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Post 0

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 5:33amSanction this postReply
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Here is why you are wrong.

Rand wrote: "no amount of past thinking, of established virtues, of acquired knowledge will guarantee that a man will remain rational and virtuous next day, next year or in the next emergency; the act of focusing one's mind and of facing reality remains an act of volition, to be performed anew in every hour and issue of one's life."

 

It is clear from this, that errors of both knowledge and morality are possible, perhaps even inevitable, and that life requires a continual, continuous, continuing reassessment and reflection.  The act of "focusing one's mind...must be performed anew in every hour and issue of one's life". Was Ayn Rand perfect? No. Did she ever compromise her principles? Yes. Does it matter? No. She was a hero, and an explempliary human, but human none the less.  Can you honestly and objectively claim Peikoff has never made an immoral choice, never acted immorally, ever,  at any time?

 

Objectivism is not a way of putting your life on autopilot. In the face of such matters as taste, temperament, talent, and level of intelligence a formula for an inflexible, infallable morality is impossible.  One can only be as moral as ability allows, and should be judged on those isssues that matter most.  Perfection is an impossible goal.

 

 


Post 1

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 5:41amSanction this postReply
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This issue brings to mind The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.  The author endeavored as a young man to achieve his own "moral perfection" in accordance with 13 virtues he had isolated from a survey of the major world religions and philosophies.  He systematically focused his energies on one virtue per week, thus giving him four weeks total per virtue per 52 week year in 13 week cycles.  He scored himself in his personal planner, the "little book" he carried with him always.  As an old man, he noted in his autobiography that he fell far short of his goal of moral perfection, but still made himself a much better person by the undertaking than he otherwise would have become.

Post 2

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 7:21amSanction this postReply
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Robert D.

I probably wasn't clear enough, so let me just say that I never intended to say (actually, don't think I did, but that's unimportant) that morality could be put on auto-pilot. Far from it, as you rightfully quote Rand, rationality is a daily choice.

But the question is, "what is required for moral perfection?" and then, and only then, "how do we make judgements about ourselves and others" and "is moral perfection possible"  To move from "being moral is a daily choice" to "moral perfection is impossible" (why? because it's impossible to make that choice every day?) is a very fast move, logically. I think that at least the premise that "being moral is a daily choice" needs to be fleshed out.

That's what I was trying to do in the second and third paragraphs after the bullets. The discussion of  the sailor tacking was my attempt to show how a commitment to rationality (the moral choice)("inflexible" -- ubetcha, if what you mean is that one MUST make the choice to be rational every day to be moral) is precisely what is needed to reach one's practical goals in life.

Maybe one way of making it simpler is to say this: being moral is not complicated and it requires effort. It's not complicated in the sense that it amounts to making the decision to turn on your brain every day.  "A moral process is a rational process" to reverse the quote. It is the commitment to the process (on a daily basis) that is the only relevant moral issue, here.  And, I am claiming, the only basis on which to judge moral perfection. 

In other words, the fact that you happen to disagree with a conclusion that Ayn Rand or Leonard Peikoff comes to doesn't reflect on their morality, if you can't present evidence that they abrogated their commitment to a rational process. Put another way, your disagreement with a position they -- or anyone else -- takes (homosexuality or a woman president, for example) does not prove anything about their commitment to the moral process. What is needed to show that the process has been abandoned is some evidence of evasion or its equivalent (Bidinotto's own criteria).  But, again, you're argument that they have reached a faulty conclusion is not evidence -- by itself -- that they weren't moral in reaching it.

Now, if you're a backer of Kelley's position, you should be happy at this point, for this is very similar to his argument.  And it had me stuck with Kelley for many years. But that is completely off the issue in this thread, so maybe we'll get a chance to chat about that in some future post.

A couple of further points. "Infallible", as far as I've figured it out so far, is really only applicable to "errors of knowledge" since all that is required of you from a moral standpoint is "turning on the brain every day".  "Inflexible", on the other hand, again as far as I've figured it out so far, is really only applicable to "errors of morality" since is precisely the process of "turning on the brain every day" that MUST be done. One is inflexible about morality and flexible about the results because one is fallible.

Yes, doing your best in the context of your abilities and knowledge is all that is required for moral perfection.  And that is what I've been saying. 

The comments about Rand and Peikoff are off the issue, I think, and would be interesting to pursue elsewhere.

Tom Rowland


Post 3

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 7:46amSanction this postReply
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Luther,

Well, this is very interesting, of course. But I'm not sure how relevant. I've forgotten which virtues good old BF was practicing and how he scored himself, but maybe these comments are relevant.

There is only one primary virtue -- turning on your brain every day -- and all the rest follow from that. (see my discussion below -- or is it above? -- in answer to Robert D's post.)

If BF counted "honesty" as a virtue, let's say, what was his definition? Did practicing it admit of any principled exceptions -- lying about the location of a loved one to Hitler, e.g.? Or did lying to an enemy count with the same weight as lying to his wife?

It seems to me that one can't conclude anything about moral perfection's possibility from BF's admission that he didn't achieve it, without knowing a good deal more.

Tom Rowland


Post 4

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 7:59amSanction this postReply
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Tom, my point is that BF saw moral perfection as worthwhile and achievable.  So do you.  That was all.  As for the specifics about exactly what constitutes morality, and why those virtues have merit, Ayn Rand has already addressed that much better than BF did.

As for my remark that he fell short of his own ideals, what I meant to convey is that he had ideals and he strove to achieve them to the best of his ability, yet he had enough honesty to admit his shortcomings.  This is different than him simply cutting himself slack where he earned none, or practicing hubris and claiming a perfection he had not achieved.  I think you and he are on the same page.  Perhaps you can peruse the book and see for yourself.

(Edited by Luther Setzer on 4/20, 8:03am)


Post 5

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 9:25amSanction this postReply
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Tom! A little on the long side, but great article! And timely too! Perhaps I'll make a summary of the excellent points you made later. I did want to comment on this:
I will, without blushing or apology, use some definitions of Ayn Rand’s
Unfortunately, that is an apology, and one you shouldn't have to make. One things I am disgusted by at Solo are the elements here that have made you feel it necessary to do it, for two reasons: the reaction implies a hatred of Objectivism; the reaction is, ironically, a snap judgment and condemnation of the person using Ayn Rand's word, phrase, or definition (I say "ironically" because even a semblance of snap judgment is yet another thing that sets these same people off).

Vile hypocrites!


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Post 6

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 9:31amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

I have little to dispute in your descriptions of positive moral behavior, and doubt that you would have substantive disagreements with my own descriptions of what a moral life would look like. I would bet that the same could be said about Adam, Phil, Shayne and others who may have disputed aspects of my essay. (When asked what I think an exemplary life would look like, I point to the fictional model of Francisco d'Anconia, my own favorite among Rand's characters.) We are disagreeing, I think, only about details of the philosophical rationale for such a life, rather than its substance.

Let me begin by saying that I found no cheap shots or acrimony in your post. Let me also stress that I neither feel nor intend any toward you in this response, which is far too brief to address all your points. As to the reasons for its brevity, let me explain by citing a single example from your critique. You wrote:
 It is evidently your belief that if anyone explains the reasons for a judgment with which you disagree, their explanation must be a rationalization.  Some of these rationalizations (which ones we are not told) “soar to awesome rhetorical heights, buttressed by plenty of arcane (?) philosophical language and familiar Objectivist code words…convincing themselves (no one else?) of things (what?)  that ordinary non-intellectuals, exercising nothing but common sense, know to be utterly stupid and morally appalling.”  Know? By common sense?  Well, OK, what is this thing called common sense?  How does it operate? What makes these things (whatever they are) stupid (whatever that is)? What are these Objectivist code words? Are you claiming that they don’t refer to anything, or that they shouldn’t be used?

What you ask for here is not a reply comment, or even an essay, or even a book, but volumes. Which would not convince you anyway -- and I don't mean that in any insulting way. Here's why it's hopeless:

I recall that Rand once said something, in an interview, I think, concerning her views of masculinitiy and femininity. She made a few bald generalizations, then added something to the effect, "I could try to prove all this, but you would not believe me anyway." I remember laughing and being struck by that at the time. Now why would she say such a thing? Because she was discussing certain kinds of romantic feelings between certain men and women -- feelings she regarded as exalted, self-justifying, but also not universal. Those who had never felt such things wouldn't have a clue as to what she was talking about.

In writing any essay, some consideration must be given to the target audience. Not everyone is a target for every essay. The reason is that to some extent, your target audience is self-defined by some common reservoir of knowledge and experiences. The reason for this is simple: You simply can't prove every assertion within an essay or article from scratch. You have to take for granted that your readers understand and have experienced certain things, so that you don't have to prove them.

My essay was written for those in the Objectivist audience who have had a fairly extensive shared level of experiences within the organized movement. It was not -- let me repeat this -- it was not meant to try to convince those lacking that common base of experiences. Why not? Because such an attempt would be impossible. It would have required that I provide an exhaustive account of an exhaustive number of individual examples and encounters, specifying names and places; that I try to re-create each one in sufficient detail to illustrate each point I was trying to make; and that I then analytically dissect each episode, proving that no conceivable explanation other than the one I was positing could be valid, and why.

That is what would be required to address each question posed in the passage cited above; and in the rest of your essay you add many, many more questions and challenges. This, I submit, is an impossible undertaking, and of course "getting down to cases" would mean leveling accusations, by name, against many individuals -- something that would be grossly inappropriate. So I trust no one will yell "Evasion!" or "Cop out!" simply because I refuse to take the first step on what would become an ugly and never-ending journey. My essay was intended as a commentary, not a legal indictment. 

For those readers who found themselves nodding at my descriptions of platonism and moral hypocrisy within the movement, the essay had two basic objectives. 

First, it was meant to repudiate those in the movement who have falsely put themselves forth as moral exemplars of the philosophy. They aren't, and if the movement is to earn public credibility, any idolatry about them should stop. Rand's own grandiose public claims about her own personal character and that of various associates over the years have been the source of endless ridicule. Telling the world that Objectivism (a) demands moral perfection, (b) offers living examples of perfect people, but (c) bases these claims upon a creative definition of "perfect" which excludes one's past moral record -- that, Tom, is a recipe for perpetuating the public ridicule forever.

Second, the article was meant to warn against having an obsessive, self-absorbed, inward focus on the moral status of one's "character," rather than directing one's attention toward the active moral pursuit of rational values in the world. I pointed out that the "standard" of platonic perfectionism was a false one; that one reason "nobody's perfect" is because the goal of moral perfection of character is simply too vague and abstract (as these discussions underscore); that we do need a standard of morality, however; and that a practical, rationally appropriate standard of morality must help people set reasonable self-expectations in applying the virtues to specific life situations.

There are a few things I can clarify.
  
Contrary to your conclusion, I do not assume that those who dispute my description are all "rationalizing" or "evading." They may not have had such encounters or, as is more likely, interpret them totally differently. But from the "comments" and "sanctions" to my essay, I conclude that many readers did recognize and agree with my description (and interpretation) of the rampant platonic perfectionism and moral inconsistency within the Objectivist movement. By rampant moral inconsistency, I meant such things as chasms between words and deeds, promises and execution, principles and practice, stated ideals and private behavior...and frequently, creative (often "philosophical") excuse-making whenever such matters came to light. I also said that I had yet to find someone in the movement totally immune from such "moral errors." Those conclusions were based upon direct personal interactions over time with many Objectivists, and in a few cases, upon their own public admissions or publicly available evidence of their moral inconsistencies and hypocrisy.

In a related vein, you ask:
Doesn’t what you say here lead to the assumption that anyone who claims moral perfection by Objectivist standards has to end up rationalizing?
Not if the claim is truly made "by Objectivist standards." If so, I'd love to meet them. But I don't think most people claiming "moral perfection" have a clue as to what that means by Objectivist standards: If they were truly following Objectivist standards, they wouldn't be dwelling on, let alone proclaiming, their moral perfection. They wouldn't be thinking about morality in that way. Those who would make such claims could do so for many reasons -- misunderstanding Objectivism would be one; it wouldn't have to be "rationalizing."

You ask...
Do you really mean, as you seem to be saying at the end of post #20, that one can pursue one’s productive purposes without the moral compass of a rational contact with reality?  Or that if one pursues one’s productive purposes rational contact with reality will take care of itself?
Answer: no. I'm talking about a fixation on the moral compass, rather than the destination. A traveler consults a compass; he doesn't obsess about it.

Elsewhere I used the metaphor of a road map to describe the proper use of ethics. The subjectivist driver tosses the map out the window, thinking he needs no guidance to reach a goal, that he can do so by picking any arbitrary direction. The intrinsicist tapes the map across his windshield, stares at it, wonders if he can live up to its requirements...and forgets his purpose, which is to put the car in gear and get moving toward some goal. The Objectivist realizes that his purpose is to drive somewhere; he picks a destination and then, in motion, consults the map when he needs guidance. He neither dispenses with the map, nor sits still, passively contemplating the map. The Objectivist knows what a map is for...and doesn't substitute the map for the journey.

Does that make sense to you?

In your example of the smoking friend, who is fully aware of the destructive consequences, you say:
By your account, I believe you would conclude that your friend was evading and therefore irrational and therefore immoral, but that’s OK because one must be tolerant because we mustn’t “saddle anyone with moral perfectionism.” 
Wrong. I would conclude that my friend was evading reality. I would conclude that in this respect -- and perhaps in only this respect in his life -- he is acting irrationally, and immorally. I would not declare his whole person, his whole character (i.e., what he does characteristically) to be "immoral"; I would not call him "an irrationalist." And I completely disagree that "one must be tolerant because we mustn't 'saddle anyone with moral perfectionism.'" If the context presented itself, I would make it clear that I regard his smoking as foolish and self-destructive and (for an Objectivist) therefore hypocritical. In that regard, I would be less tolerant than you apparently would be, in that I would regard it as a moral flaw. I would not dismiss his ongoing self-destructive behavior with the lame excuse that "he's not ready" to quit being a fool. As to what I would do about that negative judgment, well, that's a matter of context. If the friend were simply his own victim, I'd probably let him continue to be his own victim. If he tried to rationalize his smoking to me, I'd tell him what I thought. If he were to publicly advocate smoking, I'd probably publicly challenge him.

If that's "toleration," make the most of it.

Finally, that reference to being "tolerant" leads me to something you mentioned in passing at the opening of your remarks. Nothing in my essay or in this discussion has a thing to do with "the fundamental difference between ARI and TOC." Once again, for the record, I am no longer on the TOC staff, I'm not a spokesman for TOC and I haven't a clue as to whether anyone there would agree with a single word I've said. (In some cases, probably not.) They can speak for themselves on these issues, if they choose. My own view about the essential ARI-TOC differences pertains to other issues, well beyond the scope of this discussion.

Tom, I hope this message explains why I can't provide you with all the "evidence" you and others would like, but also provides a clearer statement of my aims in writing the essay. I appreciate your tone of civility throughout. I apologize to you and others if my occasional impatience and exasperation may have given some of my comments an edge I should have kept sheathed.


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Post 7

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 10:19amSanction this postReply
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I am enjoying this thread very much. Tom, your article is very well stated, and I hope it evokes lots of responses. I also enjoy the communication between you and Luther, as this is the kind of discussion and intelligent clarification of statements from which I derive pleasure and learn a great deal.
AR was the first thinker I encountered who stated clearly to me the principle of objective analysis by which I had always tried to live; namely, that truth is independendent of opinion and should be pursued without any emotional involvement in its discovery. I think your distinction between errors of knowledge and errors of judgment is too "neat". You seem to be saying that if one doesn't recognize at the time that his judgment was incorrect, he is always being moral. You (and Rand) make the act of turning on your rational focus "uncomplicated". What I have trouble with, Tom, is that it is always easy to "rationalize" later something which had a different focus at the time. I agree totally that one's goal should always be to look at things objectively; I also believe that NOBODY does that, not Rand - not ANYBODY! Now, you may say I believe that because I am a very flawed moral thinker who is trying to justify his own weaknesses by saying EVERYBODY has them so that I can excuse my own weaknesses and forgive myself for mental laziness. If you say this, you may be right. But I do think that is true.
In fact, it seems to me that if you think about it, there are circumstances where one can look back at any person and see that it is more likely that they were ":cooking the books" on some occasions to explain a past statement or behavior.
To me, this is where a person who truly understands human nature says, "James, you are right, " and where an ARI person starts to circle the wagons. It is why I believe that my statement near the beginning of my comment above, that I " had always tried" to live using objective analysis is true, where if I had said "I always lived" by objective analysis that would be false. In fact I think the second statement is SO FALSE to me that someone who makes it is living on a different planet.

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Post 8

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 10:19amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

Here is a short question. Why do I get the feeling that you and Robert are basically on the same side?

Another. Wouldn't it be interesting to define what is meant by "moral perfection" before disagreeing about it?

I get the impression that you disagree with him on points that he doesn't really hold in essence and try to trounce him with arguments that he has actually stated in different words...

Your own concept of moral perfection, as stated in your article (I can cull quotes, but I don't think I need them here), allows for lapses that one can correct.

You call these lapses the classical Objectivist "error of knowledge" thing, and you make it clear that morally perfect Objectivism-wise to you is being committed to rationality.

Sooooooooooooo...

I guess we are all morally perfect when we are being morally perfect. All the other times don't count.

LOL.

I'm starting to like this hair-splitting thing.

Michael


Post 9

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 10:24amSanction this postReply
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Robert,

There is much to talk about here, and I know that this requires volumes to discuss. I'm looking at your reply over lunch and it will probably be a day or two before I sort out what needs clarification and further discussion.

Best,

Tom


Post 10

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 10:27amSanction this postReply
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Luther,

Thanks for the clarification. I will do as you suggest.

Tom


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Post 11

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 10:36amSanction this postReply
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Tom, let me say one more thing. I believe that you accurately state AR's thoughts on morality, but I believe that both you and AR are wrong. Consequently, I can make the following statement as a summation that many people might share with me; I think AR was a greater philosopher than Shakespeare, and I certainly share her sense-of-life more than his; but Shakespeare had a greater understanding of human nature.

Post 12

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 11:01amSanction this postReply
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Michael,

Hair-splitting aside (nothing off the top, please), I think that Robert and I are on the same page on a lot of this. My discussion of tacking was meant to say that I agreed with him that that is the way one should live one's life. Our disagreement seems to center around whether tacking consistently is enough for a stamp of  "moral perfection" or whether some other criteria needs to be added. Maybe I need to say that "obsession with tacking" is the proper "obsession."  I think Robert is rightfully concerned with what he perceives as the effort to maintain the appearance of moral perfection in the face of what he believes are clear examples of  immoral behaviour.  In one respect, I'm trying to knock a few holes in what he believes in that regard, because some of what he says remains inadequately demonstrated or not clearly connected to anything I think Objectivism means by acting morally.

And, of course, we ARE all morally perfect when we are morally perfect. The problem is; what is your definition of moral perfection. That's what I'm trying to clarify.

The lapses I allow are not, in my view, lapses in morality.  See my reply to Robert D

Tom 


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Post 13

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 11:33amSanction this postReply
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James,

Thanks for both your posts and as I wrote to Robert B. I will be reading them over lunch and will get back.

One point to make off the top of my head. I didn't mean to make morality appear effortless (which in my book is different from "easy.").  It's kind of like any skill -- including the one I teach (Piano).  I can describe the process of learning a piece in three steps which are easy to recall and put into practice one step at a time. In fact the first step is a big DAH: look at the music (iff one is learning to play from the score, of course).  But you would be amazed at how many students take their eyes off the music in order to figure out what to do (which is the second step: figure out what the music tells you to do)

But... and this is the hard part. You gotta work on actually doing it every day (step three).

Isn't it the same with morality?  If morality consists turning on the brain, moral perfection comes from doing that every day.

It's three steps: Look at the moral code; figure out what it tells you to do; do it everyday.

I contend that the first two are relatively easy (I say relatively easy because AR did a bang-up job in my view of defining the Objectivist moral code; the day-to-day details may be challenging, but not morally, if one has turned on one's brain)  The hard part is "daily". Not because of all the decisions one has to make, but because laziness is so easy and remembering that your everyday goals are at stake is difficult -- particularly at first.

Note; a story I just read (a not very good one in my view) is relevant here. It's called Impulse by Conrad Aiken. Within the space of the first two pages we see the protagonist rationalize his position over and over again.  The temptation to do this can be very strong.

Well, that became a rather long point, but I will get back if I see anything else I need to clarify.

Tom


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Post 14

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 11:44amSanction this postReply
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Tom,

That 3 step thing is neat.

So if you do it, you can become morally perfect?

Like what you do to become a perfect piano player?

//;-)

(Sorry, I couldn't resist - now back to Hannon and Czerny...)

Michael


Post 15

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 1:01pmSanction this postReply
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I define moral perfection and explain it in Post 48 of Robert's "Nobody's Perfect" article, in case anyone is interested. Thanks.

David


Post 16

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 2:06pmSanction this postReply
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Tom,

Thank you for saying what needed to be said: that the Objectivist first-person, contextually individual conception of morality is radically different from the third-person universalist notion of morality in the dominant culture. And for remembering that "common sense" is merely a more polite way of saying "social metaphysics."

Robert,

Your main point - that character is, and should be, a tool, a means and not an end - is one that I agreed with from my very first comment on your article. But one's ability to achieve one's ultimate goals depends on keeping that tool in good working order, and this requires ongoing attention to its maintenance. Just as a skilled craftsman is justifiably proud of the excellence of his skill in the present - even if he botched some work in the past, but used that fact as a mere stepping-stone to greater perfection - so the consistent Randian will be proud of maintaining his character, the tool of living, in the most perfect order he can. Of course, some idiots get so fixated on the tool that they lose sight of what the tool is for. Thank you for pointing this out. But if one does strive for the goal of an excellent life, then it is also idiocy to claim that it is NOT important to maintain one's tools, in so far as one can, in perfect working order.

Post 17

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 2:21pmSanction this postReply
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Adam:

Your "character as tool" idea runs very close to a "mind as microscope" metaphor I was thinking about writing an article on, where there are 3 types of scientists: one who is fixated on his microscope, ignoring the world; one who cares little for it and therefore can't clearly see the world even though he spends every minute gathering "facts"; and the one who puts the right priority on both and achieves an actual comprehension of reality.


Shayne


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Post 18

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 2:52pmSanction this postReply
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Hey Dave!

I took you up on that and went over and got it. Your Post 48 of Robert's "Nobody's Perfect" article:
Let me define what I think "moral perfection" is. It is always being virtuous. ;-) Seriously, it is "acting virtuously all the time in regard to well-defined and hierarchical values, with the understanding that new experiences may alter values momentarily or permanently."
I don't want to get into a fistfight (because I really like Kelly from her posts and articles, and I think I am going to really like you too from what little I've seen), but we have a big disagreement here.

I know of not one single person I have ever met who is 100% consistent in being virtuous all of the time. Especially as your definition points at moral consistency without hiccups. Since it does not deal at all with the issue of virtue as a means to happiness versus virtue as an end in itself, I don't know where to place it perfection-wise. This vagueness leaves it open to all sorts of possibilities for disagreement.

And...

Our prime mover herself, Ayn Rand, as quoted above by Robert Davison above, stated:
It is clear from this, that errors of both knowledge and morality are possible, perhaps even inevitable...
(Where the hell is that quote from anyway, Robert D? All my Objectivism books are still in Brazil... btw, Dave - there is more to the quote above...)

Rand also extolled her own moral perfection as a human being to a fault, with the disastrous personal results that are now part of history.

If you can and inevitably must commit "errors of morality," as Rand stated, then what the hell is moral perfection anyway?

Can a moral code be perfect? I believe so.

Can man adopt and use a perfect moral code? I also believe so.

Can he be 100% consistent to it all the time (i.e. morally perfect), without ever making a moral error? I never met anyone like that on earth. And I've never been anywhere else...

Are there rational reasons for this? Oodles of them, which I intend to write about over time.

I don't know, I get the feeling that many consider the adoption of a perfect moral code to mean being morally perfect. If that is the case, we are all discussing semantics and wasting a lot of time. I know some people get downright pissed at you when you talk about this, though.

So please don't you get upset because we aren't seeing eye-to-eye right now. I want to get to know you better. Anyway, you know the maddening thing about SOLO is that very intelligent people disagree with you around here all the time...

Michael


Post 19

Wednesday, April 20, 2005 - 3:12pmSanction this postReply
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Tom, as evidence I cite Rand's behavior in regard to the stage production of the Night of January 16th.  She, by her own admission, made changes that were asked for knowing they were immoral/weakened her message.  She consciously choose this action in exchange for getting the show produced. 

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