_Extreme Centrism_ (http://chriscarosa.com/2010/12/extreme-centrism/) 
By  _Chris Carosa_ (http://chriscarosa.com/author/ccarosa/)   
December 14, 2010
 
 
...Aristotle once warned us to avoid extremes and pursue the moderate road. 
 This makes one wonder: What if you pursue moderation with extreme 
prejudice?  Would this cause Aristotle to overheat in confusion, babbling 
incoherently with  increasing high pitch until finally exploding in a sudden 
puff of 
sparks, fire  and smoke?  
Seeking the middle has its noble advocates. Taken in an economic context, 
one  can view moderation as the classic negotiating tactic of making your 
first offer  the most extreme possible. This creates a position from which you 
can negotiate.  Assuming your opponent adopts the same strategy, you merely 
split the difference  down the middle and agree to compromise. 
This works well when using money, but not so well when using other things.  
For example, let’s say the item subject to negotiation happens to be a babe 
in  swaddling clothes. Who in the right (or left) mind would say “Let’s 
split the  baby down the middle”? 
Solomon had a point. In a world of good and evil, black and white cannot be 
 settled with shades of gray. In terms of morality and philosophy, it’s 
often not  a question of two extremes, but of two completely different paths. 
Arguing which  path suits a goal best does not therefore become a matter of 
compromise..... 
This isn’t to suggest no situation lends itself to the classic negotiating  
strategy (and thus to compromise). Some circumstances do merit a give and 
take.  On the other hand, some issues do not. And having that debate – no 
matter how  ugly in the short-term (think WWII, the Cold War or briefs/boxers 
controversy) –  can help improve the overall position of the individual, the 
community and even  mankind in the long-term. 
Caveat: This assumes we have interlocutors smart enough to  recognize the 
supremacy of logic; thus, a willingness to concede under the  weight of 
credibly convincing syllogisms. If our nation is not smart enough for  this, 
the 
answer is not to compromise for sake of compromise, but to become  smarter 
or, in the very least, more creative. Maybe it means turning off those  
insipid cable TV gabfests. Maybe it means requiring every high schooler and  
college student to take classes in rhetoric. Maybe it just means electing  
representatives to do this dirty debating deed and then getting out of their 
way  
as they have at it.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to