Saturday, December 20, 2003

Rekindling the Code of Hammurabi

WOW.

A quick excerpt so you can't escape:
But goodness is, in my view and that of almost all ethicists, essentially bound up with freedom. We cannot praise a coerced virtue, nor blame an enforced crime. The very core of morality, enjoined by God himself in almost all religions, is the spontaneous assent to divine grace. Paradoxically, to enforce the law of good is to destroy it. Paradoxically, the freedom to do evil -- as long as it does not violate the right -- is required for the freedom to do good. The law of right is at its center the law of freedom, and is thus, paradoxically again, the only thing for which one can rightly resort to coercion and war. All of this is not to say that the law of good must bottle itself up within the individual and the closed community, and render itself impotent. Instead it means that the law of good must win the world the hard way, by the noncoercive means of persuasion, gifts, and the marketplace -- must win the population one by one by one. And it can only do so under the wing of the law of right.
Just WOW. If you don't read anything for the rest of the year then this needs to be the last thing you do... AND IT JUST GOT ADDED THE THE CLASSICS LINKS -- FITTINGLY, RIGHT NEXT TO THE "CHURCH OF THE LEFT"...

Needless to say, this will draw more analysis later...