Hey man, thanks for the long reply. I thought I should make a few more comments on truth, false belief and rhetoric.
Truth and false belief:
I suppose you didn't read the short parable about the shipowner that I gave you a link to so I'll illustrate the danger of false belief in another way. If you look at a number of threads around this politics forum you will find countless views that are directly influenced by people's views on god. In the homosexuality thread, for example, you have multiple individuals who are against homosexuality (in marriage and in practice) solely because their 'god' tells them that homosexuality is wrong. Religion can alter an individual's stance on abortion, foreign aid, war, prosecution and social policy (etc). I don't think that it is as simple as 'believe what you want' - our beliefs hold a great deal of power over us and they can greatly influence the way we interact with the world. For this reason I think our beliefs deserve scrutiny.
Suppose that a man is required to execute another on the basis of his, the executor's, religious beliefs. If he truly believes in god, and that god's will is that he execute the man who kneels before him then there is a great deal of motivation pushing him towards executing that man. If instead he analyses his beliefs regarding god and realises that he can't demonstrate that god exists (or doesn't exist) and that he can't be sure that his chosen religious belief system represents god's will... and so on, then I suspect he will have to think a great deal more about his decision to execute the man. Blind acceptance of anything which parades as truth can harm others (though it won't necessarily be the case) and as such I think we have something of a responsibility to screen our beliefs and try and seek the truth where possible, or at least an approximation of the truth. I could keep on ranting but I'm sure you see my point.
spadijer said:
Yeah, all of the above. Especially, the ubermensch. And so what if it "boils down to rhetoric and equivocation". Well, embrace rhetoric, become eccentric! I don't get how people can possibly look at this debate and not encompass rhetoric as the driving force behind reason and logic itself. I'm disturbed by this.
Rhetoric:
I'm not sure I'm entirely clear on what you mean by 'rhetoric being the driving force beind logic'. On one reading you might be saying that logic eventually boils to rhetoric, which I would say is somewhat true and somewhat false. At some point, when trying to justify logic, one comes to a point where they say 'accept it because I compel you to do so' (e.g. trying to make an argument for accepting modus ponens). On the other hand, logic (in it's classical form at least) works in the real world. We can use it to predict - to come to logical conclusions - and find that it works whenever our orignal propositions/assumptions are true (another case for seeking the truth). The empirical uses of logic provide us with a different kind of compelling argument.
As to embracing rhetoric, I love rhetoric for it's beauty and elegance but I find, at times, that it can obscure the truth. Indeed, rhetoric allows one to make an 'argument' which is at once totally convincing and totally vacuous. This debate makes me think of Plato's dialogue
Gorgias in which Socrates has a debate with the finest rhetoricians in Athens. While Socrates pisses me off a bit, as he often does, I still it is reasonable for him to claim that rhetoric acts to pervert the truth and create false belief in others through artful language (I think it's Polus who talks about using rhetoric to manipulate others). What interests me most is the unity between these topics of rhetoric and truth. The fact that you don't seem to value truth as highly as I do goes a long way to explain why you are relatively unbothered by rhetoric. Nonetheless, I maintain that rhetoric is a powerful tool for perverting the truth - a good example of this is the lobyist in the film
Thank you for smoking... alternatively you could just listen to a
poitician.