iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Apr 19, 2022 1:51 am
In regard to morality, Henry and I could not possibly be further removed in regard to "owning" our lives.
Walker wrote: ↑Wed Apr 27, 2022 3:26 pm Henry says, and I paraphrase, that every person owns himself, or herself.
To be further removed from that is to say that every person does not own himself, or herself.
Correct?
Let's try to clear this up.
If I understand him correctly Henry seems to convey the belief that in "owning" himself he has come to conclude that it is rational -- natural -- that private citizens can buy and sell bazookas.
But what if another in "owning" him or herself concludes that it is irrational that private citizens can buy or sell bazookas?
Now, from my frame of mind, there are the moral and political objectivists here who insist that "conflicting goods" such as this can be resolved. Why? Because they believe it is possible for them to be in sync with the Real Me and that this Real Me can [philosophically or otherwise] be in sync with The Right Thing To Do.
Thus, it's "resolved" if you agree with them about it.
So, how is this the same or different from Henry's "owning" himself?
Walker wrote: ↑Wed Apr 27, 2022 3:26 pm It could be said that self-ownership is what's getting fragmented, which is where you think you diverge in basic principle, but perhaps do not.
That does seem like a fundamental premise. For example, from what I've heard, J.S. Bach thought differently about self-ownership.
"I", self-ownership and fragmentation in regard to what? What set of circumstances? How did Bach come down on the moral issues of his day? Was he a Christian? Was he an objectivist?
Now, Henry also claims to be a Deist, And Deists "follow the dictates of Reason and Nature".
So, okay, how exactly does he connect the dots between the Deist God, Reason, Nature and buying and selling bazookas?
Is he an advocate of "my way or the highway" here? Or, as with those like me, is he more likely to suggest that "your right from your side, I'm right from mine"? That both sides are able to make reasonable arguments the other side can't just make go away:
https://gun-control.procon.org/
I merely suggest in turn that right and wrong here are derived more from political prejudices rooted existentially and intersubjectively in dasein... rooted in turn in ever evolving and changing historical and cultural and interpersonal contexts.
Rather than from the presumption that in regard to all moral and political conflagrations the world is divided up between "one of us" [the good guys] and "one of them" [the bad guys].
Which, for those like Henry [from my frame of mind], goes something like this:
1] For one reason or another [rooted largely in dasein], Henry is taught or comes into contact with [through his upbringing, a friend, a book, an experience etc.] a worldview, a philosophy of life about
buying and selling bazookas.
2] Over time, he becomes convinced that this perspective on
buying and selling bazookas expresses and encompasses the most rational and objective truth. This truth then becomes increasingly more vital, more essential to him as a foundation, a justification, a celebration of all that is moral as opposed to immoral, rational as opposed to irrational in regard to
buying and selling bazookas
3] Eventually, he bumps into others who feel the same way about
buying and selling bazookas; he might even have begun to actively seek out folks similarly inclined to view the
buying and selling bazookas in the same way
4] He begins to share this belief about
buying and selling bazookas with family, friends, colleagues, associates, internet denizens; increasingly it becomes more and more a part of his life. It becomes, in other words, more intertwined in his personal relationships with others...it begins to bind them emotionally and psychologically.
5] As yet more time passes, he starts to feel increasingly compelled not only to share this truth about
buying and selling bazookas with others but, in turn, to vigorously defend it against any and all detractors as well.
6] It then reaches the point where he is no longer able to realistically construe an argument that disputes his own about
buying and selling bazookas as merely a difference of opinion; he sees it instead as, for all intents and purposes, an attack on his intellectual integrity....on his very Self.
I call this the "psychology of objectivism". And, in my own personal opinion [no less rooted subjectively in the assumptions above] Henry embodies it in spades.