Every Saturday, I post the news of the week from my primary work, Philosophy in Action, where I apply rational principles to the challenges of real life. Here’s this week’s update.
Upcoming Radio Shows
Philosophy in Action Radio broadcasts live over the internet on most Sunday mornings and Thursday evenings. Below are the episodes upcoming this week. I hope that you join us! More upcoming episodes can be found here: Episodes on Tap.
Sunday morning, 8 June 2014: Q&A on Disabled Children, Muslim Immigrants, Cashier’s Mistake, and More
I’ll answer these questions on the live broadcast of Philosophy in Action Radio on Sunday morning, 8 June 2014.
- Question 1: Parenting a Disabled Child: How can a disabled person overcome a toxic childhood? I am a fifty-one-year-old woman with several neurological disabilities, and I would have liked to have been reared as a human being. Instead, I was frequently informed (usually by my mother) that I was a “retarded, subhuman spectacle” – a “vegetable,” a “handicapped monstrosity,” a “travesty of a human being.” It was daily made plain to me that I was being reared purely out of my parents’ sense of duty, so as not to burden other people with my existence. It was likewise continually made clear to me that, whenever anyone played with me or tried to become acquainted with me, they did this purely out of an imposed sense of a duty to do so: for instance, because they were following a parent’s or teacher’s commands in order to avoid being punished for avoiding me. My disabilities (dyspraxia, dysgraphia, and severe Asperger’s among some others) are not physically visible. However, their effects on my behavior led to my being perceived as retarded despite a tested IQ above 150. (This tested overall IQ, in turn, was although scores on three of the subtests were in the 80-90 range.) By that standard, at least – the objective standard of lacking some reasoning power – I am a handicapped human being. As you know, Ayn Rand points out that no child ought to be exposed to “the tragic spectacle of a handicapped human being.” How should this principle have been carried out with regard to me, as a child? Further, the consequences for me of growing up in this way include an immense fear of other people, and a feeling (which I have been unable to change or vanquish) that I am indeed subhuman and should be rejected by anyone I admire, anyone worth dealing with. This feeling persists despite what I rationally consider to be productive adult achievement in the personal and professional realms. So how can I best undo the damage that has been done to my sense of life by my situation itself (being a handicapped human being, and recognizing this) and by how I was reared (which was at least partly a consequence of what I was and am)?
- Question 2: Muslim Immigrants: Does the lack of respect for rights among some Muslims immigrants justify banning all Muslim immigrants? Sometimes, I hear people say that immigrants from Muslim countries are so illiberal (in the classical sense) that they ought to banned from entering the United States and Western Europe. The anti-immigrationists say that when people from Muslim countries are allowed to reside in the West, such immigrants remain committed to political Islam, honor-kill their own daughters, rape native-born women, and plot to impose sharia law on the West through “stealth jihad.” Is the illiberalism of some (or even many) Muslim immigrants grounds for limiting immigration from Muslim countries? What is the proper response to this problem?
- Question 3: Correcting a Cashier’s Mistake: Is it wrong to remain silent when a cashier makes a mistake in your favor? At a popular department store, I wanted to buy two items for $2.94 each and condoms for $14.00. The cashier was about my grandmother’s age. She scanned the $2.94 items three times and said the total was $8.82. I knew the price wasn’t right, , but I didn’t want to say to the elderly woman, “Excuse me, but you didn’t scan my condoms.” I got a good deal, but I think that was somewhat immoral on my part. Is that right? What should I have done?
Recent Podcasts
The podcasts of last week’s radio shows are now available. Check out the full collection of past radio shows in the podcast archives, sorted by date or by topic. Be sure to subscribe to the podcast RSS feed too.
5 June 2014: Chat about “Responsibility & Luck, Chapter Two”
I discussed “Responsibility & Luck, Chapter Two” with listeners on Thursday’s Philosophy in Action Radio:
“What are some of the common proposed solutions to the problem of moral luck? How and why do they fail? I will answer these questions and more in this live discussion of Chapter Two of my book, Responsibility & Luck: A Defense of Praise and Blame.”
You can listen to or download the podcast below, and visit the episode’s page for more.
- Duration: 1:05:45
- Download: Standard MP3 File (22.6 MB)
- Tags: Academia, Compatibilism, Crime, Determinism, Egalitarianism, Ethics, Free Will, John Rawls, Justice, Law, Luck, Moral Judgment, Moral Luck, Philosophy, Politics, Responsibility
Recent Blog Posts
Here are last week’s posts to Philosophy in Action’s blog NoodleFood, ordered from oldest to newest. Don’t miss a post: subscribe to NoodleFood’s RSS Feed.
- May 30: NoodleCast #285: Jury Nullification, the Morality of Homosexuality, Boss’s Dishonesty, and More
- May 30: Paul Hsieh Forbes Column: VA Denies Coverage to USAF Veteran With Brain Tumor
- May 30: ATLOSCon… and a New Horse!
- May 30: New Questions in the Queue
- May 30: Link-O-Rama
- June 1: Activism Recap
- June 2: Paul Hsieh Forbes Column: Three Factors That Corrupted VA Health Care
- June 3: The Arrival of My New Horse Phantom
- June 3: Preview: Thursday Radio: Chat on Responsibility & Luck, Chapter Two
- June 4: The Identity Solution: From the Cutting Room Floor of Responsibility & Luck
- June 5: Preview: Sunday Radio: Disabled Children, Muslim Immigrants, Cashier’s Mistake, and More
- June 6: NoodleCast #286: Chat on Responsibility & Luck, Chapter Two
- June 6: More Details on Question One: Parenting a Disabled Child
- June 6: Link-O-Rama
SOURCE: Modern Paleo – Read entire story here.