D
djeter
Guest
http://payingattentiontothesky.files.wordpress.com/2010/10/russian.jpg?w=448&h=600
I come to my philosophy through the literary. I dabble in the former, picked up an introductory text to Kant the other day and my eyes glazed over on the sixth page. Ah well.
But for every failure to comprehend I find some stunning successes. Like this article on Ivan Karamazov (with whom I have a special bond) by Ralph C. Wood. He also quotes Michael Sandel the Harvard professor who did the Justice series on PBS (a must see).
Great stuff with a perfect summary of the secular liberal vs the Catholic mindset:
"Michael Sandel has shown what is problematic about this notion of freedom as consisting entirely of unfettered choices. Such choices are prompted by nothing other than the individual subject and his private conscience acting either on persuasive evidence or the arbitrary assertion of will. Just as this modern secular self is not determined by any larger aims or attachments that it has not chosen for itself, neither does it have obligations to any larger communities, except those it autonomously chooses to join. The one moral norm, it follows, is the injunction to respect the dignity of others by not denying them the freedom to exercise their own moral autonomy. Such an understanding of human liberty, argues Sandel, opposes
[A]ny view that regards us as obligated to fulfill ends that we have not chosen — ends given by nature or God, for example, or by our identities as members of families, peoples, cultures, or traditions. Encumbered identities such as these are at odds with the liberal conception of [persons] as free and independent selves, unbound by prior moral ties, capable of choosing our ends for ourselves. This is the conception that finds expression in the ideal of the state as a neutral framework . . . a framework of rights that refuses to choose among competing values and ends. For the liberal self, what matters above all, what is most essential to our personhood, is not the ends we choose but our capacity to choose them.
This is a wonderful article which I have chopped up into reading selections and bolded here and there for web reading:
payingattentiontothesky.com/2010/10/15/reading-selections-from-%e2%80%9civan-karamazov%e2%80%99s-mistake%e2%80%9d-by-ralph-c-wood/
The original was in First Things back in 2004, and the full article is here if you want to print it out and read it normally:
bearspace.baylor.edu/Ralph_Wood/www/Dostoevsky%20and%20Orthodoxy/ivan%20karamazov’s%20mistake.pdf
Isn’t that a fabulous picture though. Looked Russian to me. Looked like Father Zosima (the character who is the head of an Orthodox monastery who also stands at the religious center of the novel) had been there…
dj
PS Pray for my Yankees.
I come to my philosophy through the literary. I dabble in the former, picked up an introductory text to Kant the other day and my eyes glazed over on the sixth page. Ah well.
But for every failure to comprehend I find some stunning successes. Like this article on Ivan Karamazov (with whom I have a special bond) by Ralph C. Wood. He also quotes Michael Sandel the Harvard professor who did the Justice series on PBS (a must see).
Great stuff with a perfect summary of the secular liberal vs the Catholic mindset:
"Michael Sandel has shown what is problematic about this notion of freedom as consisting entirely of unfettered choices. Such choices are prompted by nothing other than the individual subject and his private conscience acting either on persuasive evidence or the arbitrary assertion of will. Just as this modern secular self is not determined by any larger aims or attachments that it has not chosen for itself, neither does it have obligations to any larger communities, except those it autonomously chooses to join. The one moral norm, it follows, is the injunction to respect the dignity of others by not denying them the freedom to exercise their own moral autonomy. Such an understanding of human liberty, argues Sandel, opposes
[A]ny view that regards us as obligated to fulfill ends that we have not chosen — ends given by nature or God, for example, or by our identities as members of families, peoples, cultures, or traditions. Encumbered identities such as these are at odds with the liberal conception of [persons] as free and independent selves, unbound by prior moral ties, capable of choosing our ends for ourselves. This is the conception that finds expression in the ideal of the state as a neutral framework . . . a framework of rights that refuses to choose among competing values and ends. For the liberal self, what matters above all, what is most essential to our personhood, is not the ends we choose but our capacity to choose them.
This is a wonderful article which I have chopped up into reading selections and bolded here and there for web reading:
payingattentiontothesky.com/2010/10/15/reading-selections-from-%e2%80%9civan-karamazov%e2%80%99s-mistake%e2%80%9d-by-ralph-c-wood/
The original was in First Things back in 2004, and the full article is here if you want to print it out and read it normally:
bearspace.baylor.edu/Ralph_Wood/www/Dostoevsky%20and%20Orthodoxy/ivan%20karamazov’s%20mistake.pdf
Isn’t that a fabulous picture though. Looked Russian to me. Looked like Father Zosima (the character who is the head of an Orthodox monastery who also stands at the religious center of the novel) had been there…
dj
PS Pray for my Yankees.