325 lines
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325 lines
16 KiB
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Newsgroups: alt.atheism
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From: cass8806@elan.rowan.edu (Kyle Cassidy)
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Subject: Right Action (long)
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Message-ID: <cass8806.603.727472350@elan.rowan.edu>
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Organization: Rowan College of New Jersey
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Date: Tue, 19 Jan 1993 19:39:11 GMT
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Lines: 316
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Doing The Right Thing:
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Socrates, Piety, and 5,000
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Years of Conventional Wisdom
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Everyone says, stay away from ants. They have no lessons
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for us; they are crazy little instruments, inhuman,
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incapable of controlling themselves, lacking manners,
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lacking souls.
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--Lewis Thomas
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"The Medusa and the Snail"
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The preaching and persuasion, of course, are not
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without effect. We do see frequent displays of cute
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little children holding up for the camera crayoned
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posters on behalf of the whales and the earth.... It is
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... a case of what Socrates called Right Belief, a
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condition both praised and condemned by its name....
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Whence this Right Belief arises, we do not know. Surely,
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in the individual, it comes in part from social example
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and the suggestions of lore, but the origin of the
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impulse out of which flow those examples and suggestions
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is misty, and the cause of the ground in which they so
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readily take root is unclear. (Richard Mitchell, The
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Underground Grammarian, Fall 1991, pp. 13-14)
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The most profound question which Socrates brings to bear in
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Euthyphro is when he asks "whether the pious or holy is beloved by
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the gods because it is holy, or holy because it is beloved by the
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gods." Ah! but here is the crux of everything is it not? Socrates
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at this point has already put forth and had confirmed by Euthyphro,
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that what is pious is that which is loved by the gods. And of
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course in this day and age we might take to task some of Zeus'
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morality as we might cringe at various Christian doctrine. For
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example that which is found in Deuteronomy 21: 10-13: "When thou
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goest forth to war against thine enemies, and the Lord thy God hath
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delivered them into thine hands, and thou hast taken them captive,
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and seest among the captives a beautiful woman, and has a desire
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unto her, that thou wouldest have her to thy wife; then thou shalt
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bring her home to thine house; and she shall shave her head, and
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pare her nails; and she shall put the raiment of her captivity from
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off her, and shall remain in thine house, and bewail her father and
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mother a full month; and after that thou shalt go in unto her, and
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be her husband, and she shall be thy wife. And it shall be." Of
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course today we consider this barbaric. We have words for this sort
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of thing, among them are "kidnapping" and "rape". Are we to believe
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that since these words are the words of god that these actions are
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pious? And that locking up those who commit such crimes is somehow
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impious? This of course was in part the dilemma of Socrates, who
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never could understand just what it was the gods were after and
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always sought the wisdom of wiser people like Euthyphro who did (1).
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Socrates had the added difficulty of belonging to a religion of
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pantheists. Was something pious if some gods thought it was good
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and others did not? As Socrates points out to his newly adopted
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mentor, "in thus chastising your father you may very likely be
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doing what is agreeable to Zeus but disagreeable to Cronos or
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Uranus, and what is acceptable to Hephaestus but unacceptable to
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Here, and there may be other gods who have similar differences of
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opinion." (p. 43) How easy it must be then for monotheistic
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Christians, who don't have these conflicts! All of the inherent
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conflicts of Christianity come from the same source (unless of
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course you count the tons of Catholic dogma which has been spewed
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from various and inspired saints; bishops having visitations and
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weird dreams; weeping statues; cabalistic cloud formations;
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Cardinals who bump into the Virgin in the Acme; as well as various
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monks plagued by stigmata, visions and other sanctimonious
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ailments. This information is legion and has been carefully
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catalogued and squrreled away in various Vatican dungeons). We can
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for example look at the book of Deuteronomy where in 5:17 we read,
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"Thou shalt not kill." but then only 8 chapters later in 13: 1-9 we
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find "If there arise among you a prophet, or a dreamer of dreams,
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and giveth thee a sign or a wonder ... thou shalt surely kill him,
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thine hand shall be the first upon him to put him to death, and
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afterwards the hand of all the people." Of course Christ came along
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later to contradict much of this himself and add further to the
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confusion.
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When Christ happens upon Mary Magdiline's stoning party one
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afternoon, he is confronted by a bunch of townspeople stuffed to
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the gills with Right Belief. They've been religiously attending
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synagogue and are familiar with the passage in Deuteronomy (22:21)
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which states: "They shall bring out the damsel to the door of her
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father's house, and the men of her city shall stone her with stones
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that she die...." These people had been dulled by Right Belief,
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they knew how to treat a harlot. This sort of acceptance causes us
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to look to the sky or into the Cathode Ray Tube for divine
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direction brought to us via Reverend Tilton and Liberty University.
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Right Belief on it's own is nothing more than a shot in the dark,
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a guess or a whim, gathered from some remote and immaterial
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confidence. The problem which arises from Right Belief goes far
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beyond Socrates' difficulties with it i.e., that it is only a
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belief. Belief is all that we have, whether it is belief in
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science, the pope, or mom and apple pie -- our options come only
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when we are addressing the source of our belief. Traditionally
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religions have de-emphasized Self Reliance and instead placed
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accent upon some pre-determined "correct" behavior which comes from
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some great and learned professionals usually long dead, interpreted
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by the contemporary clergy living far away in some great gothic
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pile (even the Dali Lama lives in a castle). Whether this behavior
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is tithing, singing Xmas carols in the direction of your next door
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neighbors while catching pneumonia in the snow, or growing earlocks
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and wearing tzizit's is inconsequential.
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Jesus comes at these villagers armed not with Right Belief,
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but with a philosophy more akin to what Siddartha called "The Noble
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Eightfold Path" (although he didn't say it in english) which
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includes:
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Right Understanding
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Right Thought
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Right Speech
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Right Action
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Right Livelihood
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Right Effort
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Right Mindfulness
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Right Concentration
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The purpose of the eightfold path is to put emphasis on the
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individual to make the proper decisions and have the proper
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reactions through a series of self guided rationales. Living,
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acting, speaking, and thinking right do away with the need for
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merely believing right -- the burden is placed on the individual
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and the individual is now entrusted as a decision maker, as being
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able to discern the proper action as a result of proper
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understanding and interpretation of the events and actions which
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surround him.
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When taken as a whole we see that intelligence is useless
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without wisdom and that rote memorization of biblical passages will
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bring us no closer to the truth, or even to piety, regardless of
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how much you believe in them (and this is exactly how Jesus manages
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to run into this gaggle of stone hurling peasants in John 8:7). In
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T. S. Eliot's vaguely comprehensible poem Four Quartets ("Dry
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Salvages" to be more exact) he speaks of having "had the experience
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but missed the meaning." Belief without interpretation, without
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understanding, leaves us little more than pre-programmed robots who
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may be doomed to mechanically commit and recommit the same
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atrocities and impious acts because their blind belief makes no
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passage for individual action.
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The problem with Jesus' philosophy, is that it does not
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provide a solution for Socrates' dilemma. Again it shuts out the
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individual -- once again throwing out the vagaries of god's will,
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and the idea that these actions are for some higher purpose, that
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you are somehow pleasing some celestial being who will later reward
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you for playing by the rules.
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In considering that which is pious and that which is impious,
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we are reminded of Twain's Letters From the Earth, particularly
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letter X where Twain is discussing the slaughter of Onan by god.
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Onan was of course told by god to impregnate his sister in law --
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the act of attempting this didn't bother Onan in the slightest, but
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the actual thought of impregnating her must of bothered him, for he
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practiced a rudimentary form of birth control and "spilt it on the
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ground" which enraged god.
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The Lord slew Onan for that, for the Lord could never
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abide indelicacy. The Lord slew Onan, and to this day the
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Christian world cannot understand why he stopped with
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Onan, instead of slaying all the inhabitants for three
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hundred miles around -- they being innocent of offence,
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and therefore the very ones he would usually slay (2).
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We are indebted to Twain for his foresight and his daring, as well
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as his background of biblical study, which is invaluable to us.
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Twain of course does not stop there, but brings our attentions to
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bear on the books of first Kings, where in chapter 11, the people
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are warned by god "I will cut off from Jeroboam him that pisseth
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against the wall." We are glad that Twain addresses this issue, for
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it is one which always caused us concern when we were young, but it
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is a topic which is seldom discussed in Sunday Schools. Of course,
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you can't stop people from pissing against walls and so god, being
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mercyfull, was forced to slay them and all their relatives. Even
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the women, who Twain meticulously points out, are physically
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incapable of the act.
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A curious prejudice. And it still exists. Protestant
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parents still keep the Bible handy in the house, so that
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the children can study it, and one of the first things
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the little boys and girls learn is to be righteous and
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holy and not piss against the wall (3).
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Of course Twain and Socrates were searching for the same thing, and
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in similar manners, though instead of baiting a poor buffoon like
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Euthyphro because he's bored out of his skull waiting for his trial
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to begin, Twain baits us all because he is a curmudgeon. It is
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interesting to look at the ends of these two religious antagonists.
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While Socrates was put to death for blasphemy, Twain died
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depressed, angry but exceptionally wealthy and well respected. This
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is a good sign of progress. This is indicative of developments
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beyond that of Right Belief alone. The court was acting under the
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concept of Right Belief when they gave Socrates the cup of hemlock.
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Coleridge's mariner had gone far beyond mere Right Belief when
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he advises the wedding guest in that line that we all should have
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to memorize before the age of four (just as little boys are wont to
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begin pulling the wings off of flys):
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He prayeth best, who loveth best
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All things both great and small;
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The mariner has been granted what precious few of us have been
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blessed with, and this is both the time and the inclination to
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ponder his actions. He sits becalmed in the antarctic seas,
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surrounded by nothing but dead shipmates, weird fog, and this crazy
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bird swinging around his neck with nary a crossword puzzle in
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sight. While awaiting the inevitable, he reviews his actions and he
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transcends mere belief and begins to strain these beliefs through
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his actions, to filter them through his understanding. He arrives
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at a conclusion which is true piety -- it is not piety because god
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likes it, or because someone told him this, it is piety because the
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mariner is now able to justify his beliefs in a logical
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progression; he's put himself on the line this time. He now knows
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these things to be true after a process of internal dialectic. Like
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so when Arthur proposes "it is far better to be alive than dead"
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and eventually leads this to the conclusion that the diatribe
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"might is right" is impious, and rather that "might for right" is
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pious. He arrives at this not through doctrinal didactisim but by
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careful consideration of what the buddha would call the eightfold
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path.
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If we are not becalmed today, there are other difficulties
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which beseige us and give us cause to re-evaluate our beliefs. We
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are living in a renewed age of doubt, at a transition point between
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gods that perhaps started when Galileo climbed up the tower of Piza
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with some crazy hunchbacked Quazimodo of a servant crawling behind
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him lugging a bag of bowling balls and chains to see if Aristotle
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had been telling the truth. For the first time the gift horse of
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Right Belief is being looked in the mouth. As Huston Smith,
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professor of philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of
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Technology wrote in his introduction to the 25th anniversary
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edition of The Three Pillars of Zen:
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There is the further fact that with the collapse of
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metaphysics, natural theology, and objective revelation,
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the West is facing for the first time as a civilization
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the problem of living without objectively convincing
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absolutes -- in a word, without dogmas (4).
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There is of course, also a hearty resurgence of the "God said it,
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I believe it and that settles it" point of view which flourished
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under the past administrations, particularly that of Ronald Reagan,
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but this attitude is being challenged with some degree of impunity
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(it is certainly less dangerous today than it was for Galileo who
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faced a panel of people who suggested to him point blank that they
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would blind him with a burning stick if he didn't change his mind
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but quick). It is through these challenges, through the adoption of
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review and opinion, and internal debate, through right
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understanding, right thought, right speech, right action, right
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livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right
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concentration, that we will eventually be able to justify Right
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Belief and know that which is truly pious. That which is truly
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pious transcends gods and rests within the individual.
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Archie Bunker is of course, a paragon of Right Belief. He sits
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at the right hand of god and champions the true cause, believing
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with all his heart.
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Archie. It ain't a question of sides. God is always on
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the side of the right.
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Mike. And we are always right?
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Archie. Well, of course we are! You don't expect them
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Godless Gooks to be right, do you?
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Mike. How can those Gooks be Godless,
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Archie, when God created them?
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Archie. God didn't create them, smart guy! It was the
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devil that created them.
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Archie is Euthyphro in prime time. He has the answers, he has Right
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Belief and he is willing to share it with inquisitives, like
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Meathead, who in the manner of Socrates, come for his advice.
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Though Meathead is slightly more reactionary than Socrates, and
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allows himself to be easily flustered by his father-in-law, the
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idea is the same.
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I was working up towards a terrific conclusion where I was
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going to bring Archie, Jesus, Socrates and the Buddha into the Taco
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Bell across the street from my house where they were going to hash
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out Right Belief once and for all but I see that it's getting
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horriffically late and I've got a final exam in American Lit I
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tomorrow and I've got to go home and try and figure out how to
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distinguish between Michael Wigglesworth and Walt Whitman so I'll
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just leave them in the incomprehensible muddle into which I've
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gotten them and the world may never know exactly how things ought
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to go.
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-----------
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NOTES:
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(1) I am minded immediately of a line from a song by The Pursuit of
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Happiness which goes: "She's so young, she's got the answers, she
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doesn't need to question the world like I do." Ignorance may be
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bliss, but it's probably fairly boreing as well.
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(2) Mark Twain, _Letters From the Earth, Bernard DeVoto ed, Harper and
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Row, New York, 1938, p. 50
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(3) Ibid, p. 51
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(4) Roshi Philip Kapleau, _The Three Pillars of Zen_, Doubleday, New
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York, 1980, P. xiii
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(5) Spencer Marsh, _God, Man, and Archie Bunker_, Tandem Productions,
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1975, p. 86
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c & c welcome.
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----
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cass8806@elan.rowan.edu
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