hypnagogue
Member
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2007
- Messages
- 1,074
A lot of points brought up, corydoras. Let's see if I can address them all.
Your interpretation of my use of the phrase, "great burdens of the past," as an allusion to post-colonial hardships is very understandable, but it is not however what I intended. Indeed, if colonial guilt had even occurred to me I would have chosen my words more carefully. That phrase, though poorly worded, was meant to address the situations which people are born into which they could not possibly have avoided, ie troubles that were brewing before they were even born. Although, colonialism could perhaps rightly be filed under that category in some circumstances. I personally am not one to feel guilty for the fact that someone from my race alive at the time of some of my ancestors did something nasty. My motivation to aid suffering parts of the world is honestly more pragmatic. Every properly cultivated human being increases the progress of our species as a whole. To be somewhat more personal, I don't believe in a liberty agenda for any overtly moral reasons, but rather that I believe it is such conditions which produce the most potent human beings.
My distinction between morality and civil liberties perhaps owes much to that sentiment. I'm well aware that christian moralists have many factoids and angles to justify their various assertions regarding the practices of consenting adults, but I do not ascribe to any of them. For me they are purely moral preferences without any material affect on the development of human beings. If you wish to hold those moral preferences, I can not deny that they are moral, because I can not define morality. That is the basis of my distinction. One can be debated on it's merits and the other can not.
The overall theme, as I understood it, of your position is that all aid has moral ramifications, why not actively address it? I would agree with that statement without reservation were it not for the genesis of this discussion. My understanding is that you support actively trying to influence the morals of other cultures for their betterment. Keyword here is actively. I do not support active influence because, as I said, I do not believe that being in the position of aiding someone in need is an appropriate position to be trying to judge morality from. It is an uneven playing field for ideas. I say I would endorse such a statement normally for the same reasons as you've brought up regarding television and the Bhutanese. These things should be considered beforehand.
Let me explain why I believe an even playing field matters. Most simply, I believe that the responsibility of choosing for oneself what you believe and having the freedom to act on it, is absolutely vital for the development of character. If you are being influenced when you are at your lowest your own ideas have not been given a full chance. In a greater sense, or in the bigger picture, though, my greatest concern is that of cultural or moral monopolies. I oppose them for the same reason that I oppose economic monopolies. That being that competition yields superior competitors. If we set out to homogenize morality we have only dogma and stagnation to look forward to. I believe it is vital that other people's be allowed and encouraged to follow different paths to their full conclusions.
Liberty is the path I've chosen and I am more than willing to face any competitor, be they socialist, imperial, theological, or even dangerously aggressive.
Your interpretation of my use of the phrase, "great burdens of the past," as an allusion to post-colonial hardships is very understandable, but it is not however what I intended. Indeed, if colonial guilt had even occurred to me I would have chosen my words more carefully. That phrase, though poorly worded, was meant to address the situations which people are born into which they could not possibly have avoided, ie troubles that were brewing before they were even born. Although, colonialism could perhaps rightly be filed under that category in some circumstances. I personally am not one to feel guilty for the fact that someone from my race alive at the time of some of my ancestors did something nasty. My motivation to aid suffering parts of the world is honestly more pragmatic. Every properly cultivated human being increases the progress of our species as a whole. To be somewhat more personal, I don't believe in a liberty agenda for any overtly moral reasons, but rather that I believe it is such conditions which produce the most potent human beings.
My distinction between morality and civil liberties perhaps owes much to that sentiment. I'm well aware that christian moralists have many factoids and angles to justify their various assertions regarding the practices of consenting adults, but I do not ascribe to any of them. For me they are purely moral preferences without any material affect on the development of human beings. If you wish to hold those moral preferences, I can not deny that they are moral, because I can not define morality. That is the basis of my distinction. One can be debated on it's merits and the other can not.
The overall theme, as I understood it, of your position is that all aid has moral ramifications, why not actively address it? I would agree with that statement without reservation were it not for the genesis of this discussion. My understanding is that you support actively trying to influence the morals of other cultures for their betterment. Keyword here is actively. I do not support active influence because, as I said, I do not believe that being in the position of aiding someone in need is an appropriate position to be trying to judge morality from. It is an uneven playing field for ideas. I say I would endorse such a statement normally for the same reasons as you've brought up regarding television and the Bhutanese. These things should be considered beforehand.
Let me explain why I believe an even playing field matters. Most simply, I believe that the responsibility of choosing for oneself what you believe and having the freedom to act on it, is absolutely vital for the development of character. If you are being influenced when you are at your lowest your own ideas have not been given a full chance. In a greater sense, or in the bigger picture, though, my greatest concern is that of cultural or moral monopolies. I oppose them for the same reason that I oppose economic monopolies. That being that competition yields superior competitors. If we set out to homogenize morality we have only dogma and stagnation to look forward to. I believe it is vital that other people's be allowed and encouraged to follow different paths to their full conclusions.
Liberty is the path I've chosen and I am more than willing to face any competitor, be they socialist, imperial, theological, or even dangerously aggressive.
