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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 1:52amSanction this postReply
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May I be the first to congratulate you on another fine unfalse dichotomy: virtue as a means to happiness versus virtue as an end in itself.

I have already commented further in the other thread.

Michael


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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 2:06amSanction this postReply
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I say again, Robert, I can't imagine why you would have thought you'd get the kind of reaction you anticipate, here on SOLO. I don't know how many articles have already been written here about the folly of living in order to be moral, rather than being moral in order to live. Not to take anything away from an excellent post/article, but this is no breakthrough & no particularly startling heresy. Joe Rowlands & I have been saying the same thing from Day One of SOLO & before.

You know the worst thing about OPAR? The endless, tortuous chapters on all the virtues. On & on & on they go. By the time I was done with that I was ready to call them the Seven Deadly Virtues. I think David Kelley first used the word "unappetising" to describe those chapters; in any event, it's the perfect word for them. There's no doubt that many Objectivists come to the philosophy with a religious mindset, like your hovering nun waiting to wield her ruler at the first sign of a transgression. And I'm afraid Ayn herself didn't help. Watch her face as she tells James Day that one little fall from grace means you're rotten through & through, that the rest is only a matter of time.

That tightrope-over-a-precipice view of morality should stay where it belongs—the church. Human beings err & falter. No biggie. Let's learn from our mistakes ... & never do or sanction evil consciously. More important, let's focus on the good & uplifting, not as a series of Peikovian abstractions but flesh-&-blood attainable realities, & let the evil fail for want of sustenance.

Linz



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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 2:09amSanction this postReply
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I have never been involved for any length of time with any Objectivist organization for the very reasons superbly outlined above. Solo is the exception, because any organization that is so strongly based on one's sense of life has to understand that philosophy is a way to lead a good life, it is not the final goal. The good life is the final goal. I have lost that focus on occasion myself, but less often every year. It's a constant battle here at Solo, but so far the sensible people outnumber the puritans.
I am always amazed to watch people twist Rand's ideas into pretzels to show how Ayn Rand really would have come to the same conclusion as the one that they are selling at the moment. I am always grateful when the facts as I see them allow me to give my favorite answer to this, which is, "You're right. I can see now that you and Rand are both wrong about that. You know, she was wrong about some things."
I carry smelling salts at all times to help the blasphemed.

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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 2:13amSanction this postReply
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Good article, Robert. You've touched on the main points of the error of Randroidism. Though the opposite error: eclectic cherry-picking of objectivist principles--seems to have escaped your focus. You said:
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"But for those obsessed with Virtue as an end in itself ... "
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Great statement, Robert. Virtue is never an end in itself. Ends are that which are important to the happiness of existent beings. It is easy to slip into the pseudo-morality of "floating" ends--and to prematurely judge yourself and others by your interpreted, extrapolated application of these ends. You give great guidance against this error of application--of otherwise true and good principles.

Unfortunately, you seem to have not yet met another who has an overriding passion for truth, understanding, and progress--or else, I suspect, you would be singing a different tune.

The noble ideal of moral perfectionism can be viewed in one of two ways: 1) showing how we aren't "there" yet (the pessimistic way) AND 2) showing how we've advanced from earlier times (the realistic way). You seem to take the pessimistic view here--which disturbs me, somewhat.

Ed





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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 2:56amSanction this postReply
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James:

"I carry smelling salts at all times to help the blasphemed."

Thanks for the best belly-laugh this weekend, which has been somewhat short of them!

Linz

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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 3:48amSanction this postReply
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Thanks for this article/ post Robert.

I love this line:
It is all so perfectly...Catholic.
Yes it is. I suspect there are many objectivists with a religious background that took their religion very seriously. So seriously that they felt compelled to reject their religion's inherent contradictions in favour of objectivism. However, old habits can die hard and some of these objectivist types have not yet given up on preaching to the converted, hunting for witches and denouncing the heathens at the gates.

You could say that they are the "missionaries" or the "evangelists", whose mission it is to "spread the word of Rand", non-believers beware the wraith of dissent!

(Edited by Marcus Bachler on 4/17, 3:50am)


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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 5:30amSanction this postReply
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It’s true: any system of ideas can be turned into dogma – even those that explicitly reject duty and dogma. This is a perennial issue among critics of Objectivists and rightfully so. Part of the problem is the baggage left over from our previous influences. But part is a failure in Rand’s rhetorical style (particularly in the non-fiction), in my opinion. 

 

I’ve found a few things helpful in combating the problem. This first is to remember that Objectivism holds that ethical knowledge is first and foremost a factual statement about what’s conducive to furthering life - period. Bad ethical habits hamper living well. There’s no need to add a moralistic kick in the pants to compound the problem. I’m weary of spurious moral condemnations of a manipulative nature (as opposed to an expressive nature).

 

The second point is give people some slack. Believe it or not, I find reading Aristotle helpful here. He points out that an ethical practice (like learning any skill) takes years of practice and it is best to start the learning process young. It’s not a simple process of assenting to a valid statement and living happily every after. Aristotle is so un-Christian-like (un-deontological) in his presentation. Rand recognizes the issue when she talks about automatizing knowledge but she doesn’t do the topic justice.

 

Finally, ethics, like all healthy things (life supporting activities), is an aspiration. Any improvement gives one increased power to handle the challenges of life. So my rule of thumb is if you don’t sense a nurturing atmosphere that cheers each new achievement but instead decries how far you still are from perfection … run! Life always involves growing and growth needs the right atmosphere with ample room to exercise, fail, cry, laugh, etc.


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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 6:31amSanction this postReply
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Ethics is a code of values to GUIDE you thru your life - NOT A  COMMANDMENT....... "[it] is the chosen, not the forced; the understood, not the obeyed." [from Galt's speech, AS]

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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 8:26amSanction this postReply
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Robert B.,
You show once again what a delightfully fine mind and character you possess.

It's always a pleasure to read your writing; so reality focused, so healthy, so well written, such excellent distinctions and so right!

Thank you again.


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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 9:26amSanction this postReply
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As I wrote here, I agree with Ed: although Robert's identified one sort of error, he's ignored another.

I disagree with Ed about the article being good. This theme comes up over and over again at Solo, and it never seems to get old. It is a religious battle cry unto itself: "Down with Randroids!" "Virtue is not an end in itself!" "Intrinsicist!" Etc. Etc.

All this fervor, over one side of a false coin, and silence about the other. Well I know of one organization that's made itself intolerable by rational men from fixation on the evils of the subjectivist side. And it is no less intolerable to mindlessly take the opposite approach. In fact it's worse, because it's merely a reaction to the other organization's error. It's not only wrong, it's unoriginal too! How boring.

It's not entirely unexpected. If the first Objectivist organization expunges all of its subjectivists, but tolerates the intrinsicists, then what remains is going to be a mixture of rational people and intrinsicisists. Likewise, where do you think all those expunged subjectivists are going to gravitate too?

Post 10

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 10:22amSanction this postReply
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The second point is give people some slack. Believe it or not, I find reading Aristotle helpful here. He points out that an ethical practice (like learning any skill) takes years of practice and it is best to start the learning process young. It’s not a simple process of assenting to a valid statement and living happily every after. Aristotle is so un-Christian-like (un-deontological) in his presentation.

 

 

Well said, Jason.


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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 10:57amSanction this postReply
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For those who did not see this note on the previous thread:

Shayne,

Thank you again for an excellent clarification, in this case of the "moral perfection" issue. I was trying to understand exactly what I found so wrong in Robert's characterization of one's own error as "inexcusable," as though one's virtue, pride and moral perfection were irretrievably lost as a result of an occasional (and not avoidable without prior moral omniscience) moral error. You provide an indispensable insight into what is wrong, in context, with the idea of "inexcusability."

I find a parallel here with knowledge, omniscience, and the experimental process in science. Neither knowledge nor contextual certainty require prior infallibility. All knowledge starts with induction, which is fallible, and the achievement of contextual certainty requires an ongoing effort to test one's suppositions against existential reality. It is only by being tested against observation that suppositions are transformed into knowledge. It is not by omniscience or by aprioristic deduction, but only by making certain that every step in one's logical chain is either inevitable or objectively tested by experiment or by unbiased observation, that one attains certainty.

Just as knowledge and contextual certainty do not require prior infallibility or omniscience, virtue and moral perfection do not require a history of infallibly perfect conduct. They do, however, require an ongoing moral process analogous to the experimental process of science. Just as the scientist deliberately and continuously tests his suppositions against reality, the man of genuine moral pride practices deliberate, continuous awareness of the existential consequences of his actions. Just as the scientist attains knowledge by identifying the errors that led to every disconfirmed hypothesis, the virtuous man attains moral perfection and pride by (1) fearlessly identifying his own wrongs, (2) doing his utmost to undo their existential consequences, (3) identifying the errors and bad habits that led to the wrong, (4) using this identification to bring his knowledge and habits into correspondence with the facts of reality, and thus (5) incorporate the resulting improvement of his knowledge and habit into his future conduct. The result of this process is virtue, justified pride, and true (that is, contextual) moral perfection.

Robert has made a major contribution by identifying the disastrous results of assuming that one's own "moral intuition," and therefore one's conduct, are perfect a priori, rather than perfectible by experience. The remaining analogies with rationalism and apriorism are left as exercises for the reader.

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Post 12

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 11:55amSanction this postReply
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I agree with Jason's point about giving people some slack. I'd just point out that that holds for both those with subjectivist and intrinsicist tendencies.

In this connection, I'll also disagree with the way I put something in my post #9 (I'm leaving in what I wrote instead of editing it because I think the error I made is worth pointing out). I said that ARI expunged all of the subjectivists, and that they're naturally going to gravitate in other places (including here).

Well that's not quite right. Most people are not "intrinsicists" or "subjectivists", but rather have these characteristics as tendencies, and often, having *both* tendencies at the same time.

I'd say that *all* people have made mistakes of both kinds at some point in their life. We've all made some subjective and some intrinsic errors. I'd call it a "tendency" when there's a preponderance of one sort of error, and I'd reserve calling the person an intrinsicist or subjectivist to when he defends and amplifies the tendency explicitly, when he builds his philosophy of life around it.

Anyway, to correct my mistake: Really what I think happened at ARI was a pathological focus on subjectivist tendencies in people, with a simultaneous tolerance of intrinsicist tendencies. Sometimes this resulted in ejecting those who were thought to exhibit strong subjectivist characteristics, but I think it's even worse that was the imbalanced emphasis, in action if not words, on subjectivism itself. Such an imbalanced emphasis can only result in fostering the opposite tendency, which leads to creating an environment which reasonable people do not want to be a part of.

As Linz identifies in different terms, ARI & TOC have bought into this imbalanced approach, each taking the opposite form of the error. At this point, in spite of Linz's manifesto, I think Solo has already gone the TOC route to a significant degree, and I hope the trend is corrected. What Solo has going for it is the *explicit* denial of the dichotomy. But -- so does ARI and TOC. Merely naming the error does not prevent one from slipping deeply into it.

Post 13

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 1:04pmSanction this postReply
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Very interesting article and thread. Jason, your contribution is superb. Can't think of a word I'd change, except I suspect that there is more than rhetorical style problems at work with Rand, but I am not ready to expand that thought presently ( I may never be).
Adam- I should take paragraph three of your contribution and paste it on the wall next to my bed. If I woke up and went to sleep consciously considering that process, I'd make a lot fewer mistakes during the day.

Post 14

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 2:26pmSanction this postReply
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Shayne:

"As Linz identifies in different terms, ARI & TOC have bought into this imbalanced approach, each taking the opposite form of the error. At this point, in spite of Linz's manifesto, I think Solo has already gone the TOC route to a significant degree, and I hope the trend is corrected. What Solo has going for it is the *explicit* denial of the dichotomy. But -- so does ARI and TOC. Merely naming the error does not prevent one from slipping deeply into it."

SOLO is never going to bludgeon folk who sign up & then display subjectivist or intrinsicist tendencies. These are very widespread pitfalls within Objectivism AND the culture at large. They're not going to go away in a hurry. Acting like Robert's nun-with-the-ruler, ready to pounce at the first sign of either is not the way to go about it. And your last sentence smacks of precisely that tightrope-over-a-precipice approach that has done Objectivism so much harm.

You won't find intrinsicism or subjectivism in the writings of SOLO's leaders (well, *you* might!). That doesn't mean you won't find them here at all. Anyone is free to come on board and say anything they like (virtually). *This* doesn't mean that SOLO per se has slipped into subjectivism. And it won't. Not on my watch. (Some ARI intrinsicists/dogmatists might mistake the fact that there is so much humor & laughter here for "subjectivism," but that's their problem.)

Linz

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Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 3:22pmSanction this postReply
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Linz:

I don't see any "nun-with-the-ruler"-like statements in what I wrote. Even the last sentence. Especially the last sentence. On the contrary, I'd imagine that you'd say the same thing about ARI's admonitions against intrinsicism. And I never said you should bludgeon anyone. On the contrary, what I'd say is that the Solo culture already has a propensity for bludgeoning anyone with perceived intrinsicist tendencies, and I'd call for a stop to it (Robert loves to express his deep contempt "randroid intrinsicists"; I've never seen him breath a word about whim-worshipping subjectivists).

As far as the Solo leadership is concerned, I don't have a firm conclusion about it. It's the culture here I'm mainly talking about. However, if I reviewed Solo articles, and found a propensity of articles that focus on how rotten intrinsicism is, with nearly nothing about how rotten subjectivism is, well then I'd draw the same conclusion about the leadership that I have about the culture here.


Post 16

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 3:35pmSanction this postReply
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Let me answer these sequentially:

Michael Stuart Kelly: thanks again for your enthusiasm for this and other posts.

Linz: We're entirely on the same wavelength here. Excellent comment, and I didn't disagree with a word. I have no idea how fresh my post was in terms of content, but judging from the reactions, it appears to be fresh for at least a number of people. In any case, I haven't seen signs that the Platonic Virtue malady is going away any time soon, so if my essay was only a reminder, perhaps it's a needed one.

James K: Your post #2 was very funny! Thanks.

Ed Thompson: You write, "Unfortunately, you seem to have not yet met another who has an overriding passion for truth, understanding, and progress--or else, I suspect, you would be singing a different tune."

Actually, that's not true, Ed. I've had the pleasure of knowing some exemplary human beings. But even those folks have, at times -- often under some unusual emotional stresses in their lives -- been less than perfectly honest with themselves, or entirely just toward others. Their long-term commitment to truth usually reasserts itself very quickly; they make amends for any harmful consequences, if necessary, and return to reason. But I'd be less than honest myself if I didn't acknowledge their actions as moral failures, and not just "errors of knowledge."

However, there is a huge difference between an aberration and a habit. I believe that it's very important to distinguish between people whose failures, even moral ones, are temporary and rare, and those who are chronically immoral. Blanket condemnations and unqualified praise are rarely examples of "moral judgment." They are almost always examples of failing to put forth the diligent effort and contextual analysis that "moral judgment" requires.

Marcus: I think you're exactly right about the religious basis of a lot of this behavior. None of us sprang fully formed from the head of John Galt. Each of us has a personal non-Objectivist history, and often that history involved some exposure to religion. You said "old habits die hard," and that's all too true -- especially the duty-bound way of thinking about ethics. Again, I urge those who haven't done so to read Rand's "Causality Vs. Duty" essay. Many years ago it was enormously helpful to me in exorcising my own deontological demons.

Jason, you wrote, "any system of ideas can be turned into dogma – even those that explicitly reject duty and dogma." You remind me of a very funny Steve Martin comedy bit, which I've snitched as an intro gag at several public talks. He opens his bit by shouting, "Hi, individualists!" A murmur, then the crowd replies, "Hi, Steve!" He goes on: "Let's all take the Individualist's Oath! Repeat after me: I am an Individualist." The crowd, laughing: I am an Individualist. Steve: "I think for myself." I think for myself. "I speak only for myself." I speak only for myself. "And most of all..." And most of all... "I will never repeat what others tell me to say!" I will never repeat...  and of course the audience breaks up laughing.

I also entirely agree with you, Jason, about cutting people some "slack," as you say, especially on matters that aren't all that big and important. Yes, if relevant, you point the wrongness out to them. But there are degrees of evil (and good) -- something no ethical intrinsicist is willing to acknowledge -- and again, there's a difference between an aberration and a habit. The intrinsicist wishes to automate moral judgment: he wishes to spare himself the burden of making fine discriminations by simply slinging moral labels around, sticking people into prefabricated ethical pigeonholes. But that's not "judgment" at all; it's the attempt to escape the responsibility of judging. In other words, moral intrinsicism itself is often a symptom of evasion.

Robert Malcolm: ethics is a guide vs. a "commandment." Bravo! Dead on, Robert.

In "The Value-Seeking Personality" and other talks, I've likened the Objectivist ethics to a road map. The subjectivist, eager to jump in his car and rush to some destination, is too impatient and lazy to consult the map. He throws the map out the window and just starts moving, turning at whim, cutting corners. And of course he never gets to his destination. The intrinsicist, by contrast, looks at the map as the key to all of reality. He parks the car, opens the map, tapes it across the windshield, and stares at it -- analyzing its grid structure, looking at each squiggly little line and where it goes, trying to memorize the whole thing in order to convince himself that in doing that, he is a competent driver. He worries whether he can "live up to" the demands of all those squiggly lines, fearing that if he doesn't memorize the whole thing, he's lost. But he rarely turns on the ignition and gets moving; and if he does, because he's staring at the map taped across the windshield rather than at the road, he quickly ends up off the road in some wreck.

The subjectivist thinks the map of moral principle is dispensable, that he needs no guide to the world. The intrinsicist thinks the ethical map IS the whole world, and lives within the abstract universe depicted on the map. Neither understands the proper use and purpose of an ethical guide, or roadmap to living on earth.

If you conceive of the Objectivist ethics as a map for your life, rather than either a dispensable distraction, or a platonic yardstick by which to measure the "worthiness" of your Self, you'll grasp what it is really all about.

Jeff: I'm grateful for your very kind comments. Thank you so much.

Shayne: I've been around in this movement quite a while, and alas, I don't think any Objectivist group, past or present, is free of its intrinsicists or its subjectivists. Happily, none of them are devoid of rational people, either. In assessing the competing groups, we can generalize about tendencies and emphases; but no blanket judgment (see my comment above about that) can apply universally to all members or participants. Within the Objectivist subculture, some of the finest people -- and some of the worst -- I have ever encountered are currently associated with ARI, TOC and SOLO; and the same goes for unaffiliated.

You may not know it, but I've been as outspoken about subjectivism as intrinsicism. In fact, I published my own critique of libertarianism, titled "Libertarianism: Fallacies and Follies," the same month that Peter Schwartz's (he was then an associate) first appeared in The Intellectual Activist. While encounters with better libertarians (and there are many of those) caused me to back off and try to influence the movement toward Objectivism for several years, I've now gone full circle and have now written off the libertarian movement as hopelessly mired in subjectivism. Lindsay can attest to this, as he shared with me a panel on libertarianism at the 2004 TOC Summer Seminar, where I took the position that since 9/11, the most prominent libertarian leaders and organs had collapsed completely into subjectivism. In addition, I have for years been the Objectivist who has most thoroughly taken on the anarchists -- in a series of publications that you can find archived here.

So, in short, I don't think I've been at all silent about subjectivism, and only attacking intrinsicism.

Adam: You make way too much of my colloquial use of "inexcusable" -- especially when the entire thrust of my piece was to deny that moral judgments should be made by the standard of platonic perfection. For the record, in context, what I meant in the passage you cite is this: that if I have done something immoral, I can make no excuses for it; I can only try to amend any harm I caused, and return to a course of morality. I don't see a thing controversial about that, and doubt you do, either.

Shayne, I hope you don't need heart medication, because I'm going to say something that will probably utterly shock you:

I don't disagree with a word you said in post #12.
 
Not one word.
 
That being the case, maybe you and I should start anew...perhaps even "cutting each other a little slack"?  :^)

Finally, to the exchange between Linz and Shayne immediately preceding concerning SOLO: folks, I don't have a dog in that race, so I'm completely staying away from the track!
  
Thanks all for very thoughtful and often generous feedback. You make it fun and rewarding to be here.

(Edited by Robert Bidinotto on 4/17, 3:42pm)


Post 17

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 6:24pmSanction this postReply
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Shayne,

Ironically, I have to defend Linz here (while I do share your expressed sentiments, Shayne--logical points must supercede mere sentiments).

Linz and I don't always "get along." Hell, Linz even called me a Saddamite when posting a pro-war quote from George's response to me (I sanctioned that post of his--for reasons that only the insightful will discover and understand).

Despite our sometimes heated differences, I know that I can count on Linz to be straightforward with me (and there is an initially counter-intuitive, but ultimately calming, sense of security in that).

I have been marred as one of the "intrinsicists" (along with Regi and Stolyarov) on this forum--though you might say that I merely have a "tendency" to err on the side of intrinsicism (and I'd fully agree with you there). Yet I am still allowed to post here. Who is responsible for allowing hyper-rational Ed to continue posting? Linz & Co.

Linz & Co. have allowed me to continue to interact on this forum--and I am gracious for that. I won't cite anything directly, but I have, in the past, all but spewed venom at Linz--yet he continually allows for my participation. Now, that is the mark of a principled man (though I still disagree with him on many things).

The best example that supports Linz' committment to rational leadership (despite my mentioned personal disagreements) is that I submitted a potentially "hyper-rational" article on the veridicality of conceptual discernment; though--to my initial dismay--the damn New Zealander just won't publish it.

Now, I'm no professional writer. My only claim to fame is to know a deeper truth than others do--not to be able to express myself better than them. My articles may seem awful "quick & dirty" or perhaps "rough & ready" for ole' Linz--but I don't think that that is why he wouldn't publish my article.

I think that he wouldn't publish it because it sounds too rationalistic for him--is that right Linz?

Said another way, if my understanding is correct, then Linz IS trying to make sure that articles don't support the extremes of intrinsicism or subjectivism--though, I agree with you Shayne; that if Linz does err, then he will most likely err to the side of subjectivism (he will most likely NOT err to the side of intrinsicism).

Ed

Post 18

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 6:36pmSanction this postReply
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Hahaha! Ed, yes, the article *is* as rationalistic as all get-out. But I'm going to publish it, perhaps with an editorial "ahem" in the blurb. :-) I haven't done so yet because I published something else of yours recently & the queue is still very full.

I appreciate your defending me notwithstanding our disagreements.

Linz


Post 19

Sunday, April 17, 2005 - 7:32pmSanction this postReply
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Linz, as I was unaware that my thoughts would be published--I hadn't been worrying about literary excellence. Now that I am aware of the imminence of my work being published, I would like a chance to edit my initial (rough) draft.

I have just submitted a more polished (though still tarnished??) draft of my article--Linz, please use this second draft, if possible.

It's title is: The Veridicality of Conceptual Discernment. And the original submission was entitled: Veridical Conceptual Discernment.

Ed

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