Eudaimonist
I believe in life before death!
- Jan 1, 2003
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The point I was trying to make about Himmler was that he was acting counter to his conscience, and it was this that caused him to puke. Had his ideology been integrated with an objective morality of conscience, no such reaction would occur.
Wow, I wouldn't assume that. I think that you are reading more in to his reaction than was actually there. I don't think that the physical reaction was moral revulsion at the thought of murdering Jews and other undesirables. His sympathies were solely with the Germans who had to perform the executions. The integration strikes me as being present.
So, I cannot conceive of conscience that promotes indiscriminate genocide. Can you? Would such a conscience deserve the name of conscience?
Yes, it would be fully conscience. It would simply be a misinformed conscience.
And, the rationality that tells us what ought to be is inevitably founded on mindsets that have previously accepted, as axiomatic or assumptive, ideas about the way the world ought to be.
That doesn't matter. We spend time reasoning about what we ought to do, even if David Hume's dogmas are correct. That is how human beings function.
It doesn't matter that Himmler's reasoning may have been based on previous views about how the world ought to be, since that is also true of his conscience. His conscience is not something parallel to reason, but is rooted in prior reasoning, and is a possible spark to future reasoning. There is a great deal of interaction there -- a two-way cycle of cause and effect. It's not like we only ask what we ought to do when we feel the pang of conscience. Conscience may prod at times, but reasoning functions well in thinking about the oughts without that specific prodding.
If, like me, you think the world's wealth should be more justly distributed
-- I do not, if I take your meaning correctly --
reason can tell you how to get there.
It may also tell you that people ought to redistribute wealth in a more "just" way, not just how to do so. Reason will tell you what justice is and why it is important. Plato's philosophical dialog "The Republic" is a rational defense of certain views on justice, for instance.
What it can't do is provide the 'should' impetus to a political program that aims to bring such a result to be.
It does that every day.
That arises out of individual virtue, moral stature, or, indeed, obedience to conscience.
And virtue is inextricably tied to rationality. There is no virtue without reasoning and understanding, and not just about the hows, but about the whys as well.
eudaimonia,
Mark
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