| | DaveB has the most to say in that thread, and he posits two things tha I'd like to get your folks' opinion on. First, he says "The problem is that what is "good" for the self is inherently determined by instinct and whim, with reason applied after the fact to justify any actions taken to fulfill this "good." I wonder how he knows this? Must be "instinct," huh? So, we can't say that "it's not good to walk into speeding traffic," because knowing not to do that is merely instinct, but we have some need to justify the instinct with reason by calling it good....
Does he have any clue how stupid this sounds?
Is his existence merely a product of instinct and whim? It must be, otherwise, how could he view himself as good, or anyone, or anything? Either it's instinct, whim, or reason, but it can't be all three. "Instinct" is automatic, and perfect knowledge that does not need reason to justify it.
And second "Even as humans, we all have moral views that can only be described as subjective. Is forgiveness a greater virtue than punishing those who commit crimes? Is abortion murder? Is homosexuality (of which Rand was not a fan, from what I've read) immoral? These types of questions can't be evaluated from some objective standpoint, and that is where Rand fails." His claim that even humans (!? Does something else aspire to moral views??) have moral views that can only be described as subjective is actually correct, but that's not the goal. Just because some humans do, doesn't mean they should. Is this guy a moral relativist?? Lets stone him now! Afterall, his life and views are only "subjective."
What a fucktard.
|
|