Kelly, I don't think that the video suggests that the orangutan exercises volition. Volition (or free will) is not merely the power to choose between alternatives based on values. It requires reason (in the sense of the faculty of reason); it's the power to focus one's rational mind or not, simply as a matter of will. That's not evident in this video... yet nor can the behavior be explained by vacuous appeals to "instinct." Instead, the orangutan exhibits highly complex behavior, probably largely based on associational learning and imagination. He doesn't seem to have concepts though, and that means no faculty of reason and no power of volition.

I propose that his actions should be described as "voluntary" but not "chosen." As per Aristotle's usage, some action is voluntary if (1) the agent has the power to do or not do the action and (2) he knows what he's doing at the moment of action. To act by choice requires more: it requires acting based on rational deliberation, meaning the exercise of volition.

Aristotle thought that some beasts act voluntarily at least sometimes, and I agree with that. More neurologically advanced animals seem to have the power to act voluntarily on a perceptual level: they can do or not do some action, in part based on their power to direct their own perceptual-level attention. So a dog can voluntarily prevent itself from chasing the cat by directing its attention elsewhere. And animals have the power to know what they're doing, in a perceptual way, as opposed to when they're acting on some kind of mistake. So that dog knows whether he's chasing the cat or playing with his toy. Hence, the dog does act voluntarily but not by volitional choice.

In short, we need to be careful about what we mean by "volition" when attributing that to animals. Also, we must keep in mind that denying volition to animals is not equivalent to claiming that they're deterministic robots. Some more subtlety is needed, I think. And that can be found in Aristotle -- particularly Book 3, Chapters 1-5 of the Nicomachean Ethics.

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Thursday, February 11, 2010

A Critical Account of Anthony Daniels on Ayn Rand

By Diana Hsieh

NoodleFood reader Paul Marshall posted the following essay in the comments a few days ago. When I read it, I thought it far to good for a mere blog comment. So with his permission, I'm posting it here. Of course, it's also far too good for a mere NoodleFood post, but that's the best I can offer. Without further ado...

A Critical Account of Anthony Daniels
By Paul Marshall

I was taken aback by Anthony Daniels's superficial analysis of Ayn Rand in his article "Ayn Rand: Engineer of Souls," which appeared in the February edition of The New Criterion. And this is coming from someone who is enamored of Daniels's excellent writing in Life at the Bottom, where he illustrates his critique of modern British society with superbly wrought first-hand observations.

I am not, however, shocked. In contrast to his encyclopedic dissection of the culture of the British slums, Daniels has long taken a nonintellectual approach to cultural criticism, eschewing the daunting task of identifying the ideas that move the culture--a daunting task Rand excelled at like no one else.

Take his article, "Trash, Violence and Versace: But Is It Art?", which attacks the infamous "Sensation" show at the Royal Academy--a piece in which he never bothers to address the philosophic morass that led to that deplorable exhibition.

To write an article that illuminated the nihilism of the Young British Artists, one would need to do a lot more intellectual legwork. To get to the marrow, one would need to address the arc of art history, which has led us from the brilliance of the Renaissance and the technical mastery of the French Academy in the 19th century to the dismal state that we are in today. Moreover, one would need to analyze the people who conditioned "taste" makers like Charles Saatchi--the art critics of the contemporary scene, from Clement Greenberg to Arthur Danto. Most importantly, one would then need to identify the philosophic ideas that conditioned these conditioners--that is, look at the ideas that shape society. People do not just make and admire sculptures like Dinos and Jake Chapman's deformed, sexualized children without philosophic conditioning.

Daniels, however, demurs from looking too deeply into the matter. But while he steers clear of the ideas in the cultural milieu that caused "Sensation," he does so with grace and eloquence par excellence. He movingly describes the cruelty of artist Marcus Harvey subjecting the mother of one of Myra Hindley's child victims to a portrait of the murderer made with the handprints of a small child. He quotes the vapid justifications of the Royal Academy's chief of exhibitions. And he ends by delightfully turning a quip by Joshua Reynolds--about the desire of youth to find a shorter path to excellence than hard work--into an indictment of a culture that does this through the nihilism of "Sensation." All of these points are excellent, but they do not explain the phenomenon of "Sensation."

Daniels is quick to place the blame for society's ills not on ideas that people choose to live by, but on something akin to an innate bestial drive in human nature. In his article, "Nick Berg's Executioners All Too Clearly Enjoyed Beheading Him," he writes: "My vision of man has darkened ... since I began to investigate the lives of ordinary British people ... I have come to the conclusion that the default setting of man is to evil and that, if not all, then many or perhaps most men will commit evil if they can get away with it ... Both self-examination and my experience of others tells me that evil lurks within all of us, waiting for its opportunity to spring. Civilisation may be a veneer, but it is the veneer that separates us from barbarism. Never forget Original Sin and its consequences." He tends to leave his explanations there.

What he omits to note here, however, is that Nick Berg's murderers were motivated by their wicked ideology. While they may have "all too clearly enjoyed beheading him"--the thought of which makes me want to vomit in rage--they were also all too clearly willing to sacrifice everything for their faith in Allah, which our Air Force pilots valiantly delivered to them with their laser-guided bombs. Radical Islam is a theology that creates sadists, not one that simply acts as a cover for them.

When Daniels tries to make sense of "Sensation," all he can do is chalk it up to "intellectual snobbery" in a democratic age, in which the intellectual tries to prove "the freedom of his spirit by the amorality of his conceptions. Not surprisingly, in this atmosphere artists feel obliged to dwell only upon the visually revolting: for how else in a world of violence, injustice and squalor, does one prove one's bona fides than by dwelling on the violent, the unjust, and the squalid." To Daniels, the modern artist tries to impress by imitating the brutish squalor of the slums (where, he believes, man's default setting of evil is allowed to go unobstructed).

Daniels, however, does not attempt to identify or explain why the current fad of intellectual snobbery is an obsession with nihilism, and a belief that one's class, culture, race or gender inevitably distorts one's worldview. These philosophic ideas do not originate on the street but in the ivory towers of Oxford and Cambridge. Artists have seized these ideas and run with them, creating malevolent works of art, and turning their field into a proxy war where they break taboos to further the cause of their culture, race or gender. Or, as the throngs who flocked to "Sensation" experienced it, Ron Mueck sculpts his "Dead Dad" and Tracey Emin appliques the names for "Everyone I Have Ever Slept With (1963-1995)" on the inside of a tent.

To understand "Sensation" requires an analysis of how these philosophic ideas became injected into Western culture. Artists didn't make such art five hundred years ago, because these are not the ideas that dominated the culture during the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, when man's life on Earth was viewed with the benevolent wonder of the Ancient Greeks and reason was venerated as an efficacious instrument. Compare the art of our era and theirs, and note what philosophy can make or destroy.

Daniels's cultural critiques have not improved over the decade. In "The Architect as Totalitarian," he takes on the loathsome architect Le Corbusier. Noting the architect's elitist and cryptic writing style, Daniels finally zeros in on what he believes is his major fault: Le Corbusier's "totalitarian mindset." To defend this claim, Daniels produces a number of quotes from the architect, where Le Corbusier intones the imperative "we must ..." in a ridiculous but alarming manner. But the closest Daniels gets to making his case is quoting the "program of the International Congress for Modern Architecture, of which Le Corbusier was the moving spirit, [which] states: 'Reforms are extended simultaneously to all cities, to all rural areas, across the seas.' No exceptions. 'Oslo, Moscow, Berlin, Paris, Algiers, Port Said, Rio or Buenos Aires.'"

Daniels never examines what ideas the "totalitarian mindset" consists of, or what philosophy underlies it. In fact, apart from vague notions of "inhumanity" and "authoritarianism," I don't believe that Daniels knows what a "totalitarian mindset" is, which is why he can be so flippant with the label.

The program dictated by the International Congress for Modern Architecture, as quoted by Daniels, would imply a totalitarian mindset, a desire to override the property rights of citizens and forcing Le Corbusier's whims on them. But, in his article on Rand, Daniels actually seems sympathetic to this mindset when he writes: "I own my house and the land on which it stands outright, but this (in my opinion) does not give me the right, even if the law granted it, to knock my house down and build a brutalist construction of reinforced concrete in its place, however much it might be in my individual financial interest to do so. A single such construction would ruin the whole once and for all; where architecture is concerned, the public or collective interest really does exist."

Of course, Daniels is sure that he is right and Le Corbusier was wrong, so it is just fine that his impeccable aesthetic judgment should dictate how others live. This is first step down the road to totalitarianism.

Daniels needs to ask himself: Could a "totalitarian mindset" have anything to do with the aim of shaping minds in the tradition of Marxist dialectical materialism? What philosophic assumptions gave rise to Marx? Was it Hegel's ideas? Was it Kant's Copernican Revolution? What lies at the base of the politics of totalitarianism? The abrogation of individual rights? Collectivism? Is modernist architecture also a nihilistic attack on the bourgeoisie and their beaux-arts standards? What gives rise to nihilism?

Mr. Daniels does not ask such questions nor offer answers. He does not write about ideas.

Such articles are the equivalent of junk food: high in calories, low in nutrition.

But they are works of intellectual rigor compared with Daniels's "Ayn Rand: Engineer of Souls," a critical account of a subject he seems to know next to nothing about.

Daniels does appear to have read The Fountainhead (alas, apart from skimming The Virtue of Selfishness that seems to be the extent of his reading from Rand), but he is unable to name its theme: individualism as intellectual independence--specifically, the first-handed thinker against the second-handed thinker. In the book, Rand portrays people who are the embodiment of these ideas. Take the main character, Howard Roark, who defies the conventions of Beaux-Arts historical forms (a style of architecture I often find delightful), because he is an originator of ideas. Here, Rand does not mean an original in the cliched sense of one who merely flaunts convention. Rather, Roark fashions his creations from whole cloth relying on his first-hand observations of the building's setting and its requirements. In other words, he is not a classicist; he does not take the architectural forms of others and recycle them (forms which are often at odds with the function of a modern building). This separates Roark from second-handers like Peter Keating who copy styles from Beaux-Arts to modernism--the latter of which she trenchantly critiques as well. Rand repeats the theme--self-guided, rational thought over intellectual parasitism and conformity--in various permutations and with a variety of characters throughout the novel.

What is clear in his analysis of The Fountainhead is that Mr. Daniels can't get past his hang-up on the details of architecture to evaluate the ideas at its core. I too prefer the Queen Anne style to Le Corbusier, but this did not blind me to the intellectual theme of the book.

(And an aside, Howard Roark was inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright not Le Corbusier--and both used reinforced concrete, but to entirely different effects.)

More fundamentally, Rand's advocacy of rational certainty seems to irk Daniels. He appears to mistake a certainty born of the Enlightenment (Newton's scientific certainty, not Robespierre's authoritarianism) for dogmatism, writing that she "hardened her ideas into ideology." "In Loose Ends in Liverpool," he writes of his own "preoccupation--anti-ideology" and his "great surprise and pleasure" when the curators at the Walker Art Galley "appeared to make no point at all" in what could have been an ideologically polarizing exhibit. Elsewhere, he attacks Le Corbusier because he "believed there was a 'correct' way to build and that only he knew what it was." And in "Trash, Violence and Versace: But Is It Art?", he writes of a crudity that results from an "ideologically inspired (and therefore insincere) admiration for all that is demotic."

Rand's certainty was based on evidence and logic. If Daniel's had read her works or listened to her lectures, he would have observed that she made her case by laying out the evidence that led her to draw the abstract conclusions that became her philosophy. But why bother thoroughly investigating someone you are going to critique when you believe that ideology as such is just window dressing for dark, bestial impulses?

Daniels has the bad habit of trying to throw around his erudition in the free and easy manner of one who is itching to use it, but just can't quite find the right place to make it work. It is absurd for him to dub Rand as the "Chernyshevsky of individualism" without pointing out even the most cursory ideological similarity between her and the Russian tradition of "angry literary and social critics, pamphleteers and ideologues." Daniels does so based solely on what he takes to be her "vehemence, moral fanaticism and mediocrity as a thinker," and on his evaluation that she "was neither fully a philosopher, nor fully a novelist, but something in between the two" and her "speechifying." And yes, I have quoted the whole of Daniels's case. I suppose then that Newton is the "Stalin of science" for his heavy-handed political maneuvering at the Royal Society. You see the absurdity of not thinking in essentials? (One has the sense that Daniels's editors at The New Criterion are his fan-boys and they are not doing him any favors with their uncritical pens.)

What Daniels takes to be the tone of Rand's writing, that it "bores you like a drill," the fact that she held that her ideas were unprecedented (they were), her striking a dedication from Atlas Shrugged, and her "admiration bordering on worship of industrialization and the size of human construction" is enough evidence for him to repeatedly link her to Stalin--even though philosophically, were he diligent enough to investigate the matter, he would find them to be diametrically opposed: reason vs. dialectical materialism, individualism vs. collectivism, individual rights vs. class warfare. Again, this is the whole of his case. And again Daniels does not write about ideas, but superficial non-similarities--Stalin also spoke Russian and had a respiratory system, don't you know. Such a baseless comparison is chillingly unjust and it is reprehensible given that Daniels must know that Rand's parents died in the prison that was Stalin's Russia.

Such "downright cruelty," to use the doctor's own words, along with his bizarre psychologizing of Rand (based on a single distorted biographical detail and a misreading of a once mentioned character in The Fountainhead) is emblematic of a nasty streak in Daniels's writing, one illustrated in his reflections on the Walker Art Gallery, "Loose Ends in Liverpool," where he gratuitously pokes the corpse of the earnest but mediocre artist Benjamin Haydon, who took his own life in a fit of despair.

Daniels passes over some of the finest art in the world (the Walker collection includes J.W. Waterhouse's "Echo and Narcissus," Paul Delaroche's "Napoleon Crossing the Alps" and Hamo Thornycroft's "The Mower") to mock Haydon whom he coldly dubs a "tragicomic character." Here Daniels displays a shocking lack of regard for the extremely sad, but all too common phenomenon of earnest over-reachers. A soul who earnestly struggles to be good, but lacks the ability to do so is tragic. To exhume Haydon as an object of ridicule when it has nothing to do with the theme of one's piece--other than to pretentiously display your grasp of a minor player in the history of art--is shameful, even if the person is long dead. (And this from the same man who writes so tenderly and beautifully about those sensitive souls who have to live amongst the brutes in the British slums.)

If I were to tear a page from Daniels's playbook, I would wonder whether such callousness showed a psychopath lurking beneath his eloquent prose (and I get the inkling that he may even agree). But that would be just as unfounded and supercilious as when he implies the same about Rand.

Such superficial and baseless evaluations are the closest Daniels gets to Rand's ideas. He spends the rest of the article attacking a straw man. He declares that Rand divides "mankind into two categories," that she rejects compassion, that her philosophy "would seem to justify the reign of philosopher-kings," that she "suggest that people are to be judged mainly by reference to their brain power," that she holds that the marketplace is the proper judge of value, that "she never expresses any sympathy or understanding for the weak or ill" and treats it as a "sign of their moral and human worthlessness," that "Romantic Realism is virtuously indistinguishable from Socialist Realism." All of this is not just mind-bogglingly false, but absurd. Daniels should be ashamed of reviewing someone whom he doesn't have the foggiest grasp of, and someone whom he has not read more than a smattering from. This is a schoolboy's paper of confusions spun around the flimsiest of out of context quotes. That's when he supplies any quotes by Rand at all, which is a grand total of six times (and two of which he is admiring). You cannot quote what you do not read.

Daniels is not even familiar enough with Rand's oeuvre to make a pretense of addressing what she wrote. I think he would be astonished to realize the true depth of her thought from her metaphysics and epistemology to her ethics, politics and aesthetics--something one doesn't get from reading Anne C. Heller's embarrassingly trite book. (She is a "fair-minded biographer?" Listen to the bitter, mocking tone and pot shots she takes at Rand when she is interviewed by The New York Times or NPR. Contrary to her meek protestations, she is not "something of an admirer of her subject." She hates her subject.)

But Daniels will never spend the time to actually read Rand and that's just fine with The New Criterion.

Anthony Daniels's writing can sparkle. He can entertain with erudite and obscure trivia. But he seems unwilling to think deeply about ideas. Consequently, his intellect is as wide as an ocean, but as shallow as a puddle.

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Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Refutation by Subjectivism

By Diana Hsieh

Via BenB:

A philosopher once had the following dream.

First Aristotle appeared, and the philosopher said to him, "Could you give me a fifteen-minute capsule sketch of your entire philosophy?" To the philosopher's surprise, Aristotle gave him an excellent exposition in which he compressed an enormous amount of material into a mere fifteen minutes. But then the philosopher raised a certain objection which Aristotle couldn't answer. Confounded, Aristotle disappeared.

Then Plato appeared. The same thing happened again, and the philosophers' objection to Plato was the same as his objection to Aristotle. Plato also couldn't answer it and disappeared.

Then all the famous philosophers of history appeared one-by-one and our philosopher refuted every one with the same objection.

After the last philosopher vanished, our philosopher said to himself, "I know I'm asleep and dreaming all this. Yet I've found a universal refutation for all philosophical systems! Tomorrow when I wake up, I will probably have forgotten it, and the world will really miss something!" With an iron effort, the philosopher forced himself to wake up, rush over to his desk, and write down his universal refutation. Then he jumped back into bed with a sigh of relief.

The next morning when he awoke, he went over to the desk to see what he had written. It was, "That's what you say."

[From Raymond Smullyan, 5000 B.C. and Other Philosophical Fantasies. St. Martin's Press, 1983]
Yes, some people really think that's a legitimate method of refutation!

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A Few Parallels From Shelter, Food, Epistemology, and Happiness

By Paul Hsieh

Can you spot the similarities? And can you come up with your own examples?

Three views of building a shelter:

A) God will provide for our needs, just like God provides for the lilies, "who neither toil nor spin". Don't worry about how.

B) Buildings collapse all the time; it's not possible for humans to build stable shelters.

C) Man can build shelters. But this won't happen automatically. "Nature to be commanded must be obeyed". To build a proper shelter, we have to know the properties of building materials, know our shelter requirements, and build according to reality-based principles.
Three views of choosing what food to eat:
A) Just eat what tastes good. Your body automatically knows what's good for it.

B) "Food" is a social construct. What one culture regards as a delicacy, another regards as taboo. There's no possible basis for deciding what's right to eat.

C) Proper diet is possible, but not automatic. Our food choices should be guided by the biological and nutritional requirements of our physical bodies. Hence, we must understand the nature of food, the nature of our bodies, and select our foods accordingly.
Three views of knowledge:
A) We can know the truth -- we just have to rely on the infallible "inner vision" provided to us by God.

B) Knowledge is impossible. Our imperfect senses and flawed minds inherently prevent us from ever knowing the truth.

C) Knowledge is possible, but not automatic. But to gain knowledge, we must consciously seek to adhere to reality, using a specific method proper to our conscious minds -- namely reason.
Three views of happiness:
A) Don't worry, be happy! We live in the best of all possible worlds, so success and happiness are inevitable!

B) We're doomed from the start. Life is a vale of tears, where happiness and success are impossible. Tragedy, defeat, and failure are the norm -- we just have to accept that.

C) Achievement and happiness are possible, but not automatic. To be happy, we have to seek our own good by means of rationally formed principles.
Here are a few related concepts from the Ayn Rand Lexicon:
Objectivity
Subjectivism
Malevolent Universe Premise
Benevolent Universe Premise
Logic
Reason

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Monday, December 21, 2009

The Impartialist Ethics of Deep Ecology

By Diana Hsieh

FAIL Blog recently posted this remarkably honest card from The Green Game (via Kevin Delaney):



In case you can't read that easily, it says:

Question: Which is greener; being obese and out of shape or slim and healthy?

Answer: Although obese people do consume slightly more energy than slim people, they will not live as long and therefore, will consume less of the earth's resources.
Most people would likely think that's some kind of horrible mistake: "Surely, they can't mean that!" Yet in fact, the card perfectly represents the ideological core of the environmentalist movement, often referred to as "deep ecology."

As I've argued before, most self-described environmentalists are motivated by fundamentally human concerns: they want clean air and clean water; they want "open space" for hiking, camping, and other sports; they want to preserve species for future study and enjoyment. Such people often wrongly suppose that government controls are required to achieve these ends. They are often mistaken about the benefits and dangers of certain products or practices. They err in thinking in terms of intrinsic value of nature. Yet fundamentally, their aims are anthropocentric: they wish to protect and improve human life.

Undoubtedly, the creators of that game are environmentalists of a different sort: they are "deep ecologists." Here's the description of deep ecology from Wikipedia (with my emphasis added):
Deep ecology's core principle is the claim that, like humanity, the living environment as a whole has the same right to live and flourish. Deep ecology describes itself as "deep" because it persists in asking deeper questions concerning "why" and "how" and thus is concerned with the fundamental philosophical questions about the impacts of human life as one part of the ecosphere, rather than with a narrow view of ecology as a branch of biological science, and aims to avoid merely anthropocentric environmentalism, which is concerned with conservation of the environment only for exploitation by and for humans purposes, which excludes the fundamental philosophy of deep ecology. Deep ecology seeks a more holistic view of the world we live in and seeks to apply to life the understanding that separate parts of the ecosystem (including humans) function as a whole.
Notice that, in addition to its metaphysical collectivism, deep ecology specifically rejects anthropocentrism, i.e. man-centered environmentalism. Ultimately, that's why it promotes human suffering and death as a positive good. To understand the why and the how, we need to draw some parallels to altruism -- particularly to utilitarianism and impartialism.

The moral perspective of deep ecology is similar to that of utilitarianism -- or, more broadly, impartialism. Utilitarianism demands that we always act so as to promote the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people. Utilitarianism is hedonistic: happiness is understood to be nothing more than pleasure, whether physical or emotional. Today, the widely-accepted variant of utilitarianism is the non-hedonistic doctrine of impartialism.

Impartialism abstracts away from the hedonism of utilitarianism: it is neutral about the nature of the good. Impartialism speaks in terms of "interests," yet that can mean just about anything: pleasure, wealth, happiness, health -- or even obedience to duty or submission to God's will. However, impartialism is still decidedly collectivistic: the good is neutral between persons. So whatever the standard for the good is, we must promote that good for everyone, not merely ourselves. We must be impartial in our decisions: we ought not concern ourselves with whether something is good for me or my loved ones -- or good for a stranger and his loved ones. All that matters is that something is good. (Kant's ethics of duty shares the same detached view of the good: that's why I think of impartialism as the distilled essence of both utilitarianism and deontology.)

Technically, impartialism permits each person to consider his own interests when acting. Yet the desires, goals, and welfare of one person must always be deemed inconsequential in comparison to the interests of the other billions of people in the world.

For example, you might think that your choice to buy a latte is your own private business, perhaps just concerning you and the owner of the coffee shop. You aren't harming anyone by buying the coffee. In fact, you and the coffee shop owner are better off after the transaction. Sounds good, right? No! That's far too narrow a perspective for impartialism: you must consider the impact of that transaction on everyone else, including the billions of total strangers in the world. Impartialism demands that you consider everything else that you might have done with those few dollars. Clearly, you could be feeding the poor, rather than indulging your desire for luxury. You have no moral right to a cup of coffee while someone in the world lacks bread. (For that argument, see Peter Singer's classic essay, Famine, Affluence, and Morality.)

The fact that the needs of the one are always swamped by the needs of the many is why impartialism is properly regarded as a form of altruism. In practice, you must always do for others, never for yourself. Unless you are the worst-off person in the world, you have no moral right to your own life or happiness.

That sounds awful, but it gets even worse.

(I'll speak of altruism from here on, as the rest of my analysis is not specific to impartialism.)

Impartialism and other forms of altruism cannot rejoice in the fact that people's interests are often in harmony. That only creates epistemic problems when attempting to judge people morally. How so?

Sometimes, a person might act for the sake of his own interests, yet by so doing, he happens to benefit others. In such cases, the person deserves no moral praise or credit -- even when the benefits provided to others are tremendous, like when neurosurgeon saves the live of a beloved child. Such a person is motivated by his own selfish concerns -- perhaps by the expected payment for the surgery or even his enjoyment of the work -- not purely by selfless concern for others.

Thus, when a person benefits from his actions in some way, we must wonder about his motives. He might be a secret egoist! As Kant observes in the Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, even the person himself might be deluded, thinking that he was motivated by duty when instead he was motivated by self-love. The result? A person can only be safely praised by altruistic standards when he receives no benefit whatsoever from his actions -- and better yet, when he suffers deeply for them. Only in such cases -- when the person clearly and deliberately inflicts harm on himself for the benefit of others -- can he be judged moral by altruistic standards.

Moreover, the person praiseworthy by altruistic standards need not really benefit other people much, if at all. A person's noble plans might go awry for all kinds of reasons beyond his control. Or perhaps a person lacks the resources or power to accomplish much. The critical question is whether the person decided on his course of action using the proper impartial or altruistic principle -- or "maxim," to use Kant's term. That's all that this morality demands.

So what does that mean? Altruism demands that people help others, yet shrinks from measuring moral worth by that standard. Instead, a person's moral worth is determined by his private motives or maxims: he must act for the sake of others, not for his own sake. He clearly demonstrates that only by his choice to suffer for others. Thus, self-inflicted suffering is the measure of a person's moral worth according to altruism.

Sadly, that's not some far-fetched, stretched interpretation of the meaning of altruism. It's exactly what the most consistent altruists have preached as the good throughout history -- Kant most explicitly.

Recall that the highest moral ideal of Christianity is that of Jesus, a god who willingly allowed himself to be brutally murdered for the sake of sinners. Jesus didn't die in a fight against injustice -- as might the leader of a slave rebellion. He didn't die in defense of anything of personal value to him -- like a friend, lover, or child. He died for the sake of all humanity, wicked and sinful as we are. He died for the sake of the very people who rejected him.

Moreover, that mythology of Jesus' death was based on the same altruistic principles he preached during his life, most clearly exemplified by the story of the Widow's Mite.
[Jesus] sat down opposite the treasury, and watched the crowd putting money into the treasury. Many rich people put in large sums. A poor widow came and put in two small copper coins, which are worth a penny. Then he called his disciples and said to them, "Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all those who are contributing to the treasury. For all of them have contributed out of their abundance; but she out of her poverty has put in everything she had, all she had to live on."
Notice that the widow is not morally superior to those who donated large sums because she provided a greater benefit to the poor. She didn't. Instead, she's morally superior because she sacrificed more. She will suffer greatly for her donation, as now she has nothing to live on. That's what makes her virtuous: her deliberate suffering.

So what does all of that have to do with deep ecology? What does it have to do with the suggestion that we die sooner for the sake of the environment?

Deep ecology is deep impartialism: the interests of everything in the natural world must be considered on a par with human interests. After all, why should mankind be so selfish as to only consider its own interests? Shouldn't we consider the interests of cows, moles, robins, turtles, worms, maples, lichen, and amoebas too? And more: even rivers and rocks have interests that we ought to consider, as well as the planet as a whole! For deep ecology, any form of anthropocentrism -- including traditional utilitarianism -- is really just another form of selfish egoism.

In practice, just as the interests of one person are totally swamped by the interests of billions of other people in human-focused impartialism, so human interests are totally swamped by the interests of living organisms, ecosystems, and natural objects in deep ecology. Consequently, humans will always be obliged to sacrifice themselves for nature. Just by sheer numbers, we're always going to lose.

As with altruism, the test of moral virtue for deep ecology is not any benefit done to the natural world but rather the depth of human sacrifices. Otherwise, we might just be pretending concern for nature, while actually secretly pursuing our own selfish ends. We can only prove our morality by eschewing anything that might benefit ourselves. That's why the morality of deep ecology demands human destruction.

These various moral theories -- utilitarianism, impartialism, altruism, and deep ecology -- are similar for a reason. The morality of egoism is the morality of life and happiness. To reject egoism as immoral requires adopting suffering and death as the moral standard -- whether for a single individual or all of humanity. The form of that ideal differs, as does its window dressing. Yet if you dig a bit, you'll find suffering and death at its core.

Sometimes, as with the card from "The Green Game," that's just a bit more apparent than usual.

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