| | Okay, here's a second effort to convey the same message.
Evil exists via compartmentalization. Don't look long-range or wide-scale, look at it with a limited perspective and a partial view. On the limited, partial views and perspectives, just about any act can be seen as the Good (which is the goal of Evil). One of the things that needs to be held in the perspective -- when examining moral decisions -- is moral character. Acts don't take place in a vacuum, and moral actors are never blank-slates. Some folks decry this as some sort of idolization of some sort of mystical thing which folks have come to refer to as the Good Life, but I think that that's a limited and partial understanding.
Another thing that needs to be in the perspective of evaluation of a moral choice is reality. It seems like a bromide to say that. Everybody seems to be able to get away with saying it, and then try to get away with just arbitrarily implanting their limited, partial perspective in -- about what is "the reality" of the situation. Joe mentioned this arbitrary implantation tactic disparagingly and rightly so. However, I'd use that same sword to cut through his (and Bill's) defense of "survivalism" as foundational or justifying -- for moral evaluations. This was the tricky, prickly thing Alasdair MacIntyre handled when he wrote about when he wrote "Who's Justice? Which Rationality?"
Let me get personal, as that has worked -- albeit in a limited fashion -- for Jeff, in reaching at least some common ground. If I were a rapist who had had a moral awakening -- so that I could more clearly see a path to happiness for myself -- I'd understand the importance of justice in that happiness. I'd turn myself in (rather than evade). Rand talked at length about this. David Kelley did, too. MacIntyre wrote a book about it, and Philippa Foot championed it.
What is "it"? It's an integrated being (existence). Aristotle was the first to attempt to shed light on the fact that moral virtue is an integration rather than separate, limited, partial parts. You either have them all in some degree, or none in any degree. This is the part where Bill (or Joe) can step in with the following charge:
"Virtues are valuable only when they are in service to your life!"
And there is no arguing about that. It's true. The crucial next step is to define "your life" -- and that's where moral philosophy makes ground (or where moral philosophy ought to make ground -- if you can excuse the double entendre`).
Here are some quotes showing that integration is the only way to go, when you have got it into your mind to be moral and enjoy your life:
Foot (1958):
Is it true, however, to say that justice is not something a man needs in his dealings with his fellows, supposing only that he be strong? Those who think that he can get on perfectly well without being just should be asked to say exactly how such a man is supposed to live ....
The reason why it seems to some people so impossibly difficult to show that justice is more profitable than injustice is that they consider in isolation particular just acts.
David Kelley (1996):
To achieve our values, we have to take account of certain basic facts about the human condition. That is why we need virtues in the first place: we cannot achieve our ends by magic, whim, or random action; we must take account of facts about human nature, the world in which we act, and the causal relationships between actions and results. A virtue involves the recognition of such facts and the commitment to acting in accordance with them. ...
Honesty, for example, is a commitment to maintain an unbreached cognitive contact with reality in all of one's actions; to act on the basis of the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth; and not to seek any value through deluding oneself or others. This commitment is based on the fact that cognition is man's primary means of pursuing any value, and that knowledge is the identification of what exists. These are fundamental facts about the human condition, and honesty is accordingly a major virtue. ...
The appropriate method of attaining these values is through trade. "The principle of trade," Ayn Rand observed,
"is the only rational ethical principle for all human relationships, personal and social, private and public, spiritual and material. It is the principle of justice. ..." ...
... Humanity. If we expect to trade with other people, we must first of all recognize and treat them as people ... capable of self-awareness. In virture of this self-awareness, we all have a need for visibility, a harmony between what we know about ourselves from the inside and the way in which others treat us. ... . Of course human viciousness does occur, ... and when it does it must be dealth with.
The common thread is that you can't be happy without internal and external justice -- that it's not an "optional" virtue for only special occasions (or for only general occasions). And that's because of the (human) kind of creatures that we are.
Ed (Edited by Ed Thompson on 6/01, 12:17pm)
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