Well, it would be nice to answer that action on our personal moral
principles should cease, when it breaks the law.  

 

The trouble is, there are laws and there are laws.   

 

The Protestant idea that each of us has a direct and personal obligation to
the law, no matter what a duly appointed law enforcement officer may tell
us, makes thinking about these issues VERY complicated. Back in the sixties
we were taught that we might be obligated to "throw our bodies" on the
machine to stop the vietnam war.  I am not sure to what higher law we
appealed in those days but I vaguely remember that it had to do with the
Nuremburg trials.  I belief that in military law a soldier is obligated to
DISOBEY a law that is illegal?  Whether the soldier gets a commendation for
disobedience or shot for it depends, in this case, on whether a military
judge, in the peace and quiet of a courtroom, comes to agree with the
decision of the soldier, which may have been made in a split-second during
the chaos of a battle.  We have to have a way of thinking about this that
rules in civil disobedience but rules OUT stalking abortion providers.  

 

Be careful to take note of how I am reasoning here.  I am reasoning
backwards from my own actions to some principle that would justify them.
Pretty shoddy, as a form of reasoning, but, if one believes that beliefs
just are those principles implied by one's actions, then what I am saying
here  makes more sense.  I am trying to discover  what my beliefs ARE, not
trying to justify them.  The pragmatist Justice, Oliver Wendel Holmes,
famously said that Justice is what judges do [in the long run, if they think
carefully and well about precedent and the facts of each individual case].
On this account, our beliefs get justified by their long term success.   By
"long term" I mean generations and generations and by "our" I mean the
species.  This is the pragmatist doctrine of truth.  

 

I think the reason that people live about 60 years beyond youth is that it
takes about that long for the high=minded protestations of one's youth to
come home to roost.  I cannot escape the feeling that in some strange sense
I am personally responsible for the Tea Party.  And bombing abortion
clinics.  But this s no doubt liberal guilt gone mad. I guess we got THAT
from the quakers?  

 

Nick 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Douglas Roberts
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2012 8:59 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] Faith

 

Ok, all of you "faith" proponents:  at what point does practicing "faith"
cross the line and become criminally negligent?

 

Corollary question:  at what point does adherence to religious faith cross a
moral boundary by allowing the practitioner to select comforting dogma over
moral obligation?

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2205306/Russel-Brandi-Bellew-Faith-h
ealer-parents-avoid-jail-Austin-Sprout-16-dies.html

 

--Doug

 

PS: <complexity>  (Added to keep this thread from being completely
off-topic.)

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