Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Modernity
without hope.
Burned, bombed, bruised, and beaten,
To a cell I return.
My prison, my freedom,
My island.
Forgiveness I ask, or
Leave me here to rot.
Monday, April 23, 2007
The Ethics of "Yes"
I am, interested, however, in the ethics of "yes" and in the creation of a system of "yes." Is this system possible? Can such a system stay in line with ethics? Of course, the following request will come from my conspiritors here at E&E, "will you go kill so-and-so" or some various form of the same question. But do limitations need to be placed upon such a system of yes? I am currently undecided on the issue, because it seems to me that members of such an ethical system would have no reason to request ridiculous things such as murder or violence, because, under the ethical system, if asked, they themselves would be required to perform such actions. Is an ethical system only valid within itself?
I suppose that I am looking for a legitimate way to encourage myself to really just live in the moment and accept the world around me as it is, and love the people in my life.
Answers? Questions? Requests?
All Art is Quite Useless*
I have been mulling over the possibility (or non-possibility) of coming up with a decent definition for art (probably thanks to the Ethics and Ethos team’s monumental artistic creation last week). So, I will begin by posing a question: what constitutes art?
This question was much easier to answer in, say, the Italian Renaissance. If it has a bunch of circles and naked people, can be put on the wall of a church, and is commissioned by the Medici, then we call it art. Obviously I am vastly oversimplifying the matter, but the issue of defining what is art has become drastically more difficult in the past century thanks to modern, postmodern, and contemporary art pushing the boundary of what is and is not acceptable.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Right to partially choose? Partial right to choose? Right to choose non-partially?
Not only does the Supreme Court 5-4 ruling infringe upon the famous ruling in Roe v. Wade, the ruling, in effect, suggests that the conservative cinch could very well become tighter. I am particularly angry at the opinion piece written by Edward Whelan for the USA Today, found here: http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20070419/cm_usatoday/awelcomedecision;_ylt=AnnlbcKQE863ydC9OXdajXWs0NUE
Whelan, the President of the ironically named "Ethics and Public Policy Center," not only makes the ridiculous claim that "all Americans should welcome" this ruling, he says that the majority "exercised judicial restraint and properly deferred to the democratic process." Just how did Kennedy, Scalia, Alito, Thomas and Roberts Jr. exercise restraint? Maybe they thought twice about that second cup of coffee? Maybe they restrained from caring about individual liberty? Maybe they restrained from getting their deli sandwiches with extra mayonaise? It seems to me that the democratic process protects the individual's right to individual liberty, so I'd be interested to know how "deferring to" such a process resulted in a self-promoting, self-guided (though certainly not self-written) Supreme Court decision. Or maybe Whelan's editor incorrectly assumed a grammatical or content error and added the "to" into his original sentence. Maybe Kennedy, et al., placed aside the democratic process to restrict individual liberty. I'd like answers, Mr. Whelan.
I'm thinking that placing restrictions on individual liberty is not quite what our "founding fathers" (I say this only because it's commonly accepted) had in mind (no, they were too concerned about giving Americans the right to bear arms. That turned out quite well, didn't it?) nor is it a very good idea. And here's why: if we restrict liberties, we are necessarily restricting freedom. As we know, our President-in-Cheif has declared that freedom is the pursuit of all Americans--we wouldn't want W. to be wrong, now would we?
I'm so upset that I can't even make jokes. I've never really been graced with that talent; I more kind of crinkle to the floor and curl into the fetal position. It's just now, with this ruling, if I ever find myself in this position again, I'm afraid I won't be able to get out for 24 weeks, even if I wanted to get out. And when I do get out, I'll still be upset because I'll be re-born into a world where my very own Supreme Court dismisses individual liberty.
And on the first day...
The quest of three students to discover truth in the midst of the college culture of consumer America officially begins.
Enjoy.