| | Roger B.,
Thank you for not stooping to my level, though -- from your impressions of my activity here -- it might've been more just for you to do so. While 2 wrongs don't make a right, 2 wrongs are more right than 1 (unanswered-in-kind) wrong is. If someone's swinging at you, it's more right to swing back than to start lecturing him about your 'philosophical position' on violence. But I digress.
Now, let's get to specifics. You wrote:
================ But the form of your question really bugs me, both for its rudeness ("I think you suffer from a thinking error.") and its obliviousness to Bill's comments just two posts earlier (post #37 in this thread). ================
First of all, spotting a thinking error (an error of knowledge) isn't equivalent to a moral condemnation -- the "suffer from" could have been worded better, I admit. Something like: I think you "are working with" a thinking error -- might have been more proper to say at the time. At any rate, I didn't state that it is true, I merely stated that I THINK that it is true. So, you are basically castigating me for being open about my thoughts -- something which I didn't think was proper for you to do.
Secondly, you claim that my post 39 had "obliviousness to Bill's comments just two posts earlier." Well Roger, did you happen to READ that 'post in-between' (my post 38)? I responded to/countered post 37 in my post 38:
================== Bill,
That was a pretty good retort regarding [B], in effect, you are implicitly choosing ALL OF THE ABOVE ...
That's helpful in the defining the context. Thanks. ...
Even still, I'd disagree on the semantics involved in your following analogy ...
My response to this hypothetical is that then I would CREATE an extra choice. ...
And I would retort that that's precisely, by nature, the purpose of debate -- to elucidate (even if it takes "work") the fundamentals involved. ...
A contingency that's impersonal is a metaphysical contingency -- a real-ness of alternative paths existing. A personal spontaneity occurs when ...
Owing to what I said above (about elucidating fundamentals), I disagree. ==================
Now, I don't think of my response (to Bill's post 37) as oblivious, but rather one of taking Bill's points into consideration -- and providing answers to them which would lead to progress in the discussion. In short, I think that it is you, Roger, who is exercising obliviousness here.
================== Ed, you should consider yourself lucky that someone as intelligent and nice as Bill is willing to overlook your careless and discourteous way of discussing ideas and actually engage you in discussion. ==================
Oh I do, Roger, I do. Now, I'm not one for dry debates. As a college instructor, I could make the most boring and dry topic come alive in the minds of the students (an impression validated by their mid-quarter evaluations of me). And I'm someone who could make philosophy come alive in the minds of casual observers, too (so I've been told). And I AM lucky to have "someone as intelligent and nice as Bill" willing to put up with and continually engage me -- in spite of my oft-witty, tongue-in-check, rib-jabbing antics!
=================== And while you're at it, you might ponder why it is that someone else ... ===================
I already have (I "know," Roger). And I don't think that that issue was appropriate to mention in a public forum like this. Personal stuff like that ought to be handled by private email or not at all. This reminds me of that discourteous and impolite article which Kilbourne wrote and submitted about Linz's personal life. Civility means protecting privacy as a value. If I'm on the outs with someone, then you can bet that I won't advertise it to the "public-at-large." It's an issue meant for friends, Roger, not mere acquaintances and strangers.
Besides, what value would THAT KIND of act be aimed at, anyway?
Ed
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