Checking my premises
I was unsure as to whether I would title this, "Unlearning what I have learned" or "Checking my premises", because in it, I have done both. A couple of recent posts by AmericanGreatness and Eudaimonia, along with a couple of posts from 1-2 weeks ago are relevant.
I have long thought that the US military was an agent for liberation from totalitarian regimes. Now should I think they are mere pawns of their political masters, most often performing altruism to societies that do not appreciate their presence?
I had long thought that having a strong military meant having a strong national defense. After seeing 67 out of 70 purposeful attempts by TSA employees to evade TSA screening in a "test" of TSA security, I know differently. Moreover, the strong military and even the border agents were unable to protect us from an invasion of illegal immigrants because the one holding the leash kept the military and border agents on so tight a leash that they were unable to do what used to be their job.
I had long thought (because I had thought that the US military was an agent for liberation from totalitarian regimes) that the US had the "moral high ground". I still think that abortion is not the best moral decision and have been criticized (perhaps rightly) within the Gulch for that opinion. Moreover, I see a commentator (sorry, but I forget whom) on FoxNews suggest that America has lost the "moral high ground" in light of the Planned Parenthood situation (The commentator said that Muslims must consider us barbarous for having so many abortions. The term barbarous ironically is derived from the Barbary Pirates in Libya.).
I'm just checking my premises.
I have long thought that the US military was an agent for liberation from totalitarian regimes. Now should I think they are mere pawns of their political masters, most often performing altruism to societies that do not appreciate their presence?
I had long thought that having a strong military meant having a strong national defense. After seeing 67 out of 70 purposeful attempts by TSA employees to evade TSA screening in a "test" of TSA security, I know differently. Moreover, the strong military and even the border agents were unable to protect us from an invasion of illegal immigrants because the one holding the leash kept the military and border agents on so tight a leash that they were unable to do what used to be their job.
I had long thought (because I had thought that the US military was an agent for liberation from totalitarian regimes) that the US had the "moral high ground". I still think that abortion is not the best moral decision and have been criticized (perhaps rightly) within the Gulch for that opinion. Moreover, I see a commentator (sorry, but I forget whom) on FoxNews suggest that America has lost the "moral high ground" in light of the Planned Parenthood situation (The commentator said that Muslims must consider us barbarous for having so many abortions. The term barbarous ironically is derived from the Barbary Pirates in Libya.).
I'm just checking my premises.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 7.
Subsidies for abortions are a side issue in the current hysteria over Planned Parenthood being spread by those who want to ban abortions no matter who pays for them.
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There is no issue of philosophy "trumping" the physical and biological sciences. They are different fields of subject matter.
There can be no science of "direct observables" of "raw data" without conceptualization and principles, which require an epistemology.
From the Preface:
[This book] "contains the main philosophical passages from my novels and presents the outline of a new philosophical system. The full system is implicit in these excerpts (particularly in Galt's speech), but its fundamentals are indicated only in the widest terms and require a detailed, systematic presentation in a philosophical treatise. I am working on such a treatise at present; it will deal predominantly with the issue which is barely touched upon in Galt's speech: epistemology, and will present a new theory of the nature, source and validation of concepts. This work will require several years; until then, I offer the present book as a lead or a summary for those who wish to acquire an integrated view of existence. They may regard it as a basic outline; it will give them the guidance they need, but only if they think through and understand the exact meaning and the full implications of these excerpts"
...
"For those who may be interested in the chronological development of my thinking, I have included excerpts from all four of my novels. They may observe the progression from a political theme in "We the Living to a metaphysical theme in Atlas Shrugged.
"These excerpts are necessarily condensed summaries, because the full statement of the subjects involved is presented, in each novel, by means of the events of the story. The events are the concretes and the particulars, of which the speeches are the abstract summations. When I say that these excerpts are merely an outline, I do not mean to imply that my full system is still to be defined or discovered; I had to define it before I could start writing Atlas Shrugged. Galt's speech is its briefest summary."
"Until I complete the presentation of my philosophy in a fully detailed form, this present book may serve as an outline or a program or a manifesto."
"For reasons which are made clear in the following pages, the name I have chosen for my philosophy is Objectivism.
AYN RAND
October, 1960
She never wrote the "presentation in a fully detailed form" for her philosophy in detailed, "systematic presentation in a philosophical treatise." But she did publish one part of the planned "detailed, systematic presentation in a philosophical treatise" she described above including "dealing with ... epistemology [to] present a new theory of the nature, source and validation of concepts" in her Introduction to Objectivism Epistemology. IOE was almost exclusively on the nature of concepts. (including the nature of the axiomatic concepts). The 2nd edition includes two appendices, one with Leonard Peikoff's essay on propositions, "The Analytic Synthetic Dichotomy", and the other with about a third of the workshops on epistemology she conducted to answer serious, detailed questions from a small group.
Leonard Peikoff's recorded lecture course on Objectivism from the 1970s systematically covers the whole scope of her philosophy in far more detail than had previously been presented, and Ayn Rand was present for some of the question periods. Leonard Peikoff's own detailed treatise Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand is based on that lecture series. It begins with the metaphysical basis and the reasons for it, and the epistemology, but only summarizes the nature of concepts covered in detail in IOE.
For those interested in Ayn Rand's philosophy, this tells you the most serious, systematic accounts to read and listen to -- along with many other essays not as technical, but very important, like "Philosophy: Who Needs It?", "Causality Versus Duty", "Metaphysical Versus the Man Made", and many more. Also crucial is Leonard Peikoff's lecture series on the History of Western Philosophy, which explains the historical development of the major philosophical positions, how they were connected and influenced one another, and how they differ from Objectivism.
Re-reading Galt's speech after going through this shows how much of the significance you missed in Galt's speech without it, and more fully what Ayn Rand meant when she wrote, "The full system is implicit in these excerpts (particularly in Galt's speech), but its fundamentals are indicated only in the widest terms".
The definition of life is a foundational principle for any philosophy. I agree with Ayn Rand's definitions for existence and for consciousness, and with the rights that follow from such definitions. I understand Ayn Rand's definition for life, and I can agree that it creates a philosophical contradiction when one assigns rights to beings without sentience, particularly when those rights would be in contradiction with the life and rights of someone without whom this whole argument would be moot.
Fetuses or tissue-engineered specimens can reasonably be said to not have rights. We are not in disagreement about that either, at least until they reach the point of consciousness.
You and I are at a fundamental disagreement, albeit politely, because you have chosen the definition of life based upon Rand's Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology rather than the completely objective definition based on direct observables that all biologists and most people who have studied biology accept. I am not saying that Rand's definition is wrong. It is perfectly fine for the assignment of rights, but just because a being is unconscious or not sentient does not mean that being is not alive. It exists. It simply is not conscious or not sentient.
We will continue to disagree because my philosophy is based upon direct observables whenever possible. I know I have had disagreements with you and others as to whether philosophy trumps science. When someone publishes a scientific paper, he/she makes observations. Those observations form the basis for interpretations and applications. When science can establish a directly observable fact, that can serve as a pillar upon which philosophy can be based. As for me, I will base everything on raw data as much as possible. If the philosophy (or the theory in the case of science) is consistent with the raw data, I will choose to accept the philosophy. You have argued that I should understand the philosophy first. If Ayn Rand is correct, then if I logically connect my direct observables together, then I should come to the same conclusion, and with what are, in my mind, minor exceptions, I have. This actually strengthens Rand's conclusions, rather than weakens them. If someone can come to the same conclusions with a somewhat different set of premises, that validates the conclusions even more because they can be achieved from the mathematicians would consider two different initial guesses. The answer would then be considered rigorous in the mathematical sense.
Rand herself said that we must all come to these conclusions for ourselves. The conclusions cannot come first. The raw data must come first.
Freeing individuals from tyrants was a goal of several presidents in the recent past. That should not be an objective for the military, but unfortunately it has been. If I were in charge of the military, wars would be rare, but swift and extremely destructive to the opposition with no nation building in the aftermath. I know that creates a vacuum, and that is the biggest reason why (even moreso than Objectivist philosophy) that I think wars should be exceedingly rare. There definitely has not been a war since WW2 for which the "compelling national interest" has been sufficiently compelling.
I couldn't agree more with your last two paragraphs.
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