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January 14, 2008

Comments

Laban

Two points

"In fact there seems to be a Law of Conservation of Moralization, so that as old behaviors are taken out of the moralized column, new ones are added to it."

Isn't that just human nature ? We all need something to hate as well as love, and if we can't hate x any more we'll take a shot at y ?

"Give me the woman I can love, the horse I can ride and the enemy I can hate" as Genghis Khan supposedly said ? Think how hatred of the US increased after we couldn't hate South Africa any more, and how hatred of SA increased after educated Brits stopped laughing at Johnny Foreigner ? Seventy years ago white South Africans were "our kith and kin", twenty years ago "I've never met a nice South African".

Mr Singer's Expanding Circles ?

"In many arenas of life, two parties are objectively better off if they both act in a nonselfish way ... You and I are both better off if we share our surpluses, rescue each other’s children in danger and refrain from shooting at each other"

But what happens when there is dearth ? It took an awful lot of slaughter before the solidarity of first kin, then clan, then tribe and nation evolved.

What happens when that evolved solidarity meets another evolved solidarity, which may have evolved quite differently ? It seems extremely optimistic to suggest that "reasoning" will triumph in the short term. How much slaughter has it taken to evolve a peaceful Europe ?

Mick H

Well yes, that slightly tongue-in-cheek Law of Conservation of Moralization is another way of saying what you said: it's "just human nature". I think it's a good way of putting it though.

As for the problem of what happens when, as you nicely put it, one "evolved solidarity meets another evolved solidarity" - yes, I agree, much of this stuff does come across as a tad optimistic.

Recusant

Natural Law anyone?

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