| | Dave,
If we were merely talking about the rational side of living, I would agree with you 100% in everything you said.
But there is another issue that is usually not dealt with concerning moral perfection (like the future I mentioned), and that is the influence our emotional life has on it.
The whole quest to achieve moral perfection is to become happy and stay that way. Not to achieve some hypothetical mental standard of virtue. In other words, virtue is a means, not an end. It is a means to happiness on earth, not an end in itself.
If we take a look at the vast number of emotions that operate in us, we see that happiness is only one among many. Part of learning to take control of this marvelous human capacity to project goals and attain them is learning to keep our whimsical and negative emotions under control, while keeping our positive ones "up" and pushing us on. If the negative ones did not exist (and if the positive ones never went away), the whole concept of moral perfection would lose its meaning because people would simply choose the best - like they normally do when all things are equal (including emotional balance).
So this leads to why people - including Objectivists - know what the best is morally and choose the worst sometimes. The main reason is what I call emotional surges. For instance, here is a banal example. Everyone gets irritated at sometime in their life and takes the head off - or says something inexcusably cruel to - a loved one without provocation. This is not just a widespread generalization about behavior. You can see it all the time. I would not call this an error of knowledge.
If you don't call it a moral error, recognize that you stomped on yourself and apologize for it (while also getting a little pissed at yourself to try to learn not to do that anymore), how are you ever going to correct it? How are you going to preserve your greatest value, i.e. your loved one's love? The mere itch to scratch an irritation (a lesser "morally flawed" value) will most certainly destroy over time that which you value the most. And of course you will not want your loved one to do that back to you at the same rate as you did, as they would have every right to do if you want to be fair about it. That to me is the real meaning of the "do unto others" rule in Christianity.
There are a whole lot of emotions that flow through us that are not too pleasant. Disciplining them (not repressing them, as Freud would have it) is one of the tasks of morality. My own inner emotional life serves as an example to me. Since I cannot share this with anyone in actual reality, I can and will only report what I observe.
I have done many stupid things in the past, but through it all, there has been oodles of time since I have felt envy. This is one tricky emotion because most people deny feeling it when they are in the throes of it. I am not above that denial either. (Some around here gleefully call this "evasion" while doing an outstanding job of evading it themselves.) But being brutally honest with myself, I think back to my childhood and let her rip, no holds barred. Let's see what was back there.
I remember often wanting to win a game at all costs and murderously hating a playmate who won (and, ahem... cheating sometimes), also, coveting a toy that belonged to another so much I lost sleep over it (and, ahem... stealing sometimes).
When I look into my heart now, I do not see anything that closely resembles that kind of feeling anymore. However, I am a human being. That was once in me and it could return at any moment, depending on many possible circumstances. If it does, I will probably want to do something really retarded. I refuse to rationalize all this away by calling it an error of knowledge. If I act on that emotion, I will want to destroy something or someone to keep a hated person from having something I want. Period. And that is really retarded, but there it is. If I don't properly identify it, I will never be able to control it.
I have enough "virtue" in me now to be able to recognize what is going on and try to catch it in time. If I don't, well voilá, one more mess to clean up. I have learned enough about myself to know that I will eventually get it and do something about it. My "sense of life" or "virtue," which I have actively sought to perfect - and honed to about as brutally self-honest as I can get - in order to be happy, will lead me to do just that. This is about as morally perfect as I can achieve. When these emotional things go way out of whack, Objectivism-wise there is a wonderful body of work by Nathaniel Branden to help us work on them.
There are several other things that make us choose unwisely. I have sketched out some articles on this for SOLO - that is, if I don't kill some people around here first!
Michael
(Edited by Michael Stuart Kelly on 4/19, 1:13pm)
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