Re: virus: bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do?

Robin Faichney (robin@faichney.demon.co.uk)
Sun, 2 Aug 1998 13:09:55 +0100


In message <35C39128.19D76CFA@worldnet.att.net>, Nathaniel Hall
<natehall@WORLDNET.ATT.NET> writes
>Moral
>judgments are a necessary condition of our existence

I don't agree.

>( we have to choose
>values in order to live )

But our moral judgements are supposed to be based on our
values, in which case to suggest that choosing a value is
a moral judgement, creates a circularity. How to get out
of it? Admit that your *most* basic values are not
chosen, but inherited (whether genetically or memetically
or both).

>Cry in vain as you might that you are not
>making any such judgments you can't get around it. To say something is
>"cool" for example is a moral judgment.

(a) I agree with Bob that it's at least as accurate to
portray this as an aesthetic judgement, as a moral one.

(b) I didn't mean it in that sense anyway, or I'd have
left out the quote marks. What I meant was, maybe this
view is too detached, disinterested, apparently
passionless, for some people. Of course, that wouldn't
prevent it being cool in the other sense, too. :-)

>As long as you remain a mortal creature you cannot
>pretend to detach yourself from the necessities of life, and morality
is
>one of them.

That's yet to be established, around here.

>I call em as I see em and if that means "projecting" , so
>be it.

If you're projecting, what you're seeing and calling is part
of *you*!

>( Asking me not "to project" is another moral judgment, by the
>way)

No, it's a request motivated by practicality.

-- 
Robin