Hi Platt,

[Steve]
How do you argue that property is part of the
essential nature of man?






>> Do you consider yourself a Deist?
>
> I consider myself a Mysterian. But Deist will do.


Steve:
I had never heard of that term Wikipedia says:
"New Mysterianism is a philosophy proposing that certain problems will 
never be explained or at the least cannot be explained by the human 
mind at its current evolutionary stage. The problem most often referred 
to is the hard problem of consciousness; i.e. how to explain sentience 
and qualia and their interaction with consciousness."

Is this what you believe?



>> Steve:
>> In a liberal society, rationales can be criticized. Religious dogma 
>> we are
>> told is above criticism since it is a matter of faith.
>
> What is dogma to you is belief to others. I argue that all belief 
> includes
> an element of faith.

Steve:
We've been through this before. I think we agreed that the use of term 
faith to say that it is a virtue to hold certain beliefs outside the 
realm of rational questioning is bad.


>
>>> Steve:
>>>> The other point is that it is not only happiness but suffering that
>>>> Harris says we need to consider in judging morality. Certainly
>>>> religion continues to be a great source of suffering.
>>>
>> Platt:
>>> Compared to the state as a source of suffering, religion is heaven.
>>> Statists tend to forget that Communism and National Socialism were
>>> responsible for over 125 million deaths in the last century.
>>
>> Steve:
>> I still see this as a non sequitur. It is certainly not an argument
>> that faith (as the idea that it is good to belief things without 
>> reason or
>> evidence) really is a virtue.
>
> Not a non sequitur if suffering is your criterion of evil as it seems 
> to be
> for Harris, not to mention Reagan..

Steve:
But Harris would agree that Communism and National Socialism are evil.




>> Steve:
>> I am not necessarily arguing that religion needs to be dispensed 
>> with. I am
>> simply saying that beliefs must be evaluated based on intellectual 
>> quality
>> rather than accepted on authority of magic books. If religion really 
>> is
>> wroth anything (and I think it is) then there will be something of 
>> value
>> left once dogma is rejected in favor if reason.

Platt:
> Your faith in reason can be viewed as dogmatic as religious belief.

Steve:
What have I said that suggests a dogmatic belief?

Platt:
> Speaking of John Locke, would you agree with what he wrote in "Civil
> Government?"
>
> "To understand political power aright, and derive it from its 
> original, we
> must consider what estate all men are naturally in, and this is , a 
> state
> of perfect freedom to order their actions, and dispose of their 
> possessions
> and persons as they think fit, within the bounds of the law of Nature,
> without asking leave or depending upon the will of any other."
>
> To me this sets out the fundamental  battle between the intellectual 
> and
> social levels as outlined in the MOQ.

Steve:
Locke reasons based on SOM premises. According to Northrop, he reasons 
that as mental substances we are completely free. So why would we want 
to participate in a government that will necessarily be to give up some 
liberty? Locke says that the only reason we do this is because we can't 
defend our private property on our own.

This thinking is completely at odds with the MOQ which says that the 
"free" individual that Locke is talking about does not exist without 
social patterns. Locke sees that man is subject to the law of Nature 
(inorganic and biological patterns), but does not see the evolutionary 
roll of social patterns. He sees social patterns as imposed and 
corrupting a "free" man rather than man as being a product of social 
evolution as well.

Pirsig addresses this fallacy here:
"Is society good or is society evil? ...The idea that, "man is born 
free but is everywhere in chains" was never true. There are no chains 
more vicious than the chains of biological necessity into which every 
child is born. Society exists primarily to free people from these 
biological chains. It has done that job so stunningly well 
intellectuals forget the fact and turn upon society with a shameful 
ingratitude for what society has done."

Regards,
Steve






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