Reply By: SBArdam@aol.com(Anonymous User) Posted: Thursday, December 30, 2004 If each individual chose their set of values it would lead to anarchy.
AND???? You might want to look at the Stirner book on line that I linked to in my article. Anarchy - the absense of the "Archon," i.e., the monopoly state - has a long and interesting history. It does not necessarily mean the same thing as "chaotic" or "disorderly" or "destructive." Ancient Ireland maintained a functioning anarchy for several centuries during the time when the rest of Europe was falling into chaos called the Dark Ages, and during that time Ireland was the last safe repository for scholars and books.
The rule of law is necessary to bind civilization into functioning societies.
Well, certainly some kind of law is necessary. But there is "law" and "law." For example, Ireland during the period I mentioned opperated under the "common law," which is entirely about equity. There are no punishments in the Common Law and no rules forcing you to accept someone else's values or beliefs, just a system to try to keep things fair. Opposed to that, we have "positive law," such as the Roman law, which is the law of the conquerer, which always imposes the values of the ruler upon the ruled.
In societies that function it's necessary for it's constituency to work together in common causes and shared common values or there would be no civilization as we know it. Values can be positive or negative and for better or worse we all have them. Aristotle and Galileo were giants upon whose shoulders we today stand, but to belittle this greatest of human tragedy by implying that it's really not important in the scheme of life is beyond my comprehension and shows a smug, misguided intellectualism. My god ( and I don't believe in god), five million lives imperiled and you don't think it's of any great consequences. Have you no sense of compassion
As I stated originally, for the people involved, this is certainly a great tragedy. But similar tragedies happen all around us. A girl I loved was killed when I was in college, along with all five of her brothers, by a drunk driver. I wept over that. The numbers do not matter. Millions of people died tragically in the World Wars. Is it just that that was 60 years ago that makes us regard it as simply dry history? Yes, we can relate to the victims of today on the level that it could have been us, while we could not go back in time to World War II, so that could not have been us.
Somewhere in the vast universe, there is probably an entire species of intelligent beings capable of magnificent achievements who were destroyed just because they were too close to a supernova... Should we be weeping over them as well? My issue is how to put such things in proper perspective. What are values? Why do we need them? What should this really mean to us?