Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Value of Key Values


Note: This post was written some time ago: due to operator ineptitude, it went in the draft files rather than the web. It still relates, though.

You worked hard asserting, defending, defining, and understanding the various values that make up the class web of belief. I could see that my larger class (of 23 people) took longer and worked harder to come up with its core web values than did my smaller class (of 7 people0. We had to find words and ways to compile 23 different webs into 5 and then into 1. The other class compiled 7 webs into two, then into 1. I am sure there is a mathematical formula or a psychological theory that explains why more people equals more complexity. The benefit is that we had some interesting questions, alluring insights, and, perhaps, a glimpse of unknown territory. Both classes engaged in deep and thoughtful discussions. If our webs of belief are our protection and means to sustenance (Hey, that FLY is HAPPINESS!) then it makes sense to take some time to really understand them. Test drive that car. Bounce on that web.
Integrity. Trust. Caring. Respect. Structure.
Integrity. Contentment. Faith. Respect. Survival.

Does Moral behavior fit in somewhere? Duty? Obligation? Mercy? Forgiveness? Justice?

Oh, yes: the birdcage drawing is by Kurt Vonnegut, one of my heroes. He drew it with a felt-tip pen. It was the only image on the official Kurt Vonnegut webpage after he died. It speaks for itself. If you know about Kilgore Trout's canary in Breakfast of Champions, it speaks for that, too. And so it goes.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Webs of Belief



One morning this weekend I had the teakettle heating water for coffee. I saw something MOVE on the handle, and realized it was a medium sized tan spider. On the teakettle? After escorting Spidey outside to a pleasant new home in a bush, I went back in and really LOOKED at the teakettle, which was approaching a roaring boil. In the spout was a fresh spiderweb. No wonder the spider wanted out! But what did he want in the first place? Coffee moths? Bad planning.

Ever see a spider revise his/her web? Repair it, yes, but I don't know if they do any web editing. . .

Our webs of belief, however, seem to do a lot of changing through the years, at least around the sometimes tattered edges. How about those core beliefs? Do we ever even review those? Find some outdated, ragged, irrelevent? Do we replace them with something else?

Spiders DO reinforce their webs, however, and conduct maintenance checks to see that the web is holding strong and true. Some of our spiders make the strategic error of building webs exactly where they shouldn't.


If you can observe a spider please do so and share what you observe with us.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Euthyphro

Here we have Socrates waiting in court to face his judges and accuser. What is his crime?
"Socrates. Oh, he [Socrates' accuser Meletus] brings a wonderful accusation against me! At first hearing it may surprise you. He says that I am a poet or maker of gods, and that I invent new gods and deny the existence of old ones. That's the basis of his charge.

Euthyphro. I see, Socrates. He's attacking you for the familiar sign that sometimes, as you say, comes to you. He thinks you're a heretic, and he's going to have you tried for it."

What is a "familiar sign"? It is that inner voice - the inner voice that leads to poetry, (note that - Poet or Maker of Gods) or insight, or mystical vision. Euthyphro considers himself to be a prophet. He, too, has an inner voice, and his tells him what piety is. No wonder Socrates wants Euthyphro to enlighten him on the nature of piety. It might save his life!

But Socrates' questions reveal that Euthyphro is one of those spiritual materialists, one of those who wear the trappings of goodness and virtue on the outside, but are shallow and confused on the inside. Not evil - not one of those Jeckyll-and-Hyde hypocrites, but rather someone so intellectually immature ("unexamined") that he takes the stories of Kronos and Zeus literally, and thinks that in order to be pius he must follow in the footsteps of the god's son who took down his father god.

Euthyphro wants, above all, to be pious. He loves his Gods, and believes that piety is the way to express that. But what about loyal to a parent? The Gods think that is good, too. Prosecuting a murderer, that is definitelly pious. Talk about an ethical dilemma!

Socrates' questions help Euthyphro see (rather unwillingly, don't you think?) that his reasoning is superficial and won't stand up to scrutiny. That doesn't help Socrates.

Do you think Euthyphro proceeds with his prosecution of his father? He was in a big hurry to leave. . .

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

And what does it have to do with critical thinking?


No, this is not about the Monday night TV show, although we might get around to talking about Hiro and Sylar eventually. . . This blog is for the Humanities 115 students at Wake Technical Community College who are taking a summer course entitled "Critical Thinking." Since thinking goes on 24/7 with humans, awake or asleep, this blog is for you thinkers who might want to contribute outside classroom time.

So what makes a hero, anyway?

We have 5 weeks to figure it out.

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