One of the challenges in our modern philosophy lies in the difficulty of acknowledging right and wrong, good and bad. We’ve blurred the lines so much it’s almost impossible to clarify this in any absolute way. An artist puts a glass of water on a shelf and calls it an oak tree, and defends that it’s an oak tree because he says it is. And there’s no argument to be used against his declaration because that would be intolerant, politically incorrect. Hate speech even in extreme cases. The pendulum has swung so far in this liberal direction that you have 50 something gender choices when signing up for a new Facebook account.
Now I’m certainly not advocating the cleaning out of the society of anyone who doesn’t agree with the traditional view of things, but I also can’t really see my way to endorsing any opinion whatsoever as the new normal.
Some will certainly say I’m a dinosaur stuck in the 1950s for expressing that. And that, I suggest, is exactly the problem.
Dare we try to approach this in our program today? Of course we do.
The Censorship of Natural today on Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head.