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Ron G.

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Everything posted by Ron G.

  1. That's because you work in the media...That's why you've always been towards to top of my prayer list. You get many of the stories and see the pics that are typically deemed not suitable for public consumption...and the stuff the rest of us do get, you get in concentrated doses...and unlike the rest of us, you can't necessarily turn away. I had a tiny little taste of all that, once upon a time, and you're immersed in it. Just know that you're deeply admired and you've got prayer behind you.
  2. Ron G.

    beautiful baby

    Of course she'll do good! She's a super cutie. Just don't waste your money on any picante sauce made there.
  3. Emma Peel and John Steed, of course.
  4. Ron G.

    Caption Contest

    And Timmy, this is how tanks are made.
  5. I have a couple of buds, brothers, who are the quntissential hillbillies and have pretty much lived off the land all their lives. They went to Alaska a few years back and went as far as they could from any cities or towns and built themselves a little cabin and lived there. No one cared until they decided they wanted some fresh meat, so they went out and shot some sort of wild sheep. According to them, it's okay when there's no snow on the ground, but if it's winter, they have to use a tarp when cleaning their kill since, evidently, helicopters routinely fly over and look for blood spots in the snow with human tracks. They then follow the tracks and arrest the evil doers. My buds came back complaining about that and the extremely short growing season there. According to them, hunting licenses are very, very expensive and very restrictive. They don't make exceptions for survival or "meat for the table" like we do here. I think they're off seeking adventure elsewhere, now. I haven't seen them in a little over a year.
  6. No fishing??? From what I've heard about hunting restrictions there, I was wondering what extremely rural folks are supposed to eat.
  7. Ron G.

    Two girls

    Being a daddy of boys I have little to contribute. It is a form of bullying, but boys tend to take a more direct and physical approach...at least mine would. Sometimes, you must just get away from a situiation you aren't equipped to deal with head on, although stuff like that comes up all our lives. The first thing that came to my mind was for Kelly to talk about it in depth with Sami. I have an idea Sami might have some creative solutions no one has thought of yet...and that's what sisters are for. You have our prayers and thoughts.
  8. Ron G.

    How's your pantry?

    My emergency store is almost identical to Shell's except I have a lot of peanut butter, sardines, flour, sugar and coffee. While she uses propane, I use wood so I have about 5 ricks on hand, a bowsaw and enough gas, 2 cycle oil and bar oil to keep my chainsaw running for a month or two. We also keep a lot of candles and lamp oil on hand. It's good to keep some liquor and some ammunition stored up because it's good to barter with, although one year, we got iced in so bad it was too slick to stand up outside, so I stood on the back porch and shot possums, rabbits and squirrels to feed the dogs. They couldn't stand up well enough to chase or catch anything themselves. These conditions lasted about 9 weeks up here.
  9. Our guests haven't gotten here yet, but will most likely get here tonight. We've been doing construction projects all day...building shelves, storage sheds, closets, putting up some clotheslines and doing some rewiring. We got two or three truckloads of groceries and are just about all set. We installed central air and heat and a big generator since these folks might be here for the long haul. Our winters might be quite unpleasant for somebody accustomed to the Gulf Coast. As I said, our little town has a population of about 500 while Marshall has 1200 or so. The total population of our entire county is about 7000 (cattle outnumber people 6 to 1). It'll be difficult to absorb that many people into such small towns, especially if any are seeking jobs. I found out today, our guests are not coming directly from NOLA, but from Ft. Chaffee. The evacuees could just as easily be from Biloxi or anywhere else on the Gulf Coast. We won't know until they arrive. Some locals are anticipating trouble and have stocked up on ammunition. The prevailing attitude, however, like that of hillbilly and southern rural folks everywhere, is we'll give you whatever you want or need and treat you like family as long as you treat us with the dignity and respect with which we treat you. I'm sure these folks have been screened for criminals at Ft Chaffee, but just to make sure, the Sheriff and a few deputies will be keeping a watchful eye as they get off the bus. You have to remember, the Sheriff and his 4 deputies, along with Marshall's two traffic cops and our one highway patrolman are the only law enforcement for the entire county. We're kinda on our own here. I'll be sending up some pics as soon as I get new batteries for my camera. An intersting note here... With the notable exception of yours truly...yes, ME...Ron G....There has NEVER been a Way presence in this county...no twigs, no Corps, no clergy, NADA...EVER. Yet we've NEVER been hit with a hurricane. We have some world class ice storms, but we manage to get through them. We get an occasional tornado and have had some torrential rains and a few high winds, but we always survive. Evidently, God looks out for others besides Wayfers...isn't that ironic?
  10. Today we got news that a busload of 75 to 100 evacuees was on its way from New Orleans to our little town of Leslie, population 485. It seems we have an old church campmeeting dormitory tucked back in the woods that most of the locals never knew existed. We all went out and cleaned it up, stocked it with food and put fresh sheets on all the beds. We brought some washers and dryers and just about anything we could think of to make it comfortable for these folks. We even got satellite TV hooked up, internet access, and are trying to get several tvs for the folks. We want to welcome these folks like visiting royalty. We were talking to one of our neighbors, Phellknap, whose grandpa told us all about some refugees that came from Oklahoma after a real bad tornado, many years ago, and he figured that's how they knew about the place. Anyway, I'll take some pictures of our big adventure, email them to a moderator so they can get uploaded here, since I can't do FTP anymore. Since I have a big 5 bedroom house, I've been asked to maybe house a family here. I said I would, so we'll see how all that goes. We wiped out the contents of all the local church foodbanks and after looking it over, I think we might need to invest in some Beano. If anyone's interested, I'll update.
  11. Mine got here last Friday. I picked my mail up just before our Scout meeting, so I played a couple of tunes for the Scouts. We all LOVE them!!!!! They want to hear more this afternoon. The other asst. Scoutmaster, Pastor Norm, also the Methodist minister here loves them, too. Thanks so much!! They're wonderful!! Ron
  12. Come on Goey, You failed to tell the whole story...that Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld are the TRIUNE SATANICUS BEELZEBUB HONKUS ERECTUS. The truth is out there.
  13. Ron G.

    Caption this

    I suggest we make Belle the Official Caption Contest judge...although she usually comes up with some decent ones herself. All in favor, raise your right hand.
  14. Ron G.

    Feel the Noize

    Huh? What's that you say? Back in the '60s, I paid for much of my college by working college frat parties as a photographer. That's back when they all had live bands and no DJ's. I also played in the marching band and concert band...I played the tuba and we typically sat directly in front of the drums, beside the trombones. That, along with my shooting hobby, my woodworking hobby and my machining hobby has caused a condition known as tinnitus...a constant ringing in my ears. I used to HATE those stupid classes and teachings, especially the ones run by Harvey P. in Californey, where they kept the volume low so everyone would strain to hear. I guess they thought folks would pay more attention or something. So, could you all speak a little louder, please? I guess a hearing aid is inevitable, but I think I'll try a horn, first...it's more my style.
  15. Things are looking kind of peculiar this year. Leaves are already starting to turn and the other signs we go by are all kinda haywire, also. This story came down the wire about a week ago. For those who know, this is happening about 20 miles south of Yellville near State Highway 14 and it's about 25 miles north of where I live just across the county line in Marion County...not too far from Buffalo Point. http://enews.earthlink.net/article/str?gui...508161028495521 LITTLE ROCK - It happens every year: large numbers of copperheads gather and move in unison to dens for hibernation. But it happens in October, not July or August. Now the common event has become an uncommon and inexplicable one. "I know for a fact that all these snakes didn't just wake up one day and do this," said Chuck Miller, whose Marion County yard has been overrun with the pitvipers. "Something's making them do it. They know something we don't know. There's got to be something more to this." Nearly 100 of the snakes are using a cedar tree as a sort of meeting place, and neither Miller, an outdoorsman and former snake owner, nor scientists who have traveled to the rural north central Arkansas site to study the phenomenon, know why. Stanley Trauth, a zoology professor at Arkansas State University, said the snakes normally gather to move to hibernation sites in the fall. Trauth has traveled to Miller's property to conduct research on the snakes' behavior. "With this hot weather we didn't anticipate such a grand movement of so many snakes. In the fall they aggregate in fairly large numbers, so it's quite an unusual event," Trauth said in a telephone interview Monday. Miller agrees. "If it were October, no one would know about it. It wouldn't be that strange," he said. When the snakes first started showing up three weeks ago, Miller said he was a little concerned that no one would believe how many were visiting the cedar tree, so he began collecting the reptiles. He saw 20 the first night, he said. One of his friends contacted Trauth and the research began. Trauth and one of his graduate students traveled to Miller's property and embedded a radio transmitter in one of the snakes for tracking purposes. Other snakes also had tags clipped to their scales. Miller said seven of nine tagged snakes were taken a quarter-mile away from the tree and released, but have since returned to the tree and been recaptured. Trauth said the copperheads gather at the tree to leave their scent. By rubbing the tree, other copperheads know that it is a marker on the way to a den site, he said. But Trauth is only guessing that the snakes are preparing to move to a den for hibernation. "All we can do is speculate as to what this is right now. This might be a precursor to an actual event. But having the numbers there that he's had, it just makes you wonder what's going on," Trauth said. A gathering of copperheads like the one in Miller's yard has not been documented before, Trauth said. Though he can't yet explain why it's happening, he can say for sure it's not for mating or feeding. All the snakes that have been gathering at the base of the tree are adult males. Copperheads also like to feed on cicadas, but the insects haven't appeared in the area in large numbers this year. The best guess, Trauth said, is the snakes are moving to hibernate as usual - they're just doing it earlier than normal. All Miller knows is, it's weird. "It's like seeing a bigfoot or something walk across the yard; if you don't keep them, no one will believe you," he said. Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
  16. I'm looking for volunteers to help with the Odell Fiscus Foghorn Presidential Campaign 2008. We'll be using such winning slogans as "Seal Your Fate in Double X Ought Eight", "Make 2008 an O.F.F. Year!" and "O.F.F. With Their Heads" etc. When you come to the campaign meetings you'll be treated to cookies and coffee, an entertaining video featuring Odell himself speaking unintellegable things and lots of kissing on the mouth. We'll be passing a "horn'o'plenty" (folding money or checks only, please) so you can get blessed by contributing to our campaign...and if Odell get's elected, maybe you can get some food stamps or something. Sign up early and be eligable for a bona fied Cabinet Position. But don't be discouraged if you don't make it in time for that. There's lots of Intern positions open. Y'all come now!!! "Get O.F.F. when it gets '8"
  17. Andrew is being taught the southern ways. He says ma'am and sir and he addresses adults as Mr. Miss or Mrs. He knows to help others, open doors for ladies etc. etc...treating others courteously and with respect. I don't know about talking behind peoples backs...that's always been considered bad form and dishonorable...but then I'm originally from Texas which is southWEST (with a capital WEST), and not just south. Now I live in the Ozarks which is a world unto itself. Something I noticed at summer Scout camp in Oklahoma. There was a Scout troop from Brooklyn...mostly blacks, and they addressed their Scoutmaster as Mr. Eddie and they were quick to open doors for ladies and when hiking up "cardiac hill", I had to stop and catch my breath, a couple of them stopped and asked if I was okay, could they get anything, offering water and addressing me as sir. That wasn't typical of the New Yorkers I encountered when I was up there about 15 years ago. Just an observation.
  18. Garth, You'll notice it DID come from the Von Mises Institute blog. It's quite interesting, nevertheless.
  19. http://www.mises.org/story/1893 Does Neuroscience Refute Ethics? by Lucretius [Posted on Wednesday, August 24, 2005] The study of the brain, also known as neuroscience, from its modest beginnings as a branch of physiology, has expanded considerably in recent years, now poised to become the queen of the sciences. The advent of techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), for example, have attracted many with little interest in traditional neurobiology, which is largely concerned with tracing anatomical pathways and elucidating electro-chemical communication between brain cells. These new neuroscientists are interested in the type of questions addressed, traditionally, by the humanities and the social sciences. The answers they gave have attracted much attention in the popular press. We now have affective neuroscience, social neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience-indeed neuroscience of everything under the sun. As all human activities can be related to the brain, neuroscience seems to be in a perfect position to bring the prestige of the natural sciences to the "soft" disciplines. Morality and law are among the latest subjects to be invaded by neuroscience. Here I discuss a recent attempt, based on brain imaging evidence, to debunk universal moral principles and revive utilitarianism in moral judgments, not in the Misesian sense of rules that foster social good, but rather the view that there is no real right or wrong or fixed moral standard by which anything can be judged. (In a forthcoming article, I will discuss a related attempt by the same researchers, again resorting to arguments from neuroscience, to attack the concept of free will and personal responsibility in law.) Neuroscience and morality In 2001 a group of researchers published in the journal Sciencea study examining the neural basis of moral judgment. Interestingly, the principal author of this paper, Joshua Greene, is an analytic philosopher by training, having received his Ph.D. from Princeton under the late David Lewis (you can read about his background here). The moral dilemmas posed to the experimental subjects, while their brains were being scanned, were described thus: "A runaway trolley is hurtling down the tracks toward five people who will be killed if it proceeds on its present course. The only way to save them is to hit a switch that will turn the trolley onto an alternate set of tracks where it will kill one person instead of five. Ought you to turn the trolley in order to save five people at the expense of one? Most people say yes. Now consider a similar problem, the footbridge dilemma. As before, a trolley threatens to kill five people. You are standing next to a large stranger on a footbridge that spans the tracks in between the oncoming trolley and the five people. In this scenario, the only way to save the five people is to push this stranger off the bridge, onto the tracks below. He will die if you do this, but his body will stop the trolley from reaching the others. Ought you to save the five others by pushing this stranger to his death? Most people say no."[3] Using fMRI, Greene et al. found that brain areas associated with emotion were activated when the footbridge version of the dilemma was presented, but not when the trolley version was presented. Some moral dilemmas, therefore, appear to engage more "emotional processing" than others. They argue that people are more likely to sacrifice one life to save five if the scenario does not engage their emotional brain areas, as in the trolley case; and they call this type of dilemma "impersonal." By contrast, in the footbridge case, where one must kill a stranger to save five, the emotional brain areas are engaged, and as a result people are less likely to make this decision; this type of dilemma they call "personal." So far, so good. Regardless of the validity of their data, Greene et al. have stayed within the boundary of experimental science. In a later study, however, they went further[2]. This time they employed a different moral dilemma: Should one smother a crying baby to death to protect the lives of many when enemy soldiers are approaching? Here they compared the activation patterns in the brains between those who approve (utilitarians) and those who do not (deontologists). For those new to philosophical jargon, utilitarians believe that morality is a matter of promoting the greater good, while deontologists argue that there are absolute moral principles that can never be violated regardless of the consequences. Hence according to utilitarians, one should kill the baby to save everyone else, but according to deontologists, one should not, since murder is simply wrong. Greene et al. observed greater activity in brain regions associated with emotion when subjects disapprove of baby killing in this case, and greater activity in brain regions associated with "cognitive control" when utilitarian judgments prevail. Cognitive control processes, moreover, can work against the social-emotional response, resulting in more utilitarian judgments--greater tendency for baby smothering. In one brain region (right anterior dorsolateral prefrontal cortex), activity increases for participants who made the utilitarian choice, but decreases for those who made the non-utilitarian judgment. Again, emotions drive individuals to reject choices that, while violating moral principles, result in more aggregate welfare. The shock comes from the conclusion drawn by these authors: "The social-emotional responses that we've inherited from our primate ancestors . . . undergird the absolute prohibitions that are central to deontology. In contrast, the 'moral calculus' that defines utilitarianism is made possible by more recently evolved structures in the frontal lobes that support abstract thinking and high-level cognitive control." To put it bluntly, the old emotional brain represents the view of the deontologists, who believe in universal rules of morality, whereas the new rational brain embodies the utilitarian view[2]. At this point, the vigilant reader can already detect some bias surfacing in the interpretation of the data. According to Greene et al., there are two sets of brain structures in competition when humans make moral decisions-the old emotional brain regions and the new rational brain regions. The form of the argument, of course, is not new, but in place of the traditional dichotomy of reason and emotion we now have "areas associated with cognitive control and working memory," and "areas associated with emotion." The benefit of this transformation is the ability to use an evolutionary argument regarding the brain areas. And the reasoning goes something like this: Because the old emotional brain was evolved to deal only with the personal situation, it is ill-equipped to do the moral calculus, weighing costs and benefits and choosing the action that yields the highest aggregate welfare. For such advanced cognition, the more newly evolved brain areas must be recruited. Unfortunately, however, Greene et al. are not interested in pursuing their evolutionary line of reasoning further than is convenient for their argument. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a brain area that Greene et al. found so important for utilitarian calculation, is indeed a "recent structure" on the evolutionary scale, but its period of greatest expansion in the primates was still millions of years before universal moral principles arrived on the scene. For example, rules such as "thou shalt not kill" and "thou shalt not steal" are not found in humans 40,000 years ago, though there is no known biological difference between their dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and ours. Moreover, as a deontologist, Kant would presumably be classified by Greene et al. as someone with overdeveloped emotional brain. But the Kantian Categorical Imperative--we should always act according to a rule that can become universal law; we should always treat another human being as an end, never as merely means--is not the type of morality that characterized our hunter-gatherer ancestors. It should also be pointed out that a measure of brain activity like the fMRI signal can at best be correlated with a psychological function; it cannot demonstrate a causal role for the brain area in question. Just because a particular brain area became more active when a decision was made does not mean that that area influenced the decision. In fact, the fMRI signal does not even provide a direct measure of the spiking of neurons, so we do not know whether it reflects the inputs or outputs of the activated area. Nor, for that matter, is the classification of the brain areas as either "emotional" or "cognitive" beyond dispute; it is in fact a common sleight of hand among the new phrenologists. Most fMRI studies link a particular area to a particular function. Never mind the validity of the psychological function posed-the assumption, rather, is that if there is a scholarly name for a function, such as cognitive control, there must be a brain area for it. As a result, many areas are burdened with dozens of labels. Now if you found multiple areas activated, you can search the literature, and find what you are looking for among the functions discovered for these areas. This approach rarely fails, and in the hands of skillful practitioners, it is almost guaranteed to succeed. So much for the scientific arguments. Greene's own views on morality can be found in an opinion piece written for Nature Reviews Neuroscience[1]. Not surprisingly, Greene is on the side of the utilitarians. His opinions now fortified by empirical evidence of the sort described above, our utilitarian neuroscientist, following contestants for Ms. Universe, argues in essence that we should care more about the world, in order to make it a better place. This simple message, however, is presented in the scholastic format fashionable among contemporary analytic philosophers, and deserves some unpacking. Using yet another moral dilemma taken from Peter Unger's work, Greene asks: Why should we feel it is morally obligatory to help an injured man on the road, but ignore letters asking for donations to respectable charities? As there is no difference between these cases when analyzed in terms of total human welfare, he argues, this is a result of our having evolved a brain that cares more about the personal rather than the impersonal, thus failing to take into account "impersonal" situations, such as the conditions of starving children in Africa. Our moral sentiments are therefore deficient in scope. For if viewed in terms of total welfare, not giving to charities is just as wrong as not helping the wounded on the road. In this connection Greene mentions with approval the fact that Peter Singer, the famed utilitarian professor, donates about 20% of his income to charity. But if we must act on utilitarian assumptions, why stop at modest contributions? Why only 20%, why not all? If we really must perform the moral calculus as the utilitarians urge us, the only rational thing to do is to donate everything we have and starve to death. The money Greene spends on groceries is more than enough to feed, say, several starving babies in third-world countries. Surely starving oneself to death, in terms of the moral calculus, is no different from smothering the baby to save others-the paradigm of utilitarian thinking. Why does such stifling moral responsibility seem ridiculous, especially when recommended by someone whose research requires hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayers' money? To answer this question it helps to remember that Greene's arguments are intended to attack morality that relies on universal principles. Such a morality contains very few positive recommendations, among which, as Greene suggests, is the rule that if we see a seriously injured man on the road we should help him. The prohibitions are rather more extensive: we should not murder, steal, rob, and so on. It is a morality of rather modest scope, in comparison to the utilitarian quest for cosmic justice. Earlier I explained that utilitarians do things for the greater good, while deontologists follow absolute moral principles. This brief definition is not quite adequate, because it is not clear what is meant by "the greater good." For utilitarians like Greene, the greater good or welfare could be calculated by the individual agent based on his beliefs about the world; it is a product of individual calculation. It was the central concern of Hayek, especially in his later years, to show why this assumption is not valid. According to Hayek, while it is often possible to calculate the immediate consequences of one's actions, it is nearly impossible to calculate, given the limited information available, the long-term consequences. But these can be discovered, albeit indirectly, simply by observing those rules that have survived the longest period of selection, that have been independently developed in various cultures, or, originating in one culture, have spread to others in the course of history. These rules and practices are themselves selected, the unit of selection being the group of human beings following them. They are universal due to their long-term consequences for the groups that follow them, and their existence implies some sort of overall advantage. On this account, "moral calculus" is an oxymoron, because the whole purpose of morality is to get rid of the individual calculation. Utilitarians of all stripes mistake calculations of this type, which every primitive can perform, for rationality, and they think a cost-benefit analysis is necessary for behaving morally. What they fail to recognize, above all, is that there can be more intelligent ways of information gathering and "calculation" beyond the individual actor involved in the decision making. The development of morality transforms temporary action-outcome contingencies into perennial and universal rules. As Hume famously put it, "the rules of morality are not the conclusions of our reason." That moral principles are not necessarily based on reason does not invalidate them, because the product of a gradual process of selection can be superior to the results of individual calculation. The above is the crux of Hayek's argument, which we do not need to accept in toto to see the flawed assumptions behind utilitarian thinking. As Hayek was fond of pointing out, it is often precisely the altruistic urges that are primitive, and drive the irrational behavior of so-called progressives. By contrast, universal principles derived from cultural selection avoid the individual bias that taints the utilitarian analysis. The instinctual altruism of doing visible good, for instance, is replaced by an impersonal system of coordinating resources, namely capitalism, which, not surprisingly, is the favorite target of those who can get no satisfaction of their primitive altruistic urges[4]. How theoretical altruism-pity for all in the abstract sense, delivered from the armchair-has become the opium of the intellectuals is a fascinating topic. Unfortunately the urge to do good, though overwhelming in our universities, more often than not stands in the way of accomplishing any good. It is, indeed, only with the decline of moral responsibility that there has emerged a large group of professional intellectuals whose job it is to proclaim concern for the poor and the suffering. Professing care has become the latest function of the professors, and enhancing aggregate welfare the pet function of governments everywhere, much to the chagrin of those being cared for and whose welfare is considered in the aggregate. Just as a little sacrifice for the greater good has ever been the refrain of dictators, justifying murder, plunder, and torture, so traditional moral prohibitions, the petty moral principles, must be trampled upon by the aggregate welfare, as they have been. Greene's second confusion concerns moral realism, the idea that moral truths are objective. He argues against moral realism, claiming that moral principles are subjective, that what is moral is only in the eyes of the beholder. For if there are no moral facts, only opinions, then there cannot be universal moral principles that everyone must follow. Immediately, however, an objection arises: something being objective has nothing to do with whether we should follow it. For example, although the tree outside of my house exists objectively, independent of human beings, the tree-fact does not command my obedience. Love, on the other hand, is subjective, but we should not on that account dismiss it as irrelevant in human affairs, especially when choosing whom to marry. That moral principles are produced by humans, that they only apply to the human inhabitants of this planet for a brief time in its history, does not mean that they are to be ignored. Moreover, moral realism cannot be experimentally tested by neuroscience.If you scan someone's brain while he is making moral decisions, you will find certain patterns of neural activation. But moral truths are not subjective because you find brain activation (or a change in heart rate, for that matter). Moral subjectivism can never be falsified by any experiment. Greene's confusion stems from his fundamental misunderstanding of what an empirical science can and cannot do, because for him, neuroscience is just another tool with which to beat down opposing points of view. With the scholastic and pseudoscientific façade removed, what Greene really wants to say is that, because people believe in objective moral truths, they are very dogmatic in that regard. And he detests such dogmatism. Like a good moral relativist, he wishes everyone to go on comfortably with his or her moral truths--a state of affairs that is supposed to produce peace and harmony. For example, if I believe it's wrong for you to steal my wallet, and you disagree because morals are subjective, I would simply shrug and walk away. For Greene wants moral relativism, though he finds it easier to argue for moral subjectivism, or rather to attack moral realism. Accordingly, he believes that universal moral principles can be abolished by showing that there are no objective moral truths. Here we encounter a particularly interesting trait of many contemporary intellectuals, which explains the conceptual morass that Greene has gotten himself into. On the one hand, they believe that, so far as morality is concerned, we should not be so dogmatic-we should not believe so firmly in our moral principles, for others have their own. On the other hand, they advocate some version of utilitariansim and collectivism deemed to be so mandatory that anyone questioning it must be labeled as primitive and stupid, like the deontologist whose emotional brain is overdeveloped. Thus the goal of this concealed search for moral relativism is to get others to abandon their beliefs in a few moral principles; and thus Greene's studies are just an attempt to prove his own collectivist truth with brain science. Only in this case we discover a new twist. He uses facts about brain activity to argue 1) there are no moral facts, it's all a matter of opinion; and 2) we should all become utilitarians and donate to charity. To be fair, Greene did not urge us, ala the Communist Manifesto, to unite and become utilitarians immediately. He merely described the two sides for us. One side is controlled by the primitive emotional brain, which evolved before this world of multicultural community-a brain suitable for the harsh, prehistoric ghetto of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, who have no interest in peace or happiness. The other side, with its more evolved brain capable of cognitive control, is more rational and fit for the world today. Our brains are a combination of the two, which are perpetually at war within our skull. Greene would have us believe that, given these facts, we would know which side to choose. But students of liberty should recognize in this instance just another collectivist fantasy. Greene's brand of neuroscience is not science, but a new addition to the category of "politics by other means." ---------- Lucretius is a neurobiologist living in Maryland. Email. He will read the blog and answer comments there. [1] Greene, J., From neural 'is' to moral 'ought': what are the moral implications of neuroscientific moral psychology?, Nat Rev Neurosci, 4 (2003) 846-9. [2] Greene, J.D., Nystrom, L.E., Engell, A.D., Darley, J.M. and Cohen, J.D., The neural bases of cognitive conflict and control in moral judgment, Neuron, 44 (2004) 389-400. [3] Greene, J.D., Sommerville, R.B., Nystrom, L.E., Darley, J.M. and Cohen, J.D., An fMRI investigation of emotional engagement in moral judgment, Science, 293 (2001) 2105-8. [4] Hayek, F.A., The Fatal Conceit, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1988.
  20. Ron G.

    The Dalai Lama......

    I'm not sure who that guy you're talking about is. I only know of the Dealy Lama who lives in the sewers beneath Dealy Plaza in Dallas, Texas. He's only about three feet tall and refers to himself as "The Midget". He's best known for placing random signs all over with assorted rules and signing them "The Mgt"....short for The Midget. I'm sure you've seen some of them at one time or other...nearly everyone has. His best quote is "A bowl is only useful if filled with chili with some cheese sprinkled on top". No Loitering The Mgt. No Smoking The Mgt. Keep Out The Mgt. etc. etc. etc.
  21. Chop up some fresh Roma tomatoes, some onion, a few sprigs of cilantro and a couple fresh jalapeno peppers...just enough jalapeno to make you sweat and make the tops of your ears turn red...chop it all together and set it in the refrigerator over night (covered) then take it out and eat it. Goes real good over enchiladas, but I like it plain or maybe with some tortilla chips broken up in it. You might want to keep a few Rolaids on hand, too.
  22. As long as the SWAP SHOP is on every morning from 9 til 10:30 and 30 or 40 folks sit down at Fergussons Superette listening to it over the PA while drinkin their coffee...or listening in the truck or wherever...Radio won't be obsolete. It's the information superhighway in these hills.
  23. DMiller... I'm giving that to a neighbor who is opening a paint and body shop...sounds a lot classier than "Hiway 66 Collision Repair", don'tcha think? That's a good one. If he uses it, where does he send the check? CoolWaters... Tows'R'Us {fill in the name}'s Big Tow Hitchin' Your Ride On a side note... If you use the hooker theme, you MUST have a red light on the truck.
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