There’s an provocative essay on this UCSD-affiliated blog about the rather extreme and violent examples used frequently in ethics classes, and whether they might be doing more harm than good. The discussion following the essay is very good and interesting.
Author: Huenemann
God & morality, in the Washington Post
OK, not the most nuanced exchange, but Michael Gerson wrote an article claiming that, without God, we really don’t have what it takes (direction? motivation?) to be moral. This has been followed by Christopher Hitchens’ typically acerbic reply.
I would have thought Plato’s Euthyphro should have put this debate to rest a long time ago!
Philosophy iLecture
USU is in the process of putting together some brief “iLectures” for interested prospective students (and anyone else). So I have put together one on Philosophy, which you can read here if you want:
Here’s the final paragraph, so you can better determine if you’re interested:
“But more than all that: philosophy, as the love of wisdom, is the intelligent and honest attempt to become, as Aristotle might have put it, a ‘professional human being,’ which is a human being who has worked out his or her moral obligations and theoretical beliefs and integrated them into an honorable, well-balanced life. For in the final analysis, none of us wants to have lived a mistake; nobody wants to regret how they have lived. We want to live the best possible life, given who we are and what we face. And that is why we are all interested in wisdom. It is the science of figuring out how to live as a fully human being.”
(I’ll post a link to the actual iLecture once it’s recorded and posted.)
Also: for anyone interested in listening to other philosophers discuss interesting topics, check out the podcasts available here on “Philosophy Bites.” It’s an interesting set of topics, discussed by well-known professional philosophers, and the series is growing increasingly popular in the set of educational podcasts.
Philosophy rocks!
Hear Philosophy major Suzy R.’s latest guitar jam here.
Is your belief in God consistent?
To find out, try taking this test. I haven’t tried it myself, since I’m not a theist. Any impressions about it? (I’m not expecting it to run very deep; but is it any fun?)
