"A torch song is a sentimental love song, typically one in which the singer laments an unrequited or lost love, where one party is either oblivious to the existence of the other, or where one party has moved on." (Wikipedia) Sarah Vaughn, Broken Hearted Melody. Timi Yuro, Hurt. Billie Holliday, The Very Thought of You. Roy Orbison, In Dreams. Peggy Lee, Oh You Crazy Moon. Ketty Lester, Love Letters. Etta James, At Last. Lenny Welch, Since I Fell For You.
Conservatives Versus Libertarians on Immigration
Victor Reppert thinks that a conservative case can be made against immigration restriction but cites a libertarian article in support of his contention. But as I see it, it is important to distinguish carefully between conservative and libertarian positions on this and other issues, despite several important points of agreement. Pace Reppert, no conservative who understands his position can support open borders or tolerate the elision of the distinction between legal and illegal immigration. There are no conservative arguments for open borders. But let's turn now to the article in question. Here are some excerpts:
. . . the false dichotomy between civil and economic liberties. Both incorrectly bifurcated forms of freedom are rooted in the same set of property rights, first and foremost in one’s own person and, by extension, in the tangible property one acquires justly through homesteading, gifts and honest market transactions. If Big Brother tries to comprehensively regulate immigration, he can smash economic freedom of association. And if the state has the power to oversee our economic lives, our personal freedom will always suffer in the process.
This is the type of excessive rhetoric that libertarians are known for. Immigration laws obviously limit economic freedom of association, but to write that they "smash" it is to suggest that the limitation is some pure power move on the part of "Big Brother" without reason or justification. But there are a number of solid reasons for border control none of which is so much as mentioned in the article. I sketch some of them in Immigration Legal and Illegal. And what exactly is wrong with the distinction between civil and economic liberties? The word 'civil' derives from the Latin civis, civis, citizen and civitas, civitatis, state, citizenship. So I hope I will be forgiven for asking how a person could have civil liberties apart from his membership in some state or other, and how a person who has civil liberties in a state of which he is a citizen can have any civil liberties in a state of which he is not a citizen. As an American citizen I have the civil right to the presumption of innocence. But I don't have that right when I head south of the border. I can see how economic liberties are grounded in the universal right to life, a right that does not derive from membership in any polis, civitas, Staat, state. But civil rights and liberties are state-specific. The right to vote is a civil right, but Mexicans don't have the right to vote in American elections any more than Americans have the right to vote in Mexican elections. There is no universal right to vote wherever one happens to be.
This also is a good time to question the entire idea of the national government trying to “seal the borders,” pick winners and losers among immigrants, decide who gets all the welfare benefits of being a legal immigrant and who is not even allowed into our golden door. Invariably, when the federal government imposes its way on immigration, we get some immigrants who come in with legal sanction and quickly become dependents of the U.S. government—whereas illegals are probably not net beneficiaries of the welfare state, legal immigrants might very well be.
I'm sorry, but this is hopelessly wrongheaded. Since the USA is a welfare state and under ObamaCare about to become even more of one, it is obviously suicidal for purely fiscal reasons alone to open the borders. Who would not want to come to this great prosperous nation of ours? Do I really need to spell this out? Only if the libertarians got their way and succeeded in shrinking the government down to 'night watchman' functions (the Lockean triad: protection of life, liberty, and property), would this fiscal objection to open borders be removed. But obviously this shrink-down is not going to happen. Given that the USA is a welfare state and will remain one — the only real question being how much of one — it is all the more necessary to control entry into the country.
Since conservatives often say our rights come not from the government but from God and the nature of man, it is not for the government to decide whether someone should have the right to live here or not—it is up to individuals and communities, which obviously are able to sustain a fair number of illegals.
This is very shoddy reasoning. Conservatives maintain that there are certain natural unalienable rights, among them life, liberty and the right to pursue happiness (which is not the right to be or be made happy). These natural rights are not granted by governments but secured by legitimate governments. They are rights that one has irrespective of one's being a citizen of a state. But it does not follow that every right that one has one one has irrespective of citizenship. My right to vote is not a right to vote anywhere. When I lived in Germany, Austria, and Turkey, I did not have the right to vote in those countries, nor should I have had that right. Just as I don't have the right to vote anywhere, I don't have the right to live anywhere or travel anywhere. When I lived in Turkey I could not stand on my natural right to live in Turkey: there is no such right. I had to apply for a visa and be granted permission to live there for a stated period of time after I had paid a fee for the privilege. Now you might not want to call living in Turkey a 'privilege,' but it is surely not a natural right that everyone has just in virtue of being a human being.
The author says that communities have a right to decide who shall live in them. But a community is a political entity, a state writ small, and what goes for states writ small goes for states writ large.
. . . constitutionalists in particular should question the very notion that the feds have legal authority to crack down on the border, since immigration is not an Article I, Section 8 authority of Congress. Conservatives especially should follow Reagan’s example and embrace immigration amnesty.
This is just false. "Congress shall have the power to establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization . . . ." (Article I, Section 8) As for Reagan's example, is this guy suggesting that conservatives should follow Reagan's example even in matters on which he acted foolishly or not like a conservative? Come on! Amnesty for those illegals already here and established may well be unavoidable. But this is separate form the question whether the border should be sealed to keep out additional illegal aliens.
You Want Anti-Government? I’ll Give You Anti-Government
Contrary to the willful misrepresentations of contemporary liberals, conservatives are not anti-government. To oppose big government is not to oppose government. This passage from Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century (1851), conveys a genuine anti-government point of view:
To be governed is to be kept in sight, inspected, spied upon, directed, law-driven, numbered, enrolled, indoctrinated, preached at, controlled, estimated, valued, censured, commanded, by creatures who have neither the right, nor the wisdom, nor the virtue to do so…. To be governed is to be at every operation, at every transaction, noted, registered, enrolled, taxed, stamped, measured, numbered, assessed, licensed, authorized, admonished, forbidden, reformed, corrected, punished. It is, under the pretext of public utility, and in the name of the general interest, to be placed under contribution, trained, ransomed, exploited, monopolized, extorted, squeezed, mystified, robbed; then, at the slightest resistance, the first word of complaint, to be repressed, fined, despised, harassed, tracked, abused, clubbed, disarmed, choked, imprisoned, judged, condemned, shot, deported, sacrificed, sold, betrayed; and, to crown all, mocked, ridiculed, outraged, dishonored. That is government; that is its justice; that is its morality.
A Modal Aporetic Tetrad
Here is a four-limbed aporetic polyad:
1. The merely possible is not actual.
2. To be actual is to exist.
3. To exist is to be.
4. The merely possible is not nothing.
Each limb is plausible, but they cannot all be true. The first three limbs, taken together, entail the negation of the fourth. Indeed, any three, taken together, entail the negation of the remaining limb, as you may verify for yourself.
Now which limb ought we reject in order to avoid logical inconsistency? (1) is non-negotiable because purely definitional. Everything actual is possible, but not everything possible is actual. 'Merely possible,' by definition, refers to that which is possible but not actual. This leaves us three options.
(2)-Rejection. One might reject the equivalence of the actual and the existent analogously as one might reject the equivalence of the temporally present and the existent. Just as one might maintain that past events exist just as robustly as present events despite their pastness, one might maintain that merely possible items exist just as robustly as actual items. David Lewis' extreme ('mad dog') modal realism is an example of (2)-rejection. On his modally egalitarian scheme there is a plurality of possible worlds all on an ontological par. Each is a maximal mereological sum of concreta. Each of these worlds is actual at itself, but no one of these worlds is actual simpliciter. For each world w, w is actual-at-w, but no world is actual, period. Thus there is no such property as absolute actuality. It is not the case that one of the worlds is privileged over all the others in point of being actual simpliciter. What is true of a world is true of its occupants: I enjoy no ontological privilege over that counterpart of me who is bald now and living in Boston. Actuality is world-relative and 'actual' is accordingly an indexical term like 'now.' When I utter a token of 'now' I refer to the time of my utterance; likewise, on Lewis' theory, when I utter a token of 'actual,' I refer to the world I am in.
Having rejected (2), a Lewis-type philosopher could gloss the other limbs of the tetrad as follows. To say that the merely possible is not actual is to say that merely possible objects (e.g. bald Bill the Bostonian) are denizens of worlds other than this one. To say that to exist is to be is to say that there is no distinction between the existence of an object and its being in some world or other. To say that the merely possible is not nothing is to say that objects which are not denizens of this world are denizens of some other world or worlds.
I am tempted to say that this solution, via rejection of (2), is worse than the problem. For one has to swallow an infinity of equally real possible worlds. Further, my possibly being bald is not some counterpart of mine's being bald in another possible world. (This critique of course needs to be spelled out in detail.)
(3)-Rejection. A second theoretical option is to reject the equivalence of being and existence, of that which is and that which exists. Accordingly, there are things that are but do not exist. They have Being but not Existence. Everything is, but only some things exist. The early Russell, in the Principles of Mathematics from 1903, toyed with this view although he rejected it later in his career. If existents are a proper subset of beings, then one could locate merely possible items in among the beings that do not exist. The merely possible would then have Being but not Existence or Actuality.
This solution leads to an ontological population explosion much as the Lewis theory does.
(4)-Rejection. A third option is to deny (4) by affirming that the merely possible is nothing in reality, that it has no ontological status. One might construe the merely possible as merely epistemic, as being merely parasitic on our ignorance, or as having no status outside our thought. A view along these lines can be found in Spinoza.
Intuitively, though, it seems mistaken to say that there are no genuine, mind-independent possibilities. My writing desk, for example, is one inch from the wall, but it could have been two inches from the wall. It is not just that I can imagine or conceive it being two inches from the wall; it really could be two inches from the wall even though this possible state of affairs was never actual and never will be actual. (Moreover, what I CAN imagine or conceive refers to real but unactual possibilities of imagination and conception; or will you say that these possibilities are themselves derivative from acts of imagining or conceiving? If you do, then a vicious infinite regress is in the offing.))
Now suppose I had provided more rigorous and more convicing rejections of each of the three theoretical options. Suppose that a strong case can be made that all four propositions must be accepted. Then we would have four propositions each of which has a very strong claim on our acceptance, but which are collectively inconsistent. (Assume that the inconsistency is demonstrable.) What might one conclude from that? (A) One possibility is that we ought to abandon the Law of Non-Contradiction. (B) A second is that one of the solutions must be right even though we have good reason to think that every solution is mistaken. (C) A third is that the aporetic tetrad is an insoluble problem, a genuine intellectual knot that cannot be untied.
Note that (A), (B), and (C) form a meta-aporia. Each of them has a claim on our acceptance, but they cannot all be true.
Suppose there are genuine but absolutely insoluble philosophical problems. What would that show, if anything?
The Pointlessness of Worry
The dreaded event will either occur or it will not. If it occurs, then the worrier suffers twice, once from the event, and once from the worry. If it does not occur, then the person suffers from neither. Therefore, worry is irrational. Make provision for the future, be aware of the possibilities of mishap, take reasonable precautions — but don't worry.
Maverick Philosopher 6th Blogiversary
Some say that blogging is dead. Read or unread, whether by sages or fools, I shall blog on. A post beats a twit tweet any day, and no day without a post. Nulla dies sine linea. It is too early to say of blogging what Etienne Gilson said of philosophy, namely, that it always buries its undertakers, but I am hopeful. After all, a weblog is just an online journal, and journal scribbling has flourished most interestingly for centuries. To put it romantically, blogging is a vehicle for the relentless quotidian sifting, seeking, and questing for sense and truth and reality without which some of us would find life meaningless.
This, the fourth version of Maverick Philosopher, was begun on 31 October 2008. Since that time it has racked up 459446 Lifetime Pageviews, 835.36 Pageviews/Day, 1463 Total Posts, and 2685 Total Comments.
I thank you for your patronage.
Is Hegel Guilty of ‘Epochism’?
In these politically correct times we hear much of racism, sexism, ageism, speciesism, and even heterosexism. Why not then epochism, the arbitrary denigration of entire historical epochs? Some years back, a television commentator referred to the Islamist beheading of Nicholas Berg as “medieval.” As I remarked to my wife, “That fellow is slamming an entire historical epoch.”
The names of the other epochs are free of pejorative connotation even though horrors occurred in these epochs the equal of any in the medieval period. Why then are the Middle Ages singled out for special treatment? This is no mean chunk of time. It stretches from, say, the birth of Augustine in 354 A.D. , or perhaps from the closing of the Platonic Academy in 529 A. D., to the birth of Descartes in 1596, albeit with plenty of bleed-through on either end: Greek notions reach deep into the Middle Ages, while medieval notions live on in Descartes and beyond.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) counts as an epochist. When he comes to the medieval period in his Lectures on the History of Philosophy, he puts on his “seven-league boots” the better to pass over this thousand year period without sullying his fine trousers. (Vol. III, 1) Summing up the “General Standpoint of the Scholastics,” he has this to say: “…this Scholasticism on the whole is a barbarous philosophy of the finite understanding, without real content, which awakens no true interest in us, and to which we cannot return.” “Barren,” and “rubbishy” are other terms with which he describes it. (Vol. III, 94-95)
The politically correct may wish to consider whether the descendants of Hegel should pay reparations to the descendants of Thomas Aquinas, et al.
Top Ten Dumbest Things Said About Arizona’s New Immigration Law
Here. The mendacity and journalistic malfeasance of liberal quill-drivers has reached an all-time high.
Their wild exaggerations and hysterical allegations will do more to help the new law achieve its objective than its actual enforcement. Illegals are leaving and we can expect fewer to turn up here. Why migrate to the land of nAZis when you can head for California?
The Modal Asymmetry of Birth and Death
Our births were contingent, our deaths will be necessary.
(The literary value of this aphorism, if you care to assign it any, trades on an equivocation, which I leave to the reader to detect.)
The Characteristic Attitude of the Pyrrhonist
Benson Mates, The Skeptic Way, Oxford UP, 1996, p. 5: ". . . the characteristic attitude of the Pyrrhonists is one of aporia, of being at a a loss, puzzled, stumped, stymied." Aporia is not doubt. Doubt implies understanding, but aporia is a lack of understanding. The modern skeptic may doubt, but not the ancient skeptic.
Connected with this is a distinction between epoché as the withholding of assent and suspension of judgment. One can withhold assent from an assertion without granting that it makes sense; but if one suspends judgment then one has a clear propositional sense before one's mind which one neither affirms nor denies. See Mates, p. 32. A good distinction! Add it to the list.
So, strictly speaking, aporia is not doubt and epoché is not suspension of judgment. Close but not the same.
Contingent, Necessary, Impossible: A Note on Nicolai Hartmann
Nicolai Hartmann, Moeglichkeit und Wirklichkeit, p. 29: . . . denn das Zufaellige ist immerhim wirklich, und nur die Notwendigkeit negiert. Hartmann is saying in effect that everything contingent is actual, and that the contingent and the necessary are polar opposites: what is contingent is not necessary, and what is not necessary is contingent.
I beg to differ. First of all, not everything contingent is actual. My being asleep now and my being awake (= not asleep) now are both possible states of affairs. The second is actual, the first is not. But both are contingent. So not everything contingent is actual. The imagery of possible worlds ought to make this graphic for the modally challenged. A contingent state of affairs is one that obtains in some but not all possible worlds. Now my being asleep now obtains in some but not all possible worlds. Therefore, my being asleep now is contingent though not actual. So not everything contingent is actual.
Second, it is not the case that x is contingent if and only if x is not necessary. For there are states of affairs that are not necessary but also not contingent. My being both awake and not awake now is an impossible state of affairs. It is neither necessary nor contingent. Not necessary, because it does not obtain in every possible world. Not contingent, because it it does not obtain in some (but not all) possible worlds.
The polar opposite of the contingent is not the necessary but the the noncontingent. The noncontingent embraces both the the necessary and the impossible, that which exists/obtains in all worlds, and that which exists/obtains in no world. Reality, then, is modally tripartite:
The necessary: that which exists/obtains in all possible worlds. The contingent: that which exists/obtains in some but not all possible worlds. The impossible: that which exists/obtains in no possible world.
You say you are uncomfortable with the patois of possible worlds? The distinctions can be sliced without this jargon. The necessary is that which cannot not be. The contingent is that which is possible to be and possible not to be. The impossible is that which cannot be.
And that's all she wrote, modally speaking.
Weaver’s Needle From Picket Post Mountain
I didn't make it to the top of Picket Post Mountain this morning as planned. (Near Superior, AZ 25 miles east of where I live.) You could say I wimped out about half way up: it was windy and cold and overcast, with nerve-wracking drop-offs. Steep I like, precipitous I don't. I was alone, couldn't raise wifey on my cell phone, and the final pitch which required the use of hand-holds would have been difficult with my walking stick. We'll leave the peak-bagging for another day. But I did explore a good stretch of the Arizona trail which runs from the Mexican to the Utah border as a warm-up before tackling the mountain.
On the way down the mountain, encountered this character who proved to be very interesting. A fortuitous meeting in a two-fold sense: by chance, and fortunate. (Interesting that 'fortunate' carries both a descriptive and an evaluative meaning: chancy and good.) I told him I'd take him for a hike in the Superstitions the next time he's in town.
The following shot looks roughly north-northwest. The prominence smack dab in the middle on the horizon is Weaver's Needle, the central landmark of the Superstition Wilderness. Superstition Mountain is on the far left and Buzzard's Roost on the far right.
The Metaphysics of the Martini
Ed Feser expatiates. I checked in at W4 to see whether there was any commentary on the the recent liberal-left hysteria over Arizona SB 1070. Nothing. But Steve Burton's E pur si muove! held my interest.
‘Superb’
'Superb' is still able to convey a hint of the Latin, superbia, pride. A thoughtful writer bears this in mind. But in a world of thoughtless readers, there is not much call for thoughtful writers.
This reflection occasioned by a sentence from a secondary source on Pascal: "[The extrinsic proofs of Christianity] are humiliating to the superb power of reasoning that would like to judge of everything."
The Converse Callicles Principle: Weakness Does Not Justify
Might does not make right, but neither does impotence or relative weakness. That weakness does not justify strikes me as an important principle, but I have never seen it articulated. The Left tends to assume the opposite. They tend to assume that mightlessness makes right. I'll dub this the Converse Callicles Principle.
The power I have to kill you does not morally justify my killing you. In a slogan: Ability does not imply permissibility. My ability to kill, rape, pillage & plunder does not confer moral justification on my doing these things. But if you attack me with deadly force and I reply with deadly force of greater magnitude, your relative weakness does not supply one iota of moral justification for your attack, nor does it subtract one iota of moral justification from my defensive response. If I am justified in using deadly force against you as aggressor, then the fact that my deadly force is greater than yours does not (a) diminish my justification in employing deadly force, nor does it (b) confer any justification on your aggression.
Suppose a knife-wielding thug commits a home invasion and attacks a man and his family. The man grabs a semi-automatic pistol and manages to plant several rounds in the assailant, killing him. It would surely be absurd to argue that the disparity in lethality of the weapons involved diminishes the right of the pater familias to defend himself and his family. Weakness does not justify.
The principle that weakness does not justify can be applied to the Israeli-Hezbollah conflict from the summer of 2006 as well as to the Israeli defensive operations against the terrorist entity, Hamas. The principle ought to be borne in mind when one hears leftists, those knee-jerk supporters of any and every 'underdog,' start spouting off about 'asymmetry of power' and 'disproportionality.' Impotence and incompetence are not virtues, nor do they confer moral justification or high moral status, any more than they confer the opposite.
The principle that mightlessness makes right seems to be one of the cardinal tenets of the Left. It is operative in the present furor over the enforcement of reasonable immigration laws in Arizona. To the south of the USA lies crime-ridden, corrupt, impoverished Mexico. For millions and millions it is a place to escape from. The USA, the most successful nation of all time, is the place to escape to. But how does this disparity in wealth, success, and overall quality of life justify the violation of the reasonable laws and the rule of law that are a good part of the reason for the disparity of wealth, success, and overall quality of life?
