Fact and Value
Posted by random 9 years, 2 months ago to Philosophy
I agree completely with “On Sanctioning the Sanctioners,” Peter Schwartz’s article in the last issue of TIA. That article has, however, raised questions in the mind of some readers. In particular, David Kelley, one of the persons whom the article implicitly criticizes, has written an articulate paper in reply, identifying his own philosophy on the relevant topics. He has sent a copy of this paper to me and to many other individuals.
In my judgment, Kelley’s paper is a repudiation of the fundamental principles of Objectivism. His statements make clear to me, in purely philosophic terms and for the first time, the root cause of the many schisms that have plagued the Objectivist movement since 1968. The cause goes to the essentials of what Objectivism is. I have, therefore, decided to interrupt my book on Objectivism in order to name this cause once and for all.
In the following, I am presupposing a basic knowledge of Ayn Rand’s ideas. I am writing to and for Objectivists, whether or not they have seen Kelley’s paper.
Read Fact and Value: http://www.peikoff.com/essays_and_art...
In my judgment, Kelley’s paper is a repudiation of the fundamental principles of Objectivism. His statements make clear to me, in purely philosophic terms and for the first time, the root cause of the many schisms that have plagued the Objectivist movement since 1968. The cause goes to the essentials of what Objectivism is. I have, therefore, decided to interrupt my book on Objectivism in order to name this cause once and for all.
In the following, I am presupposing a basic knowledge of Ayn Rand’s ideas. I am writing to and for Objectivists, whether or not they have seen Kelley’s paper.
Read Fact and Value: http://www.peikoff.com/essays_and_art...
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All this has caused to remind me of questions that I've had. I'll put them forth in the future as "Ask The Gulch" format. Meanwhile, the Gulch is serving up some heady brew in its posts.
If Objectivism hopes to be widespread, I think it needs to be brought down to the level where people live. AS, except for Galts speech, was pretty much that way. Galts speech was WAY too high and mighty to be waded through by most people (at least that was my thought on it). AS1 movie was pretty good, but it got less intelligible in AS2 and finally quite boring in AS3.
Dyed in the wool Objectivists would be good at writing a new consititution and things like that. But whats needed is to show people on the street HOW statism isnt good for them in practical terms; how it results in Venezuelan disasters; and specifically how we can change our existing culture away from it and improve things.
Unlike Christianity and particularly the Catholic Church, Objectivism encourages an individual to develop his/her philosophy from first principles based on objective (intentionally lower case) reality. Given that, there will undoubtedly be some, hopefully small, variance in what one has experienced as reality. This is precisely one of the points that I expected would come up in my post from last week. I think only one person (jlc?) had brought it up.
Peikoff is too arrogant for me and his fights to 'close' Objectivism were wrong headed and I think had more to do with his presumed 'position' within the intellectual side of Objectivism. Kelly, on the other hand may have been too willing to modify or soften the language and egoism of Objectivism in his outreach to Libertarians. But I do agree with Kelly to the 'openness' of Objectivity and it's applications to fields not addressed or fully explored by AR.
I will argue Objectivism here at GCO for the purpose of communication to the new, but in person arguments to most, IMHO, run up against 'closed' minds (believers), muddled thinkers, or the bad/evil thinkers--though I do still run onto an occasional honest error. But nearly always that idea from 'honest error' is presented from a questioning or not certain attitude.
Off the top of my head, that's the best I can do right now. I honestly hadn't thought that much about it before. Maybe it has more to do with personality that with the right/wrong position.
If you discover and prove a truth...and remain alone it would make you a dead tree as someone else is sure to stumble into the same answer. Edison tested how many thousand filaments found one that worked by changing the requirements and discovering a new branch of electricity came up with a generator and transmission system... and yet that firs step discovery had been changed how many times since? What did the others miss? Not being Edison. I got that from a book.
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I disagree with his premise that a philosophy is created whole and entire by its writer, in this case Ayn Rand. Prior philosophy underpinned and influenced her before, during, and after the creation of Objectivism. Some positively, some negatively. Your knowledge and judgment changes with time and use.
Do you think She could have created Objectivism without these influences and examples? I do not.
The tone of this article toward the end is reminiscent of either "because I say so" from a frustrated parent, or "because I say so" from some other authority figure uninterested in debate or discussion. I never bought that argument since it has a dearth of fact or evidence supporting it. That has not changed.
If you are endeavoring to teach, being unwilling to deal with questions is a handicap.
Basically, since I want debate and discussion I am excluded. How do you check premises without those tools?
While I agree with you that environmentalism is the source of much evil, there is still some objective validity to the idea that it is not life promoting to pee in the place you get your drinking water. Perhaps the biggest risk is simplistic thinking about complex issues.
I am concerned about the implied logic that follows the train: he is wrong, I can see that, he should be able to see it too, therefore he is deliberately being dishonest. It happens, but it's best not to attribute villainy when simple error suffices.
Evil idea are Evil, for example environmentalism. The people who push these ideas are evil if they have been given the information showing that they are evil and still push these ideas.
The open vs. closed Objectivism argument is important and there I whole heartedly agree with Kelley. The closed objectivism is (has been) a disaster. It turns Objectivism into a history project. All important areas of study (Geometry, Newtonian mechanics) are open to advances by other people.
Kelley is definitely an Objectivist and Peikoff's response to Kelley is out of proportion to any supposed offense.
The essential argument seems to be whether incorrect ideas are 'evil' in and of themselves. While the analysis that an incorrect idea is 'evil', even if actions are not taken based on it seems convincing, there is an association of the idea with the thinker of the idea that has unfortunate connotations. While we can argue with evil ideas, evil people are beyond the pale. With the death of Antonin Scalia recently, a quote has been circulating: “I attack ideas. I don’t attack people. And some very good people have some very bad ideas. And if you can’t separate the two, you gotta get another day job.”
So, is the creator of an incorrect idea actually an evil person unworthy of civilized discourse? For by common usage of the word evil we imply intent as well as correctness. We are all capable of error. The existence of a perceivable objective world with objective truths does not automatically give us possession of those truths. We may incorrectly perceive information, fail to perceive all relevant information or make errors in our evaluation of the data. Any subject sufficiently complex to be worth discussing is also sufficiently complex that many opportunities for disagreement occur. To some, the knowledge that there IS an objective truth implies that they are in possession of it and leads to intolerance of those who disagree since they MUST be incorrect -- for there is only one truth. In many complex arguments the reality may well be the reverse of the Rabbi's statement "You're both right" -- they are probably both wrong in some aspect.
In this political year, I’ve often quoted Tolkien, and will do so once again. Treebeard, when asked who’s side he was on responds: “Side? I am on nobody's side, because nobody is on my side, little orc.” We are all in Treebeard’s position for no other human being agrees with us in absolutely all matters – and if they did what would we find to say to them? We share a common reality with everyone in the world, although we do not share a similar understanding of it. The question is whether it is better to remain alone in the forest with your truth or join the battle for middle earth.