MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘reason’

The Elimination of Reason

Posted by M. C. on April 25, 2023

But why on earth would the controlling elite of any country seek to diminish the power to reason? 

Once we reach this level of thought control, it’s possible to offer utterly unacceptable candidates for public office and still have them gain election. All that’s needed is that they parrot the same rhetoric the people have become dependent on as a replacement for reason.

by Jeff Thomas

Recently, I paid for an item with the exact amount requested, including 89 cents in change. The salesgirl stared at the coins and clearly wasn’t sure what to do. Eventually, she reached for a calculator and began to total them up one at a time: 25 + 25 + 25 + 10 + 4. Having been schooled in the age prior to calculators, I’m accustomed to doing arithmetic in my head, but this particular instance evidenced a level of “dumbing down” over the last fifty years that was beyond what I had realised.

Since the dumbing down has been so consistently prevalent over the decades, it’s clear that this is no accident, nor is it an experiment in “alternative education” that hasn’t worked out as was intended. It’s clearly the result of a conscious effort to diminish the average person’s ability to think. As such, it’s had a long gestation period and was expected to require generations, but was nevertheless a conscious goal.

But why on earth would the controlling elite of any country seek to diminish the power to reason? Surely, reason is the basis of all independent thought – the catalyst for new ideas and improvement on existing goods and systems.

The answer, in a word, is control.

See the rest here

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The Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity : CATO Hires a Neocon Bigot

Posted by M. C. on January 27, 2022

CATO is neither CATO-like, stoic nor Libertarian.

http://ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/neocon-watch/2022/january/14/cato-hires-a-neocon-bigot/

Written by Daniel McAdams

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Neocon stench is not confined to the sweaty flatulence of Bill Kristol’s writing chambers. Yes it’s true that neocons at AEI and Brookings and Heritage and The Free Bacon, etc are all to be expected. It’s like going to the zoo and looking into the chimp enclosure: you expect to see chimps and so you see chimps. But imagine going to the marmoset enclosure and also seeing chimps. Hmmm…what’s going on here? We didn’t expect to see chimps here.

We’ve never had high hopes for the Beltway “libertarian” dogs who dutifully abide the intellectual leashes of their (pay)masters. There are some good pups out there and I’m the last guy to kick someone for trying to earn a buck while retaining as much integrity as possible given the rotten situation.

But come on, man! CATO Institute has hired that wretched neocon freak Cathy Young as a senior fellow?

Cathy Young that “Russiagate” dead-ender (holding on to the lie longer than anyone on earth except for Adam Schiff). Yes, she has a few quibbles with those low-born blue unwashed who viewed the Steele Dossier as a kind of Dead Sea Scroll detailing Trump’s potty-philia, but…but… but…wait! – as she writes herself: don’t get bogged down in the salacious, man, there’s plenty of good evidence that all of it’s true! There’s plenty of evidence that, as disgraced CIA thug Mike Morrell famously lied, Trump is an “agent of the Russian Federation.”

Forget the Steele Dossier, Young wrote, there are…

…plenty of reasons to investigate, from Trump’s just-kidding-or-maybe-not public invitation to Russia to hack into his rival Hillary Clinton’s emails to the fact that his campaign was swarming with people who had ties to Russia or to pro-Russia forces in Ukraine. And let’s not forget that later on, Trump acted in ways that stoked suspicion — such as firing FBI director James Comey, openly admitting that he did it to stop the Russia investigation, and bragging about it in a private meeting with top-level Russians.

Come on, people! Get with the pogrom!

“Libertarian” Cathy Young is no doubt pleased as punch that journalist Julian Assange is rotting away in a British prison for the “crime” of reporting the truth. After all, she still professes the laughable lie that the Russians hacked Hillary Clinton’s computer and publicized her private information via Wikileaks!

She wrote:

…there is little question that the Kremlin meddled in the election with the goal of hurting Hillary Clinton’s chances. Mainly, this was accomplished by stealing Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign emails and releasing them via Wikileaks.

Little question? There is NO EVIDENCE! For normal people that means BIG QUESTION.

But that doesn’t work for Cathy Young. She has an agenda and she’s just sure that Putin is infecting our precious bodily fluids.

Why is the CATO Institute hiring “experts” who espouse the most outlandish conspiracy theories?

Before his untimely death just over two years ago, Antiwar.com founder Justin Raimondo nailed the anti-libertarian, interventionist duplicity of the rotten Cathy Young:

While distancing herself from the ‘more extreme‘ anti-Russian narratives, which she admits are conspiracy theories with little evidence to support them, Young weaves a ‘moderate’ conspiracy theory of her own – with just as little evidence to support it. She claims that the Russians are supporting the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party of Greece, and Hungary’s ‘quasi-fascist’ Jobbik movement, although no evidence of this is presented. She says in several instances that the National Front party of France’s Marine Le Pen is a Russian front: her ‘evidence’ is that a Russian bank with ‘links to the Kremlin’ provided the party with a loan. One wonders if, say, a British bank (with undefined ‘links’ to Westminster) loaned money to an America political party, would that make them a tool of Perfidious Albion

Who needs actual evidence, anyway, when writing about Russia? After all, as computer security expert Jeffrey Carr points out, there is exactly zero public proof that the Russians ‘hacked’ the 2016 elections – and yet the media ‘reports’ this as undisputed fact.

So what really motivates Cathy Young to hate Russia – the land of her birth – so much? It is her own anti-Christian bigotry (hardly a live-and-let-live libertarian attitude). As the cover art for her cover story about Russia betrays, Young and Reason are the antithesis of libertarians in that they despise anyone with values different than their own.

In fact they represent an even more Stalinist intolerance than their caricature of Putin!

They are the Soviets they pretend to despise. 

If Russians who have re-established their freedom of choice (a libertarian concept) after 70 years of communist government-forced atheism decide of their own free will to return to the Christianity established in Kievan Rus by the Apostle Andrew, they must be punished for their choice.

That is the essence of Cathy Young and Reason…and now CATO.

For Cathy Young and the Reason/CATO crowd, libertarianism and liberalism shares a lot in common with Soviet communism: you are free to choose as long as you choose the ideological vanguard which will ultimately rule history for all time.

Cathy Young is a rigid communist and everything she writes should be laughed at. CATO should be forced to eat its own barf.


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bionic mosquito: Aquinas and Human Action

Posted by M. C. on February 25, 2021

Free will is not a power preceding the intellect and will.  It is a capacity proceeding from intellect and will operating together or jointly.  Intellect and will each make their contribution, and from this comes free will.

Of course, free will proceeds from will.  Free will also proceeds from the intellect – the capacity to know the truth.  The will and the intellect must act together.  This isn’t a different truth for each of us.  It is the truth of our objective end as human beings.

http://bionicmosquito.blogspot.com/2021/02/aquinas-and-human-action.html

Aquinas on the Stages of Human Action, Fr. James Brent, O.P. (Part 1; Part 2)

Following are some notes from this two-part talk (all quoted items are paraphrases, hopefully reasonably accurate):

It is taken for granted that human agents have free will or free agency – we have the experience, day to day, of being confronted with options and being able to opt between such options.  This offers a truncated picture, a picture of lower appetites.

This is David Hume’s “reason,” when he wrote: “Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them.”  It is the reason of lower appetites – if one can even call it reason.

Human beings also have higher appetites, to perceive the order of reality: reason.  We have the ability to live according to the reality perceived by reason.  Life goes beyond fulfilling our lower appetites; it is about living in accord with the reality of reason – integrating our passions according to reason.  There is more to being human than merely fulfilling our lower appetites.

Why is this so?

Reality is a world of form and finality: entities – the things of nature – have substantial forms and final ends.  We do not live in a mechanistic universe.  All human action is for the sake of an end – a proximate end, but also an ultimate end.  The ultimate end is happiness. (Fr. Brent will define this later)

There is an objective end for human beings as human beings.  Proper reason aims toward this objective end.  Without an objective end, or purpose…well, this is the world we certainly occupy today, where every behavior – including murder – is justifiable and justified.

No, reason, in any human sense, is not merely a slave to the passions.

Humans, unlike other animals, act based on intellect and will.  To varying degrees, other animals lack these same abilities.  Intellect is the capacity to know the truth, including the truth about the good – and there is a true, objective answer to this question of what is good – what brings us happiness.  We are able to know the truth about the good; Augustine calls this “wisdom.”

It is interesting: those who do not hold that there is objective value and objective truth at the same time have difficulty stating what is good.  The best they can do is to say avoid evil – with evil usually defined as “don’t be Hitler.”  By that standard, we are all pretty much saints.

Free will is not a power preceding the intellect and will.  It is a capacity proceeding from intellect and will operating together or jointly.  Intellect and will each make their contribution, and from this comes free will.

Of course, free will proceeds from will.  Free will also proceeds from the intellect – the capacity to know the truth.  The will and the intellect must act together.  This isn’t a different truth for each of us.  It is the truth of our objective end as human beings.

The will cannot not will happiness.  Every human being desires to be happy; this is not a matter of free choice.  By nature, we want to be happy – the ultimate end, beatitudo.  We might err in what constitutes happiness, but this is an error of the intellect. 

It is everyone’s answer to the question: what do you want, what do you want in life, what do you want for your children?  I want to be happy; I want my children to be happy.  But not everyone holds the proper definition of happiness – this is due to an error of the intellect.  And it is on this point that Thomas will say (I believe I have this right) that we have free will toward our proper ends – because free will proceeds from knowing the truth.

Our free choices regard means; the end – happiness, beatitudo – is not subject to this same free choice.

A wide variety of means are available to us when pursuing any given end – even the ultimate end.  In the means, we have free choice.  In the ends – we have the objective reality that we are human, made with a purpose, or telos.

Yes, it is an ethical story – according to Thomas, we are embedded in an ethical story.  The question of “why be moral?” makes no sense to Thomas.

It doesn’t make sense because we are created with an objective end.  To act toward that end is moral; to act contrary to it is immoral.  So…why be moral?  What else can we be?  Ask a lion why he acts as a lion; ask a rock why it acts as a rock.  It isn’t a moral issue; each acts according to its nature – just as humans do when acting with a proper intellect – the knowledge of the truth.

Fr. Brent then goes on to give some detail of twelve “steps” of the human act:  the first four steps regard identifying ends; the next four regard identifying the means – and it is only in the means where free judgement (in the Thomistic understanding) is available to us. 

This is why those who dismiss the notion of objective ends are able to say, without concern: “the ends justify the means.”  It is also true for those who hold to objective truth – the ends do justify the means.  But in both cases, the ends also define the means that are acceptable – and this is where an important difference lies. 

If the ends are not based on objective truth, then nothing binds the means.  If the ends are bound by objective truth, while superficially one might describe the situation as being bound in our means, in actuality we act in free will.  The ultimate end can only be achieved by good means.

The final four steps regard execution; the end and means have been identified, it is left to execute and to judge the success or failure.

Conclusion

How do you prove that leading the just life (proper ends) is better than leading the unjust life?  He says, long story – just go read Plato’s Republic!

Plato would write of two camps: “the friends of the forms” and “the earth-bound giants.” 

The friends of the forms believe in form and finality, the earth-bound giants believe everything is composed merely of matter and things come about by chance – and they have a certain ethic that goes with it. 

It seems Plato would not be surprised that this discussion is continuing 2400 years after he lived:

Between these two camps there is perpetual and undying warfare.

Posted by bionic mosquito

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“A rational man is guided by his thinking – by a process of Reason – not by his feelings and desires.”

Posted by M. C. on June 22, 2019

Ayn Rand

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