Two more Cato Unbound posts from me, one a reply to Mike’s latest on whether it’s conceptually incoherent to be indifferent to one’s own interests, and one a belated response to Doug’s earlier question about religion.
By Roderick
Two more Cato Unbound posts from me, one a reply to Mike’s latest on whether it’s conceptually incoherent to be indifferent to one’s own interests, and one a belated response to Doug’s earlier question about religion.
Tagged Antiquity, Ethics, Jove's Witnesses, Left-Libertarian, Online Texts, Personal, Praxeology, Rand | 2 Responses

The Empirical Me
I’m Roderick T. Long, Professor of Philosophy at Auburn University. I’m an Aristotelean/Wittgensteinian in philosophy and a left-libertarian market anarchist in social theory. (More about me here.) This blog, Austro-Athenian Empire, is a continuation of my earlier blog, archived here.
Can't Stop the Muzak Science Fact Left and Right Ethics Free the Earth The Thin Blue Line Paterson Unethical Philosophy Anarchy Therapeutic State Feminism Space Jove's Witnesses Humor Cato Encyclopedia Personal Resistance Is Not Futile Praxeology Guest Blogs Rand Left-Libertarian Antiquity Conflation Debate Boring Administrative Stuff Industriels Arma Virumque IP Thank You Please May I Have Another Lapsus Linguae No Borders Terror Spencer LGBT Online Texts Elseblogs Molinari/C4SS Labortarian PI Complex Democracy Antiracism Science Fiction Juvenilia Financial Saga
Copyright © 2012 Austro-Athenian Empire.
I don’t see how your approach doesn’t lift the concept as high as imaginable. Regardless of one’s particular religion.
Whenever I have theological discussions with my Christian friends, I ask them “what is God’s logic?” And that serves as a koan. But they tend to reject the question. If the word ‘Jesus’ isn’t included in the question, then it’s automatically blaspheme. I’m so glad our country has insitutionalized polylogism.
http://theobjectivestandard.com/blog/2010/02/virtue-and-realization-of-human-life.asp