| | Robert,
Thanks for your kind words and I will respect your wishes regarding the things you wrote in the 80s and mid-90s (three pieces I believe on Rand, Peikoff and T&T).
Your question regarding the "practical useful purpose" of the concept of "moral perfection" is right on the money, I think. My answer is that if we can define it and tie it to reality (i.e. avoid a floating abstraction) we can avoid any notion of "original sin" attached to "nobody's perfect". And, if we can expunge that concept from our vocabulary, that will serve the very serious practical useful purpose of eliminating the negative-expectation that somehow if someone watches TV or plays solitaire they have breached some Objectivist moral code and face excommunication for any "failure."
Now I know that your conclusion is based on what you consider "inductive evidence" of crimes far more serious, so I must admit that it is the validity of that "evidence" that is my ultimate target. But just for the record, I don't mean validity in any sense that would imply "you're lying about what you saw or heard." It's more like a detective novel where the evidence is, by itself, ambiguous and how we fill in the blanks has a lot to do with how we interpret what we saw -- oh, yes, like "Penthouse Legend". So, if I had you on the stand as a witness for the prosecution in the "Ayn Rand vs Objectivist Morality" case, I'd ask you, in her defense, just the questions I ask you here.
And isn't that what is going on in many of your posts on this and other threads (and you're not alone!). Are you not accusing Rand of not living up to her own morality? Are you not accusing her (along with Peikoff and Schwartz) of evading the truth, lying to herself, changing the principles of her philosophy to suite her or other's claims of perfection, or to rationalize the expulsion of this or that worthy thinker. Isn't that what's going on?
Now it's true, while you are not a little angry about this, you tend to wave it off on the grounds that "nobody's perfect." But this "nobody's perfect" has now become not an indictment that only covers the people you've met, but now has the clear meaning of "it's impossible for anyone to be morally perfect." (Which is what I believe you were arguing in post #20 of the original thread) There's all the difference in the world in my dictionary between "these people I've met are not morally perfect" and "nobody's perfect." And getting rid of even that small remnant of "original sin" would, in my book, be a very practical useful result,,,,,,even if Rand remains guilty. And if she does, you'll have the added satisfaction(?) of knowing that she stands out in that regard.
So, as her defense lawyer, I will be presenting an alternate version of the alleged crime. The facts will remain, but the story around them will be questioned. And I trust that everyone around this courtroom will not begin the trial with anything less than the seriousness it deserves. This particular defense lawyer doesn't take kindly to arguments from intimidation or name calling.
Tom
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