This should be required learning in all of our schools
Old words so pertinent today
Old words so pertinent today
concordtom said:
I may very well regret responding to you because it may elicit offensive talk on your part, as I've experienced before, but you've started out quite innocuously so I'll give it a try.
I'm just two minutes in and this is the type of philosophical discussion I enjoy.
TRADITIONAL JUSTICE (applying the same rules and standards to everyone)
VS
COSMIC JUSTICE (equalizing the prospects for everyone)
I insert a question here. What say you to this:
People are not born into equal situations. We all can understand, accept and agree upon that. And of course, the crowd that is born into better situations is often going to argue for "traditional justice", so that they can keep their advantage. Status quo is working for them!
But what if that advantage was gained and accumulated over generations through injustice?
What if my grandfather stole your grandfather's labor and my family thus has a great estate while your family lives in a shack?
What if while your grandfather was laboring to build my grandfather's house, my grandfather was at Harvard getting an education, while your grandfather was legally barred from learning to even read and write?
Traditional justice works for you here. But does that feel morally right?
If it doesn't feel morally right to you, then it seems a measure of cosmic justice should be applied.
I don't have time to continue the video right now but that first question popped in my head.
concordtom said:
My fear is that Hawaii bear posted this because he grew up with advantages, has the advantages now, and wants to support the system that supports him.
That's what Robert Manning taught me at American University - everyone throughout history comes up with philosophy that supports either the status quo because it's working for them OR their philosophy aims to change the status quo because it ain't working for them.
He told me to (paraphrasing here) stop nitpicking the fine nuances of language and simply get to the broad strokes. People are self-motivated.
But, to be fair, that's no fair way to assess a philosophical argument - just an initial take.
There is SO much more that goes into all of this bits not just one's height weight athletic ability, nor their math and English skills, nor how friendly they may be, or how insightful. We are barely scratching the surface as to what makes a person be a societal contributor and what doesn't. Nature, nurture, choice.
I like Robert Sapolsky!
concordtom said:
I may very well regret responding to you because it may elicit offensive talk on your part, as I've experienced before, but you've started out quite innocuously so I'll give it a try.
I'm just two minutes in and this is the type of philosophical discussion I enjoy.
TRADITIONAL JUSTICE (applying the same rules and standards to everyone)
VS
COSMIC JUSTICE (equalizing the prospects for everyone)
I insert a question here. What say you to this:
People are not born into equal situations. We all can understand, accept and agree upon that. And of course, the crowd that is born into better situations is often going to argue for "traditional justice", so that they can keep their advantage. Status quo is working for them!
But what if that advantage was gained and accumulated over generations through injustice?
What if my grandfather stole your grandfather's labor and my family thus has a great estate while your family lives in a shack?
What if while your grandfather was laboring to build my grandfather's house, my grandfather was at Harvard getting an education, while your grandfather was legally barred from learning to even read and write?
Traditional justice works for you here. But does that feel morally right?
If it doesn't feel morally right to you, then it seems a measure of cosmic justice should be applied.
I don't have time to continue the video right now but that first question popped in my head.
LudwigsFountain said:
I hear you, but the difficulty I have with cosmic justice is, "How do you apply it fairly?" If you apply it to groups it seems to me that you're going to end up giving an advantage to people who don't need it and denying it to people who deserve it. My take on this probably stems from my own background. White, but from a poor family. One grandfather raised without indoor plumbing or electricity. When I was born my family lived in a one room apartment with no TV, telephone or car. Not even a refrigerator, but an ice box. No one in either parent's family had gone to college. Many didn't even make it through high school because they needed to work. Started working part time at 16. Did well in school and very well on the SAT. Put myself through Cal.
Does cosmic justice afford more of an advantage to me or to a 'disadvantaged' minority both of whose parents are physicians and from families in the upper middle class? So I think cosmic justice should be applied individually, but I can't imagine how you'd do that.
LudwigsFountain said:
So I think cosmic justice should be applied individually, but I can't imagine how you'd do that.