Faith Versus Reason
Many persons who consider themselves to be intellectual conservatives do so from a religious or faith based attitude. They tie capitalism to faith.
Even though they seem to be on the side of reason,they are not. It is an illusion."The faculty that perceives, identifies, and integrates the evidence of reality as provided by man's senses, is reason.To base one's convictions on reason is to base them on the facts of reality.Faith is the acceptance of an idea without evidence or proof, or in spite of evidence to the contrary."
To rest one's advocacy of capitalism on faith , is to concede that reason is on the side of one's enemies, which to an Objectivist would be intolorable.
Nathaniel Branden, Objectivist Newsletter, March 1962
Even though they seem to be on the side of reason,they are not. It is an illusion."The faculty that perceives, identifies, and integrates the evidence of reality as provided by man's senses, is reason.To base one's convictions on reason is to base them on the facts of reality.Faith is the acceptance of an idea without evidence or proof, or in spite of evidence to the contrary."
To rest one's advocacy of capitalism on faith , is to concede that reason is on the side of one's enemies, which to an Objectivist would be intolorable.
Nathaniel Branden, Objectivist Newsletter, March 1962
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To make it simple: one acts on faith UNTIL conclusive evidence is found - one way or the other. I don't disagree that Hank Reardon's understanding of his metal's capabilities made him more confident of success, it does not change the fact that until the train passed over the bridge, he had no proof - only conjecture supported by his calculations.
Now, if one wants to contend that Dagny's plunge through the barrier required significantly more faith than Reardon's bridge, I would completely agree because the degree of uncertainty was higher. It doesn't change the fact that in neither instance was the outcome guaranteed before the test was taken. The proof was obtained in the testing and not a moment before. As logic requires proof or confirmation, one can not logically conclude the bridge would hold or that there was an invisible barrier until after the trial of faith.
Again, you are using "faith" as if it is a competitor to logic - not a motivational force, which is why to you this argument appears absurd. Until you are willing to look at the argument without basing your reasoning on the Branden definition, you are caught in the very logical procession I have already admitted is a completely rational exposition based on that definition. If you look at things from the perspective of a substantially different definition of faith, the entire chain of reasoning changes and so do the rational conclusions. That is the entire crux of my argument.
Put another way:
If I - as a parent - tell my three-year-old not to stick a knife in the power outlet because it will hurt him, does my son have to stick the knife in the power outlet just to find out what I tell him is true? Just because one person has not personally perceived something does not mean that someone else has not. Does that make the principle any less true simply because I have not personally tested it? No.
Did the planets exist before they were observed and identified by astronomers? Yes. But how many people take it for granted that Neptune exists even though they have never personally observed it through a telescope? You can apply that principle ad infinitum. We believe what other people say all the time. Do we take the time to question and confirm every single little thing? No. Does that mean that we are fools for acting on the belief that what others' say or do is not actually fallacy? Surely not.
For example, by using your very same argument, one can absolutely argue for a belief in the giant floating spaghetti monster (an actual religion) because you are not requiring any proof.
Once people gained the ability to have a christian or Jewish bible of their own, reading it actually gave them an education not just in, language, daily behavior but in a host of other subjects.
For many during those times, that's all they needed to be successful.
Foreign languages confound me but I did try to remember a few Swedish words...don't even ask me to spell them...have enough trouble with English...laughing
One night, a group of 3 local bullies approached us and I resolved to duke it out with my buddy by my side. Unfortunately, when I looked behind me, my buddy was high-tailing it, in the opposite direction. I figured 3 against 1 was going to end badly, so I followed suit...
A couple years later, I joined the Marine Corps and haven't had any problems, since.
Good point . I love your moniker!
My dad was always a republican, he got most of his important open minded news from from the Christian Science publishing house inwhich his older sister worked for 50 plus years.
Actually the political articles were quite good and non biased.
When ever my brain slowed down enough and I had a deep question or idea...he would always say: Write it down...He never got to see the day I actually "wrote it down" Nor did he get to see the Red Soxs win the pennant either but I did... in his honor.
The discoveries of what the universe is, is yet to occur. It may come as a cooperative venture or as a flash of insight ala Einsteinian thought experiments.It might require either or both physical and mental abilities that we don't have at present, but may acquire them in an altogether different way than we can imagine today..
"VE shall see" -- Gandpa Sherman..
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