Sunday, October 27, 2019

Act

11.3.19
Thandie Newton

Act for
the Moral Code
为道德守则行事 
Wèi dàodé shǒuzé xíngshì
道徳規範のために行動する
Dōtoku kihan no tame ni kōdō suru
ps119.129
Actum de moribus conveniebat

Act in a way that you could will as law 
for the benefit of overcoming error or flaw.

The context for law is legal polity
in defense of national autonomy.

Naturalism offers no reason for ethical principles.
It colludes to delude the acceptance of false victuals
as typically invincible.

The corruption of leadership was declared as the cause for rebellion.
Tyranny was the most pronounced claim for the benefit of the hellion.

It was proclaimed as factually actual despite evidence to the contrary.
Conservative reform was viewed as too legendary and arbitrary.

Bureaucratic benefit from the repression of counter-attack
was implied as the reason for government in fact.

The social contract was broken 
to achieve representation that was less than token.

The bureaucrat assumed a position as the power
that grew in the repression of people by the hour.

The equation of perfection with reality
carries consequence like a swarm of killer bees.

A massive assault is conducted on the senses.
The condition of the body is reduced to autonomic defenses. 

Progress is constrained to the leap from rags to riches.
The state of the nation is left to wallow in vicious twitches.

Restitution is a form of reparation
that compensates for damage prior to restoration.

One official offered restitution
to the crowd to request his absolution.

The chief marvel for legal polity is happiness in freedom
without excess in success with respect for treason.

I look to the design of nature as the plan for government.
The economy of the household is for the production of wonderment.

Education in the classics leads to a stately mind
when you scour definitions for the analytical find.

Term limits for executive authority don't promote conservative reform.
The subordination of profit to demand has been pressed like a storm.

The larger body declares loyalty to their cause.
The leader is expected to concede without pause.

When the word for reform goes forth in historical context
it makes sense for the simple conservation of content in the contest.

I open my mouth to exhale
that reason with joy may prevail.

The commandment to love automates thought for duty
to increase speed in performance for constitutional beauty.

Probability is a logical inference for application in science with the measure of math. 
It has grown toward the prediction of self-reliance as the reasonable path.

Analytic philosophy analyzes the logic of statements
for scientific measure in application for various places.

The preservation of culture in conservation by design
allows for surplus in production as naturally benign.

The laws of arithmetic are analytic judgments
drawn from a priori abundance.

The application of arithmetic to physical science
raises calculation to the level of deductive appliance.

Surplus is sold to feed consumer need or desire
that the royal priesthood of believers may believe in what's higher. 

Tower Bridge, London

The love of our God is the highest of powers.
It feeds our delight in the beauty of flowers and towers.

Turn to mercy when pressured to cruelty in punishment.
Divine correction is designed to renew faith in the covenant.

I will let no iniquity have dominion over me.
My footsteps will walk in your word as the way for me to see.

The light of your word will deliver me from oppression.
I will keep your commandments to avoid moral regression.

Your countenance will shine while I study your law
as it has in the past when you helped me to overcome my flaws.

My eyes have shed anxiety in the stream of my tears
for those who denied the value of constitutional peers.

Look at the proud. Their spirit is not right.
The righteous live by faith in what is right about sight.

May you fulfill by faith every good resolve in the name of Jesus
that Christ may be glorified in you by the grace of God for your freedom.

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Pe
Pe is the 17th letter of the Semitic Abjads.

It represents the number 80 in the alphanumeric code known as gematria. Its final form represents 800 but this is rarely used.

The Pe Kefulah is written as a small Pe scribed within a larger. When the letter is written in the form of a Doubled Pe, this adds a layer of deeper meaning to the Biblical text. This atypical letter appears in Torah scrolls, manuscripts and some modern printed Hebrew Bibles.

Mirabilia
Marvels

129 Your decrees are wonderful;
therefore I obey them with all my heart.
130 When your word goes forth it gives light;
it gives understanding to the simple.
131 I open my mouth and pant;
I long for your commandments.
132 Turn to me in mercy,
as you always do to those who love your Name.
133 Steady my footsteps in your word;
let no iniquity have dominion over me.
134 Rescue me from those who oppress me,
and I will keep your commandments.
135 Let your countenance shine upon your servant
and teach me your statutes.
136 My eyes shed streams of tears,
because people do not keep your law.

Sadhe
Justus es, Domine
You are righteous

137 You are righteous, O Lord,
and upright are your judgments.
138 You have issued your decrees
with justice and in perfect faithfulness.
139 My indignation has consumed me,
because my enemies forget your words.
140 Your word has been tested to the uttermost,
and your servant holds it dear.
141 I am small and of little account,
yet I do not forget your commandments.
142 Your justice is an everlasting justice
and your law is the truth.
143 Trouble and distress have come upon me,
yet your commandments are my delight.
144 The righteousness of your decrees is everlasting;
grant me understanding, that I may live.

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The name Habakkuk means 'embrace' in Hebrew. He was the 8th of the 12 minor prophets. He embraced the truth of faith.

He identified himself as "Habakkuk the prophet." (Hab.1:1; Hab.3:1) The term indicates that he was a professional who was trained in the Law of Moses in a school.

Samuel's leadership of a group of prophets is recorded in 1 Sam. 19:20. His death is approximated at 1010 BCE. The event was placed not far from Jerusalem. Ramah is located 8 km (5 mi.)north of the capital.

Elisha's involvement with another group was cited in 2 Kings 4:38.His death is dated to 832 BCE in Samaria or the northern kingdom of Israel.

It is conceivable that there was community level cultural organization that featured concern for the salvation of Jerusalem in Judah as the province for Judaic law in the time of Habakkuk.

He may have also been a priest involved in the worship of God in the temple. He gave instructions to the choir director on his stringed instruments (Hab.3:19).

Temple prophets are described in 1 Chronicles 25:1 as using lyres, harps and cymbals. The instruction to the choir director indicates that Habakkuk may have been a Levite involved in the orchestration of music in the Temple.

The date of the book is associated with the references to an imminent Babylonian invasion (Hab. 1:6; 2:1; 3:16). The event took place on a small scale in 605 BCE. It was before the total destruction of Judah’s capital city, Jerusalem, in 586 BCE.

Habakkuk likely prophesied in the first five years of Jehoiakim’s reign (609–598 BCE).

The book of Habakkuk consists of 5 oracles about the Chaldeans (Babylonians) in 3 chapters. The Chaldean rise to power is dated circa 612 BC, it is assumed he was active about that time. This made him an early contemporary of Jeremiah and Zephaniah.

The final chapter of his book is a song, it is sometimes assumed that he was a member of the tribe of Levi, which served as musicians in Solomon's Temple.

The first chapter is a complaint about the success of evil men. The second chapter is testimony attributed to God for divine action. Habakkuk was told to write his vision on a tablet so a runner could read it.

The message that the just will live by faith is important in Christian thought. It is used in Romans, Galatians and Hebrews as the starting point for the concept of faith. 

Habakkuk 2:1-4 

I will stand at my watch-post
and station myself on the rampart.
I will keep watch to see what he will say to me
and what he will answer concerning my complaint.

Then the LORD answered me and said:
Write the vision.
Make it plain on tablets
so a runner may read it.
There is still a vision for the appointed time.
It speaks of the end and does not lie.
Wait for it.
It will surely come.
Look at the proud!
Their spirit is not right.
The righteous live by faith.

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Look at the proud. Their spirit is not right.
The righteous live by faith in what is right about sight.

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2 Thessalonians
Map

Thessalonica was the second city in Europe where Paul helped to create an organized Christian community. The city is located on the Thermaic Gulf at the northwest corner of the Aegean Sea.
It was founded around 315 BCE by the King Cassander of Macedon. It was located on or near the site of the ancient town of Therma and 26 other local villages.

He named it after his wife Thessalonike. She was princess of Macedonia as daughter of Philip II and a half-sister of Alexander the Great. The city retained its own autonomy and parliament in the kingdom. It evolved to become the most important city in Macedonia.

Thessalonica was made the capital of the Roman province of Macedonia after the fall of the kingdom in 168 BCE. It became a free city of the Roman Republic under Mark Antony in 41 BCE.

It grew to be an important trade-hub located on the Via Egnatia, the road connecting Dyrrhachium with Byzantium. The location facilitated trade between Thessaloniki and great centers of commerce such as Rome and Byzantium.

Thessaloniki also lay at the southern end of the main north-south route through the Balkans along the valleys of the Morava and Axios river valleys. This linked the Balkans with the rest of Greece. The city became the capital of one of the four Roman districts of Macedonia.

It came to be named the capital of all the Greek provinces of the Roman Empire because of the city's importance in the Balkan peninsula.

It became one of the early centers for Christianity around 50 CE during the time of the Roman Empire.  Paul the Apostle visited this city's chief synagogue on three Sabbaths and sowed the seeds for Thessaloniki's first Christian church while on his second missionary journey.

Two letters attributed to Paul were sent to the new church at Thessaloniki. These epistles are preserved in the Biblical canon as First and Second Thessalonians. Some scholars hold that the First Epistle to the Thessalonians is the first written book of the New Testament.

The Thessalonicans grew concerned over whether those who had died would share in the parousia sometime after the first letter had been written. They were faced with a false teaching that said that Christ had already returned.

Modern biblical scholarship is divided on whether the epistle was written by Paul; many scholars reject its authenticity based on what they see as differences in style and theology between this and the first epistle.

2 Thessalonians 1:11-12

We always pray for you asking that God will make you worthy of his call and will fulfill by his power every good resolve and work of faith to the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you and you in him according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.

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May you fulfill by faith every good resolve in the name of Jesus
that Christ may be glorified in you by the grace of God for your freedom.

================


Luke 19
Sycamore Tree, Jericho

The 19th chapter in the gospel of Luke begins in Jericho. Jesus was on his way to Jerusalem.
The city is located in the Jordan Valley. The Jordan River lies to the east and Jerusalem to the west.

Copious springs in and around the city have attracted human habitation for thousands of years. Archaeologists have unearthed the remains of more than 20 successive settlements in Jericho, the first of which dates back to about 9000 BCE.

Jericho is described in the Hebrew Bible as the "city of palm trees" (Deuteronomy 34:3). The road from Jericho to Jerusalem winds through the badlands of the Judean wilderness. The route climbs more than 3,000 feet in less than 20 miles. The location has an elevation that is 825 ft. below sea level. It is the lowest city in the world.

The location was established as a garden city by the Hasmoneans in the 2d century after the rule of the Seleucid, Antiochus IV was rejected.

The Hasmonean dynasty was from a priestly group (kohanim) from the tribe of Levi. They rose to power in the Maccabean Revolt (167-160 BCE). They became independent from 110 BCE. They ruled until the Roman invasion in 63 BCE.

Two of the great grandson's of the first king in the line became involved in a proxy war between Julius Caesar and Pompey after the Roman occupation. The deaths of Pompey (48 BCE) and Caesar (44 BCE) temporarily relaxed Rome's grip on the Hasmonean kingdom.

There was a brief reassertion of autonomy backed by the Parthian Empire. This short independence was rapidly crushed by the Romans under Mark Antony and Octavian.

The Hasmonean dynasty had survived for 103 years before yielding to the Herodian dynasty in 37 BCE. The installation of Herod the Great (an Idumean) as king made Judea a Roman client state and marked the end of the Hasmonean rule.  Herod tried to bolster the legitimacy of his reign even then by marrying a Hasmonean princess, Mariamne.

Herod the Great had died in 4 BCE. The kingdom was divided as a tetrachy among his sons. Herod Archelaus, son of Herod and Malthace the Samaritan, was given Judea, Edom and Samaria. He ruled for ten years until 6 CE.

Herod Antipas, another son of Herod and Malthace, was made ruler of the Galilee and Perea. He ruled there until he was exiled to Spain by emperor Caligula in 39 CE.

Herod Antipas is the person referenced in the gospels. He played a role in the death of John the Baptist and the trial of Jesus. Pontius Pilate sent Jesus to Antipas for judgment. Antipas sent Jesus back to Pilate's court.

The city of Jericho is remembered for the story in the Book of Joshua. The city has the oldest known protective wall in the world. The story about its destruction was probably a reference to how worn the wall looked at the time that the story was told. 

It was located in the Roman province of Judea. Pilate was the governor when Jesus traveled to the city.

Luke

The gospel tells the story that Zaccheus (Innocent) was the publican for the area. He collected the taxes. He was the chief official.

Tax collectors were known to 'mine' the public for extra money. They could become quite wealthy as a result. The chief among them was most likely the wealthiest.

Clement of Alexandria suggested an identification with Matthew the Apostle.

The lucrative production and export of balsam was centered in Jericho. The product was used as a perfume. Zaccheus was probably quite wealthy as a result.

He was short in stature. He was unable to see Jesus through the crowd (Luke 19:3). He had heard that Jesus had restored sight to the blind there (Matt. 20:30; Mark 10:46; Luke 18:35).

He was so excited to see the Healer that he climbed a sycamore tree along Jesus's path. When Jesus reached the spot he looked up at the man in the tree and addressed him by name.  He invited himself to the tax collector's home. The invitation was honored.

There were those who were present at the banquet who complained about how the rabbi consorted with a tax collector.

Luke 19:8

Zaccheus stood there and said, 'Look, half of my possessions, Lord, I will give to the poor. If I have defrauded anyone of anything, I will pay back four times as much.'

---------------------

Restitution is a form of reparation
that compensates for damage prior to restoration.

The official offered restitution
to the crowd to request his absolution.

================

Probability
Pierre-Simon Laplace (1749-1827)
Thomas Bayes (1701-1761)

Analysis

分析
Chn. Fenxi
Pronunciation
分析
Jpn. Bunseki
분석
Krn. Bunseog

Analytic philosophy analyzes statements for scientific verification in thought.

Chn.    分析哲学分析陈述,以进行思想上的科学验证。
Fēnxī zhéxué fēnxī chénshù, yǐ jìnxíng sīxiǎng shàng de kēxué yànzhèng.

Jpn.    分析哲学は、科学的検証のための発言を分析します。
Bunseki tetsugaku wa, kagaku-teki kenshō no tame no hatsugen o bunseki shimasu.

Krn.     분석 철학은 과학적 검증을위한 진술을 분석합니다.
Bunseog cheolhag-eun gwahagjeog geomjeung-eul-wihan jinsul-eul bunseoghabnida.

Analytic Philosophy

The term for the field refers to certain developments in early 20th-century philosophy that were the historical antecedents to the current practice. Central figures in this historical development are Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, G.E. Moore, Gottlob Frege and the logical positivists.

Analytic philosophy differs from the empiricism of Locke, Berkeley and Hume in the incorporation of mathematics for the development of a powerful logical technique. Frege had proposed that there was a logic to arithmetic. He was in agreement with Hobbes that this logic was a tool to guage agreement or disagreement with proposals for change in precedent.

Russell affirmed that such a procedure could be part of that which was scientific in public discourse. It was an argument for forensics with a certain admission of limitation to arithmetic at least until the public were to grow in mathematical literacy.

He developed mathematics as a system in British education that could divert liberal excess in government expenditure at public expense or grow in knowledge with the addition of elaboration or discovery.

The logical-positivists posited that there are not any specifically philosophical facts. The object of philosophy is the logical clarification of thoughts. Traditional foundationalism considered the discipline to be a special science. It was the discipline of knowledge that investigated the fundamental reasons and principles for anything.

Analytic philosophers have considered their inquiries as subordinate to those of the natural sciences. This attitude began with John Locke. He described his work as that of an "underlabourer" to the achievements of natural scientists such as Newton. The most influential advocate of the continuity of philosophy with science was Willard Van Orman Quine during the 20th century.

This particular aspect of the orientation encounters problems when science is defined as a way to deceive the public into the acceptance of expertise as the sole basis for authority. It lends itself to bureaucratic implementation.


George Boole established the means to include probability into objective analysis. It was a necessary step in the direction of the development of the larger school.

Boole was a largely self-taught English mathematician, philosopher and logician. Most of his short career was spent as the first professor of mathematics at Queen's College, Cork in Ireland.

He worked in the fields of differential equations and algebraic logic. He is best known as the author of The Laws of Thought (1854). Boolean logic is credited with laying the foundations for the information age.

Boole reduced the four propositional forms of Aristotle's logic to formulas in the form of equations. This was a revolutionary idea by itself. The four propositional forms could then be logically expressed as universal affirmation, universal negation, particular affirmation or particular negation.

Universal affirmation: All S are P.
U. negation: No S are P.
Particular affirmation: Some S are P.
P. negation: Some S are not P. 

Second, Boole argued that Aristotle’s rules of inference (the “perfect syllogisms”) must be supplemented by rules for solving equations.

Third, Boole’s system could handle multi-term propositions and arguments whereas Aristotle could handle only two-termed subject-predicate propositions and arguments.

Boole could be viewed as typically precocious in his Irish mindset. He didn't limit his goals to arithmetic, logic and science for public discourse. He looked to Calculus as a way to correct the limitations of logic as defined by Aristotle.

George Boole (1815-1864)
The Laws of Thought (1854)
Text

"The history of the theory of Probabilities, on the other hand, has presented far more of that character of steady growth which belongs to science. In its origin the early genius of Pascal, in its maturer stages of development the most recondite of all the mathematical speculations of Laplace, -were directed to its improvement; to omit here the mention of other names scarcely less distinguished than these. As the study of Logic has been remarkable for the kindred questions of Metaphysics to which it has given occasion, so that of Probabilities also has been remarkable for the impulse which it has bestowed upon the higher departments of mathematical science."

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Probability is a logical inference for application in science with the measure of math.
It has grown toward the prediction of self-reliance as the reasonable path.

Analytic philosophy analyzes the logic of statements
for scientific measure in application for various places.

===================


Gottlob Frege (1848-1925) was a German philosopher, mathematician and logician. He worked as a professor of mathematics at the University of Jena. He concentrated on the philosophy of language, logic and mathematics.

He is understood by many to be the father of analytic philosophy. Giuseppe Peano (1858–1932) and Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) introduced his work to later generations of philosophers.

His contributions include the development of modern logic and work in the foundations of mathematics. His book the Foundations of Arithmetic is the seminal text for the symbolic representation of mathematics as logic.

His work represents a fundamental break between the contemporary approach and the older, Aristotelian tradition. He invented modern quantificational logic, created the first fully axiomatic system for logic complete in its treatment of propositional and first-order logic and  represented the first treatment of higher-order logic.

He developed an analysis of quantified statements and formalized the notion of a ‘proof’ in terms that are still accepted today. He demonstrated that one could use his system to resolve theoretical mathematical statements in terms of simpler logical and mathematical notions.

He is often called the founder of modern logic and is sometimes even heralded as the father of analytic philosophy.

The Foundations of Arithmetic was published in 1884. He refutes other theories and develops his own theory of numbers.  He makes a distinction between particular numerical statements such as 1 + 1 = 2 and general statements such as a + b = b + a. The latter are statements that are as true of numbers as the former.

A definition of the concept of number is called into question. Numbers function in language  as adjectives. The drawers of a desk can be described in terms of color or number. The drawers are brown or 5 in number.

That the drawers are objects with a color is an observation drawn from the external world. It is a visually perceptive observation. Every object has the same color, but each drawer is not 5. Color is visual. Number is conceptual.

The sentence "the number of horses in the barn is four" means that four objects fall under the concept 'horse in the barn.' He explains our grasp of numbers through a contextual definition of the operation of cardinality. The number is a count of the objects.  (Nx:Fx).

He constructs the content of a judgment involving numerical identity by relying on Hume's principle. This states that the number of F's equals the number of G's, if and only if F and G are equinumerous. There is in one-one correspondence between different objects. Frege rejects this definition because it doesn't fix the truth value of identity statements.

He argues that numbers are concepts that assert something about an object. He defines numbers as extensions of unit concepts. 'The number of F's' is defined as the extension of the concept G as a concept that is equinumerous to F.

The concept in question leads to an equivalence class of all concepts that have the number F. Zero is the extension of the concept of being not self-identical.

The number of this concept is the extension of the concept of all concepts that have no objects falling under them.  One is the number of the extension that is identical with 0. 0 and 0 alone falls into this concept. This is the basic foundation for the monas as the universal unity.

Zero is the foundation for the theory of numbers. It is uniquely conceptual insofar as it doesn't represent a corresponding identification in unity with objects.

Gottlob Frege (1848-1925)
The Foundations for Arithmetic (1884)
Text

"I hope I may claim in the present work to have made it probable that the laws of arithmetic are analytic judgments and consequently a priori. Arithmetic thus becomes simply a development of logic, and every proposition of arithmetic a law of logic, albeit a derivative one. To apply arithmetic in the physical sciences is to bring logic to bear on observed facts; calculation becomes deduction." (p.99)

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The laws of arithmetic are analytic judgments
drawn from a priori abundance.

The application of arithmetic to physical science
makes raises calculation to the level of deductive appliance.

==================


Bertrand Russell was a British logician. He is given credit as one of the founders of analytic philosophy. He was preceded by Gottlob Frege, contemporary with G. E. Moore and followed by Ludwig Wittgenstein.

He led the British "revolt against idealism" in the early 20th century. He wrote Principia Mathematica with A.N. Whitehead to create a logical basis for mathematics. His work has had a considerable influence on mathematics, logic, set theory, linguistics, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, computer science and philosophy.

He expressed agreement with socialism, but he disagreed with the idealism of Hegel and the theory according to Marx. He saw the war against Hitler's Germany as a necessary evil. He was critical of Stalinist totalitarianism. He was like Dewey in the strong association between democracy and socialist economic theory.

It is likely that he viewed capitalism as the motive force for imperialism and war.
Russell's basic idea for defending logicism was like that of Frege. Numbers may be identified with classes of classes.

Number-theoretic statements may be explained in terms of quantifiers and identity. The number 1 would be identified with the class of all unit classes, the number 2 with the class of all two-membered classes and so on. Statements such as "there are two books" would be recast as "there is a book, x, and there is a book, y; x is not identical to y".

It followed that numbers could be explained in terms of the operations of set theory. The union, intersection, difference of sets organized numbers in fields for analysis. The complement illustrated that which was outside the sets in a larger frame.

Russell is remembered for his work using first-order logic.  First order logic introduces the use of variables to propositions. It shows that a broad range of denoting phrases could be recast in terms of predicates and quantified variables.

He is also remembered for his emphasis upon the importance of logical form for the resolution of many related philosophical problems. Statements could be expanded or contracted depending upon purpose.

Spinoza's moral code presented a set of axiomatic statements to define the code. There was allowance for metaphysical expression. The statements allowed for the analysis of the morality that was being advocated. They were objects of language with which to agree or disagree with stated reason.

The difficulty of certain expressions recommended translation into easier language. Spinoza had equated reality with perfection. He subordinated the good to the real with the equation.

The proof of perfection was only dependent upon that which was determined to be real. It was like saying that whatever happened took place because it was willed to be so by God.

It rules out free will as a factor in the producton of goodness or evil. It is a kind of fatalism packaged as naturalism. This was adopted by Locke in his proposal that the state of nature was perfect freedom. Freedom in Locke's view allowed for slavery and colonial exploitation for global domination.

When the success of the British empire is identified with liberal power rather than the protection of legal trade, the goodness of the commonwealth is diminished by the absurdity.

Spinoza would develop his argument for the love of God. He argued the love was connected with the affections of the body. The affections are innately ordered to cherish the love. It ought to occupy the mind above everything else.

Descartes had followed Spinoza in time. Both were rational. Leibniz was as well. The Dutch bet was the kind of result that stemmed from the Apollonian sense of order.

The government official was the business agent. The business agent had to be a government official.
Private property was a subordinated clause to official regulation. Private property didn't have a real existence of its own.  It was only a manifestation of support for the election and bureaucratic perpetuation of the official.

Russell was more clever in his refutation. He attacked the equation of reality with perfection as the logical foundation for the rest of the argument. He stated that it would be just as easy to equate green cheese with reality. He found the proof that the love of God occupies the mind above all else to be false.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970)
Spinoza's Moral Code (1907)
Text: Review of Spinoza

"Much of the moral teaching of the Ethics, being inspired by a general tolerant largeheartedness, remains valid, whether we accept or reject the metaphysic by which it is “proved”; but the more interesting and characteristic portions stand or fall with that metaphysic, and remain unconvincing to readers who are not pantheists."

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The equation of perfection with reality
carries the implication of a swarm of killer bees.

A massive assault is conducted on the senses.
The condition of the body is reduced to autonomic defenses.

Progress is constrained to leap from rags to riches.
The state of the nation is left to wallow in vicious twitches.

==================

Socialism and the liberal power that it endorses are the entities that ought to be refuted as false. Education is a largely a non-profit enterprise by legal definition in the US.

There are privately funded schools that compete with the tax support for the non-profits, but there is a strong sense of association with state regulation as an expression of official public ownership that lends itself to socialism as an interpretation.

While standards have to be set and observed to test to make sure that student achievement in learning the language is sufficient for continued financial support from the public as a source, agreement with the standards has to be determined at local levels with the oversight of the district.

The importance of using the incentive of a good report as motivation for student achievement cannot be overstated. The harmful effect of group punishment by a no pass policy as the replacement for incentive doesn't justify the continuation of the policy.

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Bertrand Russell: Biography with Links to Resources
Online Books and Articles by Bertrand Russell

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Certain enthusiasts saw Herbert Spenser's work as the potential to tame Darwin's aggressive naturalism. G.E. Moore was critical of both Spenser and Darwin. 


G.E. Moore
b. 11.4.1873 Upper Norwood, London, United Kingdom
d. 10.24.1958  Cambridge, UK (Cambridge is 102 km (63 mi.) north of London)

G.E. Moore was an important British philosopher in the first half of the 20th century.He was one of the trinity at Trinity College Cambridge whom made Cambridge one of the centers for analytical philosophy.

The others were Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein. The group was associated with Gottlob Frege. Russell had objected to the fifth law, but respected the logic of mathematics for analysis.

Moore's work embraced themes and concerns that reach beyond a single philosophical program. He argued against hedonism as meta-ethical naturalism in Principia Ethica.

Herbert Spencer attached an ethical view to Darwin's evolution. His definition of both terms was vague.

Moore wrote, "Mr Spencer's connection of Evolution with Ethics seems to shew the influence of the naturalistic fallacy..."

Much like the utility of happiness is sustained with favor for pleasure to reduce pain, the value of freedom favors that which sustains the best choice.

Choice that selects force with the threat of damage to exploit accident does not respect freedom for others. It is not sustainable socially. It is not favored as natural selection.

Upper Norwood, London

The name "Norwood" is a contraction of "North Wood".
Upper Norwood is an area of south-east London within the London Boroughs of Bromley, Croydon, Lambeth and Southwark. It is north of Croydon and is synonymous with the Crystal Palace.

The area is one of the highest in London. It was occupied for centuries by the Great North Wood, an extension of natural oak forest which formed a wilderness close to the southern edge of the ever-expanding city of London.

Upper Norwood is situated along the London clay ridge known as Beulah Hill. Most housing dates from the 19th and 20th centuries. There are large detached properties along the ridge and smaller, semi-detached and terraced dwellings on the slopes. 

G.E. Moore

George Edward Moore was born in Upper Norwood, Croydon, London on November 4, 1873. His parents were Dr. Daniel Moore and Henrietta Sturge.

His grandfather was the author Dr. George Moore. His eldest brother was Thomas Sturge Moore, a poet, writer and engraver who worked as an illustrator for W.B. Yeats.

He was the middle child of the 7 children that Daniel had with Henrietta. Daniel had a daughter from another marriage. The daughter was the oldest child.

His father taught him reading, writing and music. His mother taught him French. He was more than competent as a pianist and composer. He was enrolled at Dulwich College when he was 8 years old. He studied Greek, Latin, French, German and mathematics.

He entered Trinity College Cambridge at 18 where he started in Classics. He made the acquaintance there of Bertrand Russell who was two years ahead of him.

He also met  J. M. E. McTaggart who was then a charismatic young Philosophy Fellow. The two friends encouraged him to add the study of Philosophy.

Moore was impressed by the conversations that were derived from Plato's work. The significance of the discussion made the study relevant for contemporary society.

The dialog that was discussed wasn't just an exercise in understanding words on a page from an irrelevant historical time and place. It became an example of how logic in dialog and dialectic could shed light on  the analysis of modern issues.

Russell convinced Moore to study Moral Science, a division of philosophy in the British University system. He graduated in 1896 with a First Class degree in Classics.

He turned his energies towards attempting to follow in the footsteps of McTaggart and Russell by winning a ‘Prize’ Fellowship at Trinity College. The prize would enable him to continue the study of philosophy there.

Moore acknowledged the influence of McTaggert. He had followed the work of F.H. Bradley into British idealism. When he made his first attempt to win a Prize Fellowship at Trinity in 1897 he submitted a dissertation on ‘The Metaphysical Basis of Ethics’ in which he acknowledged his indebtedness to Bradley. He presented an idealist ethical theory.

One element of this theory is what he called ‘the fallacy involved in all empirical definitions of the good’.  This theory essentially rejected any definition of goodness as derived from empirical experience.

Empiricism suffered from an excessive emphasis on induction. People were encouraged to entertain perception with simple ideas. Complex ideas were to be left to liberal power in elected government.

Idealism was characterized by excessive subjectivity in the subject and object distinction. The two together blocked agreement on essential matters in the elected legislation.

The Renaissance had revived the consideration of republic as a form of government. The revival refused to consider monarchy as a form.

It threatened to prevent the modern republic from advance into improvement as a governed state.

Liberal power declared election as superior to monarchy. The royal line of succession was almost abolished in Great Britain. Slavery came to be tolerated in colonial expansion by parliamentarian influence. It wasn't allowed in the United Kingdom.

The Abolition of the Slave Trade Act was passed in 1807. Slavery was abolished for the British empire in 1833. The 13th amendment to the US Constitution abolished the institution in 1865.

The United Kingdom negotiated a number of treaties to abolish the trade and the institution. The Brussels Conference was an assembly of 17 nations in 1890. It included the US and the UK. The participating nations enacted an agreement to abolish the trade on land and sea.

The League of Nations established a convention to suppress slavery and the slave trade in 1926. This convention was pressed globally. The Slavery Convention of 1926 was last ratified in Kazakhstan in 2008. Slavery was criminalized in Chad in 2017.

While slavery wasn't protected by legislation through this period. It was not outlawed. Locke had expressed personal distaste, but conceded to the institution as a part of empire, if not elected government. Leading monarchs had written against slavery.

The right to vote was given to people of color in the US before it was granted to women. Women could vote when the 19th amendment was ratified in 1920.  The UK allowed women to be elected to Parliament in 1918.

This was before women were given the right to vote in  the Representation of the People Act on 1928. Women in France weren't given the right to vote until 1945.

Naturalism had been a development from Empiricism. It was supported by Darwin's theory of evolution. The Origin of Species was published in 1859. 

Moore's criticism of goodness in empiricism was the precursor to his famous claim in Principia Ethica that there is a ‘naturalistic fallacy’ in all naturalist definitions of goodness.

A substantial part of his early dissertation was devoted to a critical discussion of Kant's moral philosophy.  Moore endorsed the kind of idealism advanced by Bradley in his general approach and conclusions, but he was already critical of Kant's conception of practical reason.

He argued that Kant's use of this conception blurred the distinction between psychology and truth. The psychological faculty of making judgments and inferences obscured the perception of the ‘true and objective’. Moore maintained that the distinction cannot be removed.

Kant's conception of morality as founded on a priori principles of practical reason was untenable. This line of thought was extended to a general criticism of Kant's conception of the a priori. It was this generalization that Moore undertook in his successful 1898 dissertation.

He identified his previous enthusiasm for Bradley's idealism as not well founded. He turned decisively against idealist philosophy both in its Kantian and Bradleian forms. He succeeded in 1898 on his second attempt.

He came to reject the idealist philosophy of Bradley and McTaggart, but he held that their criticisms of empiricism as represented by J. S. Mill's philosophy were sound. He carried this objection to empiricism forward into his mature philosophy.

He argued that truth differs in no respect from the reality to which it was supposed merely to correspond. The truth that I exist differs in no respect from the corresponding reality of my existence.

He matured as a dynamic young philosopher over the next 6 years. He began to act as a “professional”.  He participated in groups such as the Aristotelian Society and the Moral Sciences Club. His work was published. Many of his best known and most influential works date from this period. 

He actually led Russell away from the idealism of McTaggart and others. Absolute Idealism was then dominant in Britain. This would prove to be the first step toward the rise of analytic philosophy.

Moore left Cambridge for a period of 7 years, but he continued to write. The basic theme of his paper, ‘The Refutation of Idealism’ (1903), was that sense-experience is an extension of objective truth. The strong distinction between the subject and its objects which we have encountered in connection with meaning divides perception from reality.

He concentrated here on the case of a ‘sensation of blue’ and maintained that this experience is a kind of ‘diaphanous’ consciousness or awareness of blue which is not a ‘content’ of experience at all. It is something real whose existence is not dependent on experience.

His common sense realism was set against ethical naturalism in Principia Ethica (1903).

"My objections to Naturalism are then, in the first place, that it offers no reason at all, far less any valid reason, for any ethical principle whatever; and in this it already fails to satisfy the requirements of Ethics, as a scientific study. But in the second place I contend that, though it gives a reason for no ethical principle, it is a cause of the acceptance of false principles—it deludes the mind into accepting ethical principles, which are false; and in this it is contrary to every aim of Ethics." (p.20)

G. E. Moore
Principia Ethica (1903)
Ch. 1: The Subject-Matter of Ethics
Text

------------------------

Naturalism offers no reason for ethical principles.
It colludes to delude the acceptance of false victuals
as typically invincible.

==================

He wrote Ethics in 1912. His work promoted a view that has come to be called Ideal Utilitarianism. He argued that there is no important difference in meaning between concepts like “duty”, “right” or “virtue” and “expedient” or “useful”.

Duty selects pleasant experience in order to maintain happiness with goodness. Bentham's bent was against the legislation of asceticism. Slavery was an imposition acetic rigor on the enslaved.

Even though there wasn't written legislation that declared it legal, the need to outlaw it became apparent with the greatest happiness principle. The greatest number of people included the population of slaves.

The utility of treaties against the trade and institution became apparent. The prohibition of alcohol was to become an example of legislation that imposed ascetic abstinence on others.

The right to vote was extended to women and people of color as included in the greatest number. The definition for republic was revised for the modern age.

Ideal utilitarianism posited that the definition for goodness or happiness is not restricted to the experience of pleasure. Actions should be ordered to those states of affairs possessing the highest degree of good. It could be directed toward an ideal state in this way. 

Moore lived in Edinburgh and Richmond, Surrey after he left London. He worked independently on various philosophical projects.

He returned to Cambridge in 1911 as a lecturer in Moral Science. He remained there for the majority of his career and his life.

Russell  and Whitehead were finishing off their massive project of exhibiting the logical foundations of mathematics , Principia Mathematica, by the time Moore returned to his lectureship there. 

Moore was one of the first people to grasp that Russell's new logical theory was an essential tool for philosophy even though he was neither a mathematician nor a logical theorist.

Propositions were defined as the ‘objects’ of thought. This definition provided the object that was to be analyzed.

Moore earned a Litt.D. in 1913. He married Dorothy Ely in 1916 and together had two sons: the poet Nicholas Moore, and composer Timothy Moore. He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1918.

He became editor of Mind, the leading British philosophical journal, in 1921. He was chosen as James Ward's successor as Professor of Philosophy and Logic at Cambridge in 1925. 

These two appointments confirmed his position as the most highly respected British philosopher of the time. When Wittgenstein returned to Cambridge after 1929, the college became the most important center of philosophy in the world.

Moore occupied that position until 1939. When he retired he was succeeded by Wittgenstein. Moore was a visiting professor at several universities in the United States from 1940 to 1944.
When he retired as the editor of Mind in 1944, it marked the end of the golden age of Cambridge philosophy. 

He died in Cambridge on October 24, 1958.


George Moore
S. 乔治·摩尔
T. 喬治·摩爾

乔 Qiao  stately       喬  kyo    high         Jyo  じょ-   ジョ-      Jo    조  article                           
治  zhi     govern     治  ji        reign         ji     じ          ジ         ji    지  g         
摩  Mo    scour        摩  ma     rub            Mu  む-       ム-        Mo  무 radish             
尔  er       you          爾  ni       you            a      あ         ア         eo    어  uh   

------------------------

Education in the classics leads to a stately mind
when you scour definitions for the analytical find.

==================

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Sunday, October 20, 2019

Kiss

10.27.19

India Eisley

Kiss
Bliss
亲吻幸福 
Qīnwěn xìngfú
至福を楽しむ
Shifuku o tanoshimu
ps 65
Oscula beato

The sky is moist with air.
The courage of conviction has to be fair.

The image of our sky appears in the night
when the crescent moon is nearly out of sight.

The creativity of darkness approaches its height.


Uranus

Oversight sails on high.
Beauty gives courage an ally.

This temple was not made with human hands.
It was not built on stone. It is closer to sand
but it is on land.

Build a promise like you build a house.
Don't forget your beginning sprouts
with the tests you tout.

Prayer is answered with each test
insofar as you seek to find the best.

Start each task with the end in mind
until the next step is the tie that binds.

Courage for faith 
will pave 
the way 
to say:

"Design will be conceived.
Goals will be achieved.
Stress will be relieved.
Reward will be believed.

"Promises will be kept.
Support will not have left.
Meaning will be what was meant
with respect for the right intent."


The ominous drama of office
will honor the keeping of promise
for the honorable prominence
of love's dominance.

Salvation is a benefit for worship with prayer.
Survival blessed with goodness waits at the height of the spiral stair.

The Pastor was given the strength to deliver his message
that potential believers might hear the essence of the lesson.

The liturgy is a model for concise variation in prayer
that asks for guidance in statecraft to build on the goodness which is there.

The free exercise of religion is adverse to damage to self or others
in the psychology that respects health as a natural wonder.

Leadership is modeled on the image of divinity
when interpretation is viewed in relation to the Trinity.

The administration of the state concerns the law
as the means to reduce human flaw.

The law of the state is inferred from the design of nature
insofar as written intent is recorded by the legislature.

Attachment to asceticism can rise from religion or political inclination
but passion for punishment is harmful to the intent of investigation
or legislation.

From what premises are propositions deduced?
Isn't the evidence of the senses used? 


The dogmas of empiricism are against the inference of principle.
Logical constructs cannot stray from the expression of the clinical. 

Absurd conclusions are drawn from want of method.
The lack of definition results in what you may have expected.

Absurdities proceed from the confusion
in a way that resembles a cerebral contusion.

Forgiveness will be shown.
The drone groan will not have blown
the bliss of this kiss.
The fixable will forge forgiveness
for that which is forgivable in this.

Happiness will happen.
Welcome will be in fashion.
Reliability will protect the hallowed halls
with the brightly painted walls
of faith with fidelity
as the melody
for the clarity
of charity.

We will be satisfied in this house of satisfaction
with attraction for the action of benefaction
as the plan for action that is not just abstraction
with respect for life with liberty and the justice
that will thrust us into august robustness
with justness as our substance.

There is no partiality in impartial judgment.
Statistical inference has to rule on the budget.

Deliverance
will deliver us
from ignorance

as the construction
for destruction
and belief in being lawyers
with destroyers as employers.


Salvation is hope that reaches

by the farthest seas to the nearest beaches.

Mountains were established by the strength of land
being pressed by pressure from beyond and beneath the sands.

The roaring waves of outraged oceans
find solace in silent motions
after the purging surge of roaring rage
releases peace from the pain of the age.

That the funnel forms from the cloud to the ground in a tornado
doesn't rule out lightning as the cause of thunder in the sound before the hailstone.

Not all that is determined through the immediate perception of sense
is known as an inferable expense in the future tense.

Love for life quiets the tumult
from turbulent tides and the lightning bolt.

Merchants commission transportation for materials
and pay employees to sell products in a way defined as managerial.

Carriers are paid to navigate transportation 
with direction drawn from the stars to reach the destination.

Materials are transported from remote places around the globe
to reach the manufacturing industry for production beyond hope.

Machinery automates that which can be automated in labor.
Operators work the machines to produce products you or your neighbor
can favor. 

The morning and evening
shout for joy as gateways for retrieving
the goodness of peace that reaches
to the ultimate end that the awe of awesome teaches.

The power of the sun, wind, water and soil
make grain grow as part of the plan for the least amount of toil.

Irrigation teaches water to reach low
to each place that had not been known
by moisture or had not been shown
the blessing of growth.

Drainage drives deluge into ponds
for holding the drink for the palm's unfolding fronds.

Time is crowned by provision.
Trade, travel and labor's vision
will overflow with wealth in a provident decision
of the economy's revision of monetary division.

The land abounds with boundaries
established by pastures. forest trees,
rivers, lakes, seas, deserts and constructed levies.

Meadows are adorned with flocks.
Gates are secured with locks.

Valleys give growth to grain.
Pleasure is cultivated from pain.

Life sings for the joy of living.
This joy is strengthened with thanksgiving.

Liberty is limited by the law of love for life.
Redemption transforms adversity from strife.

Happy are those who are brought near your courts.
Security transcends the structure of the fort.

Kiss bliss.
Don't dismiss this.
It will help you to dismiss
what the Swiss missed.

Like you build a temple, like you build a statue, you build a vow...

----------------------

Psalm 65
Te decet hymnus
You are praised

To the leader. A Psalm of David. A Song.

1 Praise is due to you,
   O God, in Zion;
and to you shall vows be performed,
2   O you who answer prayer!
To you all flesh shall come.
3 When deeds of iniquity overwhelm us,
   you forgive our transgressions.
4 Happy are those whom you choose and bring near
   to live in your courts.
We shall be satisfied with the goodness of your house,
   your holy temple.
5 By awesome deeds you answer us with deliverance,
   O God of our salvation;
you are the hope of all the ends of the earth
   and of the farthest seas.
6 By your* strength you established the mountains;
   you are girded with might.
7 You silence the roaring of the seas,
   the roaring of their waves,
   the tumult of the peoples.
8 Those who live at earth’s farthest bounds are awed by your signs;
you make the gateways of the morning and the evening shout for joy.
9 You visit the earth and water it,
   you greatly enrich it;
the river of God is full of water;
   you provide the people with grain,
   for so you have prepared it.
10 You water its furrows abundantly,
   settling its ridges,
softening it with showers,
   and blessing its growth.
11 You crown the year with your bounty;
   your wagon tracks overflow with richness.
12 The pastures of the wilderness overflow,
   the hills gird themselves with joy,
13 the meadows clothe themselves with flocks,
   the valleys deck themselves with grain,
   they shout and sing together for joy.

-----------------------

Joel- YHWH believer
Penthuel- Mouth of God

Joel refrained from mentioning the current ruling kings. This omission suggests that the prophecy occurred in the aftermath of Judah’s only ruling queen, Athaliah (d. 835 BCE).

Her young grandson, Joash, succeeded Athaliah upon her death. Joash was too young to rule after her death so the priest Jehoida ruled in his place until he came of age. This presented a caretaking period in the monarchy.

If Joel prophesied during this caretaking period, it would make sense that he mentioned no official king. The book makes ample mention of priests, temple rituals and nations.

Phoenicia, Philistia, Egypt and Edom were prominent in the late ninth century BCE. All of this points to a date prior to 835 BCE or soon after. This makes Joel one of the earliest writing prophets and a  contemporary of the prophet Elisha.

The book focuses its prophetic judgment on the southern kingdom of Judah. There are a number of references to Zion and the temple worship. Joel’s familiarity with this area and the worship in the temple places him in Judah, possibly in the city of Jerusalem.

The book of Joel’s importance to the canon of Scripture stems from its being the first to develop the day of the Lord as a biblical idea that was to be mentioned often. Some of the most striking and specific details in all of Scripture are given. The days cloaked in darkness, a plague of locusts, armies that conquer like consuming fire and the moon turning to blood are listed.

The day is described as a time of divine judgment when consequence is imposed for the infidelity of immorality, but it had an immediate frame of reference for the public with the incidence of forest or building fires.

The eternal flame was a component of the Jewish religious rituals performed in the Tabernacle in the wilderness. Records show that a commandment required a fire to burn continuously upon the Outer Altar.

This flame was included in the temple after it had been built. Modern Judaism continues a similar tradition by having a sanctuary lamp, the ner tamid, always lit above the ark in the synagogue. The flame is a symbolic reminder of tragic events in history.

The eternal fire is a long-standing tradition in many cultures and religions. The Atar was tended by a dedicated priest in ancient Iran. The fire represented the concept of "divine sparks" or Amesha Spenta as understood in Zoroastrianism.

The tragedy of the past is used to predict the repetition in the future as a marker for living a good life in the present. A good life is divinely blessed.

The Day of the Lord

Joel 2:32

Everyone who calls on the name of the LORD will be saved. There shall be those who escape in Mount Zion and Jerusalem. The LORD has said, there will be those whom have been called among the survivors.

-----------------------

Salvation is a benefit for worship with prayer.
Survival blessed with goodness waits at the height of the spiral stair.

=================

Sirah, the Book of Ecclesiasticus, is a collection of ethical instructions. It closely resembles Proverbs, except that, unlike the latter, it is the work of a single author, not an anthology of maxims drawn from various sources.

It is likely that the author compiled statements drawn from a number of sources. Attribution to a single author was a movement towards the recognition of private property as a legal entity.

The premise for the organization of the sources was structured around the definition of wisdom as the fear of God. This fear is the presumed motivation for adherence to Mosaic law.

The maxims are expressed in exact formulas as illustrated by striking images. They show a profound knowledge of the human heart, the disillusionment of experience and sympathy for the poor as subject to oppression from adversity.

Two opposing tendencies are at conflict in the testimony of the author. It's like the conflict expressed in Ecclesiastes. The strength of morality as drawn from the past is at odds with that faith that holds an Epicurean desire for progress.

The prayer of Israel runs through the moral chapters imploring God to gather together his scattered children, to bring to fulfilment the predictions of the Prophets and to have mercy upon his Temple and his people.

The book concludes with a justification for faith in God whose wisdom and greatness are said to be revealed in morality and the history of Israel.

The book was written by the Jewish scribe Ben Sira of Jerusalem sometime between 200 and 175 BCE. He was inspired by his father, Joshua son of Sirach. The name Joshua can be translated as Jesus or Yeshua.

The book was translated into Greek in Egpyt by the author's unnamed grandson. The grandson added a prologue.

This prologue is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets. The date of the text has been the subject of intense scrutiny. The book itself is the largest wisdom book from antiquity to have survived.

Ecclesiasticus 35:15-16

The Lord is the judge.
There is no partiality with him.
He will not show partiality to the poor,
but he will listen to the prayer of one who is wronged.

-----------------------

There is no partiality in impartial judgment.
Statistical inference has to rule on the budget.

=================

The second letter to Timothy has been identified as 1 of 3 pastoral epistles traditionally attributed to the apostle Paul. The epistles are called "pastoral" because they relate to the conduct of church leaders. The leaders are named pastors as a figurative association with shepherds.

The Epistle advocates endurance as the main quality for a preacher of the gospel. Salvation was celebrated as deliverance from attack. The deliverance allowed for persuasion to faith in Christ Jesus as the author of the good news for the love of God in life.

The pastoral letters are different from Paul's other epistles. Scholars since the early 19th century have increasingly seen the pastorals as the work of an unknown student of Paul's doctrine.  They are believed to have been written between 90 and 140. They reflect a church hierarchy that is more organized and defined than the church was in Paul's time.

2 Timothy 4:17-18

The Lord stood by me and gave me strength that through me the message might be fully proclaimed and all the Gentiles might hear it. I was rescued from the lion's mouth. The Lord will rescue me from every evil attack and save me for his heavenly kingdom.

-----------------------

The Pastor was given the strength to deliver his message
that potential believers might hear the essence of the lesson.

=================

The 18th chapter of the gospel of Luke had presented the parable of the widow to encourage persistence in prayer. The parable of the publican and the pharisee promoted humility and concise expression in the persistence.

Luke 18:9-14

Jesus told this parable to some who trusted that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt: 'Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed, "God, I thank you that I am not like other people: thieves, rogues, adulterers or even like this tax-collector. I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all my income."

'The tax-collector stood far off. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, "God be merciful to me, a sinner!" I tell you this man went down to his home justified rather than the other. All who exalt themselves will be humbled, but all who humble themselves will be exalted.'

-----------------------

The liturgy is a model for concise variation in prayer
that asks for guidance in statecraft to build on the goodness which is there.

=================



James wrote True Law about the same time that Richard Hooker had published the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity (1597) to defend the Elizabethan settlement. Hooker had argued that there were good and bad monarchies, democracies and church hierarchies.

Authority was to be based on reason for goodness. He called this goodness piety. The term is interchangeable with prudence or duty. It is one of the cardinal virtues in classical culture. It refers to that which is automated in behavior based on belief. The belief is derived with reason with respect for order in nature.

When authority is wrong, it has to be corrected with right reason. The correction of that policy which was established without regard for the maintenance or improvement of goodness in precedent is a duty. The logic isn't circular. It is dialectical.

James argued that knowledge of God was the basis for allegiance especially in monarchy. Rebellion strengthened error in the Commonwealth. The true ground for allegiance between the monarch and the people was mutual duty. The duty produces the benefit of freedom within the law in relation to the absolute.   

Sound instruction in truth is the true law for that which is free. Faith in God is the guide to sound instruction.

The future king of England provided the context for his argument with respect for the Bible, the kingdom and nature. The Bible was used as a historical reference that established that monarchy was a pattern for government that developed the practice of royal succession by inheritance with birth.

The first king had won monarchy in battle.The story regarding the consumption of his heirs by Saturn illustrated that the  polytheists had trouble with the establishment of a royal line.

Rebellion was viewed as a test of mettle to repeat the establishment of rule by military battle. Each heir was seen as a competitor to the authority of the crown prior to the death of the established monarch.

The Romans had done away with monarchy to insist on victory by popular election, but the term limits for the chief elected position of consul was one year for two consuls. It was an over-correction that resulted in the rise of the emperor as a position that allowed for family succession.

The Patricians who ran the senate did not approve of the innovation. They saw it as an offense to the elected leadership in the republic. They made sure that the emperor was subject to the approval of the Patricians and the Plebians.

The policy was not favorable to foreign relations insofar as monarchies were treated as anachronistic and primitive people were viewed as barbarians. Either were capable of rebellion that could overthrow the Roman extension of rule in empire.

James VI was right to identify rebellion as the cause of error for selection of leadership by royal succession or election by the commonwealth. His treatise established an argument for the use of reason in legislative reform.

James I (1566-1625)
The True Lawe of Free Monarchies (1598)
Text

"First then, I will set downe the trew grounds, whereupon I am to build, out of the Scriptures, since Monarchie is the trew paterne of Diuinitie, as I haue already said: next, from the fundamental Lawes of our owne Kingdome, which nearest must concerne vs: thirdly, from the law of Nature, by diuers similitudes drawne out of the same: and will conclude syne by answering the most waighty and appearing incommodities that can be obiected."

----------------------

"First then, I will set down the true grounds whereupon I am to build out of the Scriptures. Monarchy is the true pattern of Divinity as I have already said. Next, the fundamental Laws of our own Kingdom which are nearest must concern us. Thirdly, the law of Nature is drawn out of the same by divers similitudes. I will conclude soon by answering the most weighty and appearing incommodities that can be objected."

---------------------

Leadership is modeled on the image of divinity
when interpretation is viewed in relation to the Trinity.

The administration of the state concerns the law
as the means to reduce human flaw.

The law of the state is inferred from the design of nature
insofar as written intent is recorded by the legislature.

================



Locke wrote the Two Treatises (1689) after Hobbes' Leviathan (1651), but his work reflected the mindset that insisted that rebellion was the power over the commonwealth.

Locke's argument was a regression even though it came after what Hobbes had published. His work couldn't be published in his name during his life.

Hobbes established the development of James' biblically based argument with the social contract as a constitutional expression.

Locke wrote about the state of nature in terms of perfect freedom. His freedom was defined in terms of the liberal claim to power over the government and the people whom had elected them for representation.

Liberal power was defined in terms of the threat of terrorism or rebellion. Treason could even be defined as the threat of rebellion. The requirement that it was organized against the claim of the tyranny in executive leadership was stipulated as neccessary to control parliament and the monarchy from the House of Commons.

Hobbes defined the same state of nature as the condition of life without government in order to establish the importance of allegiance.

The first ten amendments to the US Bill of Rights were written by James Madison. The language was used in way that demonstrated that the English Bill of Rights was too particular for the power of the Whigs and Locke in expression.

The US Bill was ratified 100 years after the English form. The English Bill came 100 years after James had his work published. The American Bill displayed the ability to learn from experience. It was the first step in the reconstruction of Roman republic for their time.

The Constitutional expression would have to add the right to vote for women and people of color later to make it less particular to the majority political group.

One of the chief elements in the liberal claim to power was the admonition to reckon without words. Aristotle's law of the excluded middle was used to reduce argument for a law against slavery. The slave trade was tolerated for slavery in the colonies.

Slavery was such an offense against that which could be defined as natural law with respect for kingdom or republic in the Bible that it was an absurdity in speech. The liberals were so invested in the establishment of their power that they didn't admit to error much less abusurdity in public speech.

Hobbes felt that it was necessary to establish that right reason admit to the correction of error or absurdity to guide the application of addition or subtraction to the constitutional expression of the social contract.

Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
Leviathan (1651)
Text

"The first cause of Absurd conclusions I ascribe to the want of Method; in that they begin not their Ratiocination from Definitions; that is, from settled significations of their words: as if they could cast account, without knowing the value of the numerall words, One, Two, and Three.

"And whereas all bodies enter into account upon divers considerations, (which I have mentioned in the precedent chapter;) these considerations being diversly named, divers absurdities proceed from the confusion, and unfit connexion of their names into assertions."

----------------------

"The first cause of absurd conclusions I ascribe to the want of method. They don't begin with argument from definitions; that is from settled significations of their words: as if they could could cast account without knowing the value of the numeral words, one, two and three.

"Whereas all bodies enter into account upon drivers considerations, these considerations being diversely named, divers absurdities proceed from the confusion and unfit connection of their names into assertions."

----------------------

Absurd conclusions are drawn from want of method.
The lack of definition results in what you may have expected.

Absurdities proceed from the confusion
in a way that resembles a cerebral contusion.

================

The British line of succession was maintained despite the Whig argument for selection by Parliament.
Anne was the older sister to Mary. Charles II was their father. He had both of them raised as Anglicans.

Mary ascended to the throne first by virtue of the Whig favor for her husband, William of Orange, and her Protestant religion. Mary ruled with William from 1669 until her death in 1694. William remained in power until his death in 1702. They did not produce any children.

Anne was crowned in 1702. She reigned until she died in 1714. She was 49 years of age. She had not had any children.

The Act of Settlement was passed by the English Parliament in 1701.  Parliament did not choose to select the next monarch. They restricted the succession to Protestants.

The Act applied to England and Ireland. Scotland abstained. A strong minority wished to preserve the Stuart dynasty and its right of inheritance to the throne.

The Acts of Union was enacted in 1707. Anne became the Queen of both England and Scotland. The two kingdoms were united with one Parliament.

Most of the House of Stuart was Roman Catholic, but whoever was being considered to succeed to the throne had to be raised Protestant. The monarch would become the head of the Anglican Church.

Sophia of Hanover was the grand-daughter of James I. When Anne died, Sophia's son, George I, became the king. This was the start of the Hanoverian dynasty in Great Britain. There would be two foreign born monarchs before the House produced a British heir.

The Jacobite risings were attempts to restore the House of Stuart to dynastic rule.  The House of Stuart had abdicated the throne when King James II (1633–1701) fled to France in 1688. He and his son, James Francis Stuart, the Prince of Wales, claimed to be the legitimate kings.

They had support from important elements in England. King Louis XIV in France supported them as well. The main issue was religion. Catholic Europe was for the Stuarts.

The Whigs were staunch opponents of Catholicism. Protestant Europe favored them. This included the Dutch and Swiss Reforms, German Protestants and Reformed Protestants and French Protestants.

The Protestant House of Hanover starting with King George I in 1714. They were not especially popular in Britain because they were born in a foreign country.

The Jacobites plotted and attempted seaborne invasions. The major attempts were the Jacobite rising of 1715 and the Jacobite rising of 1745. Both failed to rally significant popular support. The Jacobite defeat at the Battle of Culloden in 1746 ending any realistic hope of a Stuart restoration.

Britain was one of the most prosperous countries in the world by the 1720's. The nation has a set of primary interests that distinguished them from the continental dynasties of the Habsburgs, Bourbons and the House of Hohenzollern. The main diplomatic goal was to build  a worldwide trading network for its merchants, manufacturers, shippers and financiers.

The Royal Navy was strengthened to defend shipping routes and the homeland from invasion. The London government enhanced the private sector by incorporating numerous privately financed London-based companies for establishing trading posts and opening import-export businesses across the world.

Each was given a monopoly of trade to the specified geographical region. The first enterprise was the Muscovy Company set up in 1555 to trade with Russia. The East India Company and the Hudson's Bay Company in Canada were other prominent enterprises.

Trade with Africa included slaves as well as gold and ivory. The Company of Royal Adventurers was organized after the English Civil War in 1662. it was reestablished as the Royal African Company in 1672 to focus on the slave trade.

British involvement in four major wars between 1740 to 1783 paid off in terms of trade. The loss of the 13 colonies resulted in trade relations with the United States. The slave, sugar and commercial trades in West Africa and the West Indies contributed to the dominance of the British in trade with India.

China would be next on the agenda. Other powers set up similar monopolies on a smaller scale. Only the Netherlands emphasized trade as much as England. British exports soared from £6.5 million in 1700, to £14.7 million in 1760.

Adam Smith studied social philosophy at the University of Glasgow. He studied moral philosophy under Francis Hutcheson. He developed his passion for liberty, reason and free speech at the university.

He was the graduate scholar presented to undertake postgraduate studies at Balliol College, Oxford in 1740 from a scholarship set up by the Scot John Snell. He felt that the rich endowments of the colleges at Oxford and Cambridge separated the income of the professor from the ability to attract students.

Smith wrote two classic works, The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759) and An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776). The work reflects on the economics at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. The major theme is unusual insofar as productivity in labor is identified as the basic building block for wealth.

Stocks, opulence, political economy and the revenue of the sovereign or commonwealth are counted as elements. 

The Wealth of Nations gained him a reputation as the Father of Capitalism. It laid the foundations of classical free market economic theory. The Wealth of Nations was a precursor to the modern academic discipline of economics.

His explanation of the division of labor is rich in detail. He described the coat of a common day laborer in terms of all the industries that were included to make the coat.

The woolen coat required the work of the shepherd, the sorter of the wool, the wool-comber or carder, the dyer, the scribbler, the spinner, the weaver, the fuller, the dresser and others.

They all joined their arts in order to complete the product. Merchants and carriers were employed to transport the materials from different parts of the country. Modern machines were employed to automate important features in the production.

Larger scale industries transferred the work from human to mechanical automation. Skilled labor was required to run the machines to reduce the costs for the operation.   

Adam Smith (1723-1790)
Wealth of Nations (1776)
Ch.1: The Division of Labour
Text

"How many merchants and carriers, besides, must have been employed in transporting the materials from some of those workmen to others who often live in a very distant part of the country? How much commerce and navigation in particular, how many ship-builders, sailors, sail-makers, rope-makers, must have been employed in order to bring together the different drugs made use of by the dyer, which often come from the remotest corners of the world? What a variety of labour, too, is necessary in order to produce the tools of the meanest of those workmen! To say nothing of such complicated machines as the ship of the sailor, the mill of the fuller, or even the loom of the weaver..."

----------------------

Merchants commission transportation for materials
and pay employees to sell products in a way defined as managerial.

Carriers are paid to navigate transportation
with direction drawn from the stars to reach the destination.

Materials are transported from remote places around the globe
to reach the manufacturing industry for production beyond hope.

Machinery automates that which can be automated in labor.
Operators work the machines to produce products you or your neighbor
can favor.

================



The two party system for Britain was formed in England in the 17th century. The Court Party and the Country Party were organized after the English Civil War.

The Court Party came to be known as the Tories. The term stuck despite the official name “Conservative.”

The Exclusion Bill crisis of 1678-1681 produced the nicknames for the respective parties. The Country Party supported the exclusion of the Duke of York for the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland because he was Roman Catholic. The Courts opposed the bill.

Both names were originally insults. A “whiggamore” was a horse driver. A “tory” was an Irish term for an outlaw. The Conservatives are still known as Tories.

Jeremy Bentham was born in a wealthy family that supported the Tories. He studied law. He got his Bachelor's degree from Queen's College in 1763 and his master's degree in 1766. He never practiced law, but he wrote about the philosophy of law.

He spent most of his life criticizing the existing law and strongly advocating legal reform. He wrote a critical response to the Declaration of Independence. He referred to the French Rights of Man as nonsense on stilts.

He spent much of his time in intense study. He would write for 8 to 12 hours a day. He was an active polemicist.

He became associated with William Petty, the Earl of Shelburne in 1781. He came into contact with a number of the leading Whig politicians and lawyers through him. His work was admired by some, but remained largely unappreciated.

He coined the name “utilitarian” in recording a dream he had while a guest at the country estate of the Earl, his patron. He imagined himself as the founder of the sect of utilitarians. He was to be a personage of great sanctity and importance.

His major proposal was for prison reform in relation to the panopticon view of design. He had traveled to Krichev in White Russia (modern Belarus) to visit his brother, Samuel, in 1786 and 1787. Samuel was engaged in managing various industrial and other projects for Prince Potemkin.

His brother conceived the basic idea of a circular building at the hub of a larger compound as a means of allowing a small number of managers to oversee the activities of a large and unskilled workforce. Jeremy developed the model for prisons.

He outlined his ideas in a series of letters sent home to his father in England. The supervisory principle with the idea of contract management. The director of the administration would have a pecuniary interest in lowering the average rate of mortality.

The panopticon was intended to be cheaper than the prisons of his time as it required fewer staff. The proposal was the development of his utilitarian philosophy with respect for law enforcement. It was not an advocacy for hedonism. He had the utility of the national interest in mind.

The ultimately abortive proposal for a panopticon prison to be built in England was one among his many proposals for legal and social reform. He spent about 16 years of his life developing and refining his ideas for the construct.

He hoped that the government would adopt the plan for a National Penitentiary appointing him as contractor-governor. The building of a new prison in London had been authorized by the Penitentiary Act 1794 and Bentham’s plan initially received the support of the Pitt administration.

He devoted considerable sums of his own money to the project over the years. He published further material comparing the merits of the panopticon with the disadvantages of the system of transporting convicts to penal colonies

The prison was never built, but the concept had an important influence on later generations of thinkers. He was given £23,000 compensation for his work on the proposal.

His most important theoretical work was the Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789). His moral theory reflected "the greatest happiness principle" as the logical basis for legislation.

The theory was developed out of empiricism with references to statements by Locke and Hume.
The notion that pleasure and pain are the universal bases from which the principle of utility was derived is a development of what Locke had said about the state of nature as perfect freedom. Hume's philosophy of history was used to endorse the concept of psychological egoism for self-interest.

Bentham identified two classes of ascetics who were opposed to the utility of happiness in legislation. One class was moral. The other was religious. He observed that the religious party had been less wise with respect for government. The religionists not only courted pain as a product of asceticism, they used the principle to impose misery with punishment by the affliction on others.

While Locke had distanced himself from biblical reason in the metaphor of Adam as a reference to the development of monarchy out of tribal life, his association with Aristotle was tied into the justification for the Crusades, the Inquisition and slavery by the position that there were those who were meant to rule and those who were meant to be ruled.

The same cruelty towards people appeared to be the case in the Ottoman rule as well.
The Puritans weren't exactly pure when it came to government in local councils, but the religiousity of the Whig party had broader and more harmful applications on the political order.

Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789)
Text

"It is true, that from the same source from whence, among the religionists, the attachment to the principle of asceticism took its rise, flowed other doctrines and practices, from which misery in abundance was produced in one man by the instrumentality of another: witness the holy wars, and the persecutions for religion. But the passion for producing misery in these cases proceeded upon some special ground: the exercise of it was confined to persons of particular descriptions: they were tormented, not as men, but as heretics and infidels."

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Attachment to asceticism can rise from religion or political inclination
but passion for punishment is harmful to the intent of legislation.

================



When freedom is used in relation to religion, it welcomes the consideration of variety to value the meaning of faith in the context of the believer's religion. Religion is moved from a closed system to one where growth is possible personally and socially. This concept rests at the heart of classical reconstruction.

The proposal to move from polytheism to monotheism held the social value of moving from primitive to civilized life. Civilized life holds the promise that comes with association by allegiance to law in the political body.

Freedom of religion is only one element in the First Amendment, but it is socially and personally significant in political application.

James Madison re-wrote English documents on administrative structure in government for the US Constitution. It was ratified in 1788. He also re-wrote the English Bill of Rights. The American form was ratified in 1791. He edited the content for the public by the removal of expression that was too favorable to any faction.

The Federalist Papers were written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay. The Papers are a collection of 85 articles and essays. They were written under the pseudonym "Publius" to promote the ratification fo the US Constitution.

The first 77 of these essays were published serially in the Independent Journal, the New York Packet and The Daily Advertiser between October 1787 and April 1788. The last eight papers (Nos. 78–85) were republished in the New York newspapers between June 14 and August 16, 1788.

The authors explicitly stated that they were looking at the establishment of good government by "reflection and choice." This was presented in contrast to the general notion that political constitutions are determined by accident and force.

Federalist No. 10 is the most important of the 85 articles from a philosophical perspective. Madison discussed the means to prevent rule by majority faction. He advocated for a commerical republic for the promotion of employment in trade.

The proposed Constitution was ratified by the minimum 9 states stipulated in Article VII on June 21, 1788. The process of organizing the new government began when 11 states had agreed to the proposal by the end of July 1788.

The use of debate in journals published by some major media outlets contributed to the controversy that helped the public consideration of the ideas for reflection and choice.

The Federalist collection has been used by judges to interpret constitutional law. Chief Justice John Marshall noted in McColloch v. Maryland that the right to judge the correctness of the opinions expressed by the authors had to be retained for the progress of government.

The Federalist had been quoted 291 times in Supreme Court decisions by 2000.

While the source documents for the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights were written in English, the English were engaged in the controversial consideration of the political ideas that had shaped European culture. 

The Declaration of Independence had declared independence from the tyranny of monarchy.
Reflection and choice in political participation could make the difference between a successful government that facilitated trade and a tyrannical republic determined by accident and force.

Freedom of Religion was one of the key elements in the First Amendment. It stipulated that Congress will make no law for the establishment of religion nor to prevent free exercise.

Bentham's objection to the use of the force of asceticism on government decisions is relevant in a broad context. It represents disagreement with immoral morality or the domination of government by a religious faction, even the predominant kind.

Locke's liberal proposal was that political power from the larger body is expressed with the threat of rebellion over the higher authority. Force and accident are favored by this form.

The Whigs in general supported the establishment of religion for the Puritan dominance and the 'moral' norm that punishment controls public dissent. The punishment included the death penalty. torture, invasion, colonial expansion with military conquest, the threat of genocide and slavery.

The native American population was reduced to 1% of the total with this political policy. The natives were either killed by disease, in battle or by massacre. It is likely that many chose to migrate to Mexico, South America or Asian countries for protection. 

The objection to the Crusades as an example of papal supremacy stands against the invasion of foreign nations, yet their is no national law legislated against invasion as an act of aggression.

Josiah Royce recommended a definition of religion that had a moral code, allowed for devotion for observation and demonstrated value for belief. His philosophy of religion was expressed as the religious aspect of philosophy.

It was pragmatic. It provided a general definition for religion. It was drawn from the work of William James, but Royce felt that James placed too much emphasis on the extraordinary experience for an individual. He felt that an emphasis on community was necessary to define the social value of religion.

Richard Hooker's observation that there are good and bad ecclesiastical hierarchies applies to religion. Opposition to insurrection, cruelty in punishment, violent aggression and invasion stand as qualifiers of goodness in the moral code for a religion.

William James stipulated that his interest in religion was psychological from a medical perspective. He was trained in medical art. His approach was therapeutic, not political or legislative against establishment. It was for free exercise.

Freedom is qualified legally and morally as against causing damage to self or others.

William James (1842-1910)
Varieties of Religious Experience (1902)
Text

"If the inquiry be psychological, not religious institutions, but rather religious feelings and religious impulses must be its subject, and I must confine myself to those more developed subjective phenomena recorded in literature produced by articulate and fully self-conscious men, in works of piety and autobiography. Interesting as the origins and early stages of a subject always are, yet when one seeks earnestly for its full significance, one must always look to its more completely evolved and perfect forms. It follows from this that the documents that will most concern us will be those of the men who were most accomplished in the religious life and best able to give an intelligible account of their ideas and motives."

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The free exercise of religion is adverse to damage to self or others
in the psychology that respects health as a natural wonder.

================



Pragmatism began in the United States around 1870. The product of a belief was regarded as the practical value. Peirce defined the practical effects of a conception as that which defined the object.
It continued to be a dominant movement in philosophy during the early decades of the 20th century. Other movements and schools of thought emerged.

George Santayana (1863-1952) was a student of Josiah Royce. He studied at Harvard University. He went to Berlin before returning to write his dissertation and to teach. His dissertation was on Hermann Lotze, a German logician with a degree in medicine. He studied at King's College, Cambridge from 1896 to 1897.

He published The Life of Reason in 1906. His idea of common sense defined an ideal as having a natural basis. Everything natural has an ideal development. It wasn't a rejection of idealism. The biological perspective of history was added. This placed idealism in the framework of common sense.

He described reason in common sense, society, religion, art and science. His explanation of religion was conditioned by reason in experience. A little philosophy could incline someone's mind to atheism. Depth in philosophy brings thought to reflection about religion. The God that inspires atheism is different from the one for depth in wisdom.

He resigned his position at Harvard in 1912. He spent the rest of his life writing in Europe and living on his inheritance.

The influence of John Dewey (1859–1952) and his friend Jane Addams (1860–1935) was immense. Jane Addams invented the profession of social work as an expression of pragmatist ideas. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931.

George Herbert Mead (1863–1931) was also of considerable importance. He contributed significantly to the social sciences. Pragmatist perspectives upon the relations between the self and the community were developed.

When the progressive Deweyan ‘New Deal’ era passed away, the US moved into the Cold War. Pragmatism’s influence was challenged. Analytic philosophy blossomed and became the dominant methodological orientation in most Anglo-American philosophy departments.

Transitional or ‘third generation’ figures included C.I. Lewis and W.V.O. Quine. These philosophers developed a number of pragmatist themes, but their analytic allegiance may be seen in their significant focus on theory of knowledge as first philosophy. Dewey had deprecated this view as ‘the epistemological industry’.

The analytic school of philosophy started to dominate academic philosophy early in the 20th century. This was most notable in Great Britain and the United States. It originated as G. E. Moore and Bertrand Russell broke away from Absolute Idealism. Absolute idealism had been a leading school in the British universities. Gottlob Frege was also regarded as a founder of the analytic movement in the late 19th century.

The middle of the 20th century was the beginning of the dominance of analytic philosophy in America. Analytic philosophy had begun in Europe with the work of Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein and the logical positivists.

The truths of logic and mathematics are tautologies according to logical positivism. Those of science are empirically verifiable. Any other claim, including the claims of ethics, aesthetics, theology, metaphysics and ontology are meaningless. This theory is called verificationism.

Many positivists fled Germany to Britain and America with the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party. This helped reinforce the dominance of analytic philosophy in the United States in subsequent years.

W.V.O. Quine was an American logician who was affiliated with Harvard from 1930 until his death in 2000.

He was not a logical positivist, but he shared their view that philosophy should stand  with science in its pursuit of intellectual clarity and understanding of the world. He criticized the logic the analytic/synthetic distinction of knowledge drawn by the positivists in his essay "Two Dogmas of Empiricism". He also criticized the reduction of logic to immediate experience.

He advocated for his "web of belief". The web was for coherent belief in justification. No experience occurs in isolation in Quine's epistemology. The theory is actually a holistic approach to knowledge where every belief or experience is intertwined with the whole. Quine is also famous for inventing the term "gavagai" as part of his theory of the indeterminacy of translation.

Quine opened his statement against the two dogmas with the critical analysis of empiricism. This questioned the dogma that was being used to define experience. The logical positivist rejection of metaphysics prevented the use of science to infer statements of metaphysical import.

Logical positivism didn't allow people to investigate the claims of science with respect to philosophy. It basically left anti-religious sentiment as the product of critical analysis in empiricism. They disagreed with the proposal of anything even if it was derived from scientific investigation.

W.V.O Quine (1908-2000)
Two Dogmas of Empiricism (1953)
Text

"Modern empiricism has been conditioned in large part by two dogmas. One is a belief in some fundamental cleavage between truths which are analytic, or grounded in meanings independently of matters of fact and truths which are synthetic, or grounded in fact. The other dogma is reductionism: the belief that each meaningful statement is equivalent to some logical construct upon terms which refer to immediate experience. Both dogmas, I shall argue, are ill founded. One effect of abandoning them is, as we shall see, a blurring of the supposed boundary between speculative metaphysics and natural science. Another effect is a shift toward pragmatism."

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The dogmas of empiricism are against the inference of principle.
Logical constructs cannot stray from the expression of the clinical.

================



A. J. Ayer
b. 10.29.1910  London, England
d. 6.27.1989 London, England

A.J. Ayers was an English philosopher known for his promotion of logical positivism. He argued against transcendental idealism in Language, Truth, and Logic (1936). The book brought the ideas of the Vienna Circle and the logical empiricists to the English speaking world.

The verification principle asserted that only statements that are empirically verifiable are meaningful. Metaphysical statements were designated as meaningless.

Ayer saw himself as a representative of the line of British empiricism with George Berkeley and David Hume. The most recent representatives for him were Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein.

He argued in The Problem of Knowledge (1956) that the conditions for something as the case were that what was said is known to be true, that there was certainty regarding the truth and there was the right to be sure.

London

The years between Queen Victoria's death in 1901 and the start of the First World War in 1914 were years of growth and general prosperity. The inequalities which had characterized Victorian London continued.

One out of five Britons lived in London by 1900. The population of roughly 5 million in 1900 rose to over 7 million by 1911.

Representatives of various trade unions and of the Independent Labour Party, Fabian Society and Social Democratic Federation agreed to form a Labour Party backed by the unions and with its own whips in 1900.

The Labour Representation Committee was founded with Keir Hardie as its leader. At the 1900 general election, The LRC won only two seats at the 1900 general election. The SDF disaffiliated, but more unions signed up.

The LRC affiliated to the Socialist International. The name was changed to the Labour Party in 1906. It formed an electoral pact with the Liberals. The intent was to cause maximum damage to the Unionist government at the forthcoming election. Twenty nine Labour MPs were elected to the House of Commons.

Edwardian London was characterized principally by the burgeoning Women's Suffrage movement. The nationwide movement was spearheaded by Emmeline Pankhurst and her Women's Social and Political Union. Protests and demonstrations intensified during these years. Tension reached a peak between 1912 and 1914 as the movement militarized.

The introduction of the new 'Dreadnought' class battleship and the subsequent naval arms race with Germany prompted David Lloyd George, the chancellor of the exchequer, to introduce a tax on land, to increase income tax and to propose a 'super-tax' on incomes over £5,000 per annum in 1909. He presented these increases as designed to fund social reforms.

The Conservative-dominated House of Lords broke the parliamentary convention that the upper house should not overturn a financial bill when Chancellor David Lloyd George's budget was rejected in 1909. This ensured that House of Lords reform was one of the issues at stake in the next general election.

The election precipitated by the Lords' rejection of the 'People's Budget' resulted in 275 seats for the Liberals, 273 for the Conservatives and 40 for Labour. The budget was then passed. The Irish Nationalists were now in a position to force Irish 'Home Rule' back up the agenda with 82 seats.

Edward VII died in 1910. His son, George V, ensured that the monarchy was more active than it had been in the latter years of Victoria's reign. Edward's funeral brought the royalty of Europe for the last time before war broke out in 1914. Many of the European royals were family relations.

A.J. Ayer

Alfred Jules Ayer was born in St John's Wood in north west London on 29 October 1910. His family was wealthy. They were from continental Europe. His mother, Reine Citroën, was from the Dutch-Jewish family who founded the Citroën car company in France. His father, Jules Ayer, was a Swiss Calvinist financier who worked for the Rothschild family.

Ayer was educated at Ascham St Vincent's School. St. Vincent's was a former boarding preparatory school for boys in the seaside town of Eastbourne in Sussex. He started boarding at the comparatively early age of seven due to the First World War. He won a scholarship to Eaton College when he was 13.

It was at Eton that Ayer became known for his characteristic bravado and precocity. He was keen on sports, particularly rugby. He reputedly played the Eton Wall Game very well.

Ayer was ranked second in his year in the final examinations at Eton. He was first in classics. He unsuccessfully campaigned for the abolition of corporal punishment at the school as a member of Eton's senior council in his final year.

He won a classics scholarship to Christ Church College of Oxford University in 1929. There he studied Greek and philosophy. One of his tutors was Gilbert Ryle. He suggested that Ayer read Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.

He traveled to Vienna in 1933 to meet with Moritz Schlick and other members of the Vienna Circle of logical positivists. He was one of only two English-speaking people to meet and study with the Vienna Circle. W. V. O. Quine was the other.

Ayer was elected to a five-year research fellowship at Christ Church in 1935. He finished writing Language, Truth, and Logic in that year. The book brought some of the ideas of the Vienna Circle and the logical empiricists to the attention of the English-speaking world.

He argues for the verification principle of logical positivism. This principle is referred to as the criterion of significance or criterion for meaning. Ayer explains how the principle of verifiability may be applied to the problems of philosophy.

The metaphysical thesis that philosophy affords us knowledge of a transcendent reality was rejected. Unless logical or empirical verification is possible, statements like "God exists" or "charity is good" are not true or untrue but meaningless.

Ayer became strongly involved in politics in the pre WWII years. He supported the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War. He considered joining the Communist Party, but became instead an active member of the British Labour party. He joined the Welsh Guards when WWII broke out and worked for a time interrogating prisoners.

He was Grote Professor of the Philosophy of Mind and Logic at University College London from 1946 until 1959. He returned to Oxford to become Wykeham Professor of Logic at New College.
He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1951 to 1952 and knighted in 1970. He was known for his advocacy of humanism, and was the first executive director of the British Humanist Association (now known as Humanists UK).

Ayer wrote an article entitled, "What I saw when I was dead" in 1988 shortly before his death. He described an unusual near-death experience. The attending physician claimed in 2001 that Ayer had confided to him: "I saw a Divine Being. I'm afraid I'm going to have to revise all my books and opinions." His son Nick, however, said that he had never mentioned this to him. He found the words to be extraordinary though.

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“One way of attacking a metaphysician who claimed to have knowledge of a reality which transcended the phenomenal world would be to inquire from what premises his propositions were deduced. Must he not begin, as other men do, with the evidence of his senses? And if so, what valid process of reasoning can possible lead him to the conception of a transcendental reality? Surely from empirical premises nothings whatsoever concerning the properties, or even the existence, of anything super-empirical can legitimately be inferred.”

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From what premises are propositions deduced?
Isn't the evidence of the senses used?

==============

Ayer was against the transcendental idealism of Kant but didn’t rule out Hegelian argument in Marxist form. He was socialist who had ruled out communism as extreme, but was a member of the Labour Party.

Socialism was seen as necessary to correct ‘Capitalist’ excess. This was the case on the European mainland and in the leftist elements in Parliamentarian politics.

Marx had made certain statements that indicated that religion was rife ground for recruits to socialism, but there was a pronounced anti-religious trend in socialist ideology. This made logical positivism aggressively anti-religious in political representation.

Their separation of Church and State was absolute. It didn’t allow for the free exercise of religion or recognition in participation in the political world. The Proletariat was too important.

This reduced the value of his logical empiricism insofar as the proposition of empirical statements from those with a religious affiliation was not regarded as possible.

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Alfred Ayer
S. 阿尔弗雷德·艾尔斯
T. 阿爾弗雷德·艾爾斯

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尔  er  you                   爾 ji            you           zu    ず     ズ           seu  스  s               
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----------------------

That the funnel forms from the cloud to the ground in a tornado
doesn't rule out lightning as the cause of thunder in the sound before the hailstone.

Not all that is determined through the immediate perception of sense
is known as an inferable expense in the future tense.

================

Language, Truth and Logic
wiki Language, Truth and Logic
Text: Language, Truth and Logic
Text: Foundations of Empirical Knowledge

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The Military and the Declaration of War

The definition of Congress as the power that declares war is subversive. The war powers article was written when there was no standing military. It needs to be replaced with something that reflects the security of the nation.

There is an army clause in the Constitution. [Article I, Section 8, Clause 12], but it has a limit to the duration in organization. The limitation needs to be removed. The war powers article could simply be repealed at this point in time.

The liberal power of the deep state has awarded authority to those who attack the people by their claim to authority over the president. The separation of powers is not sustained by making war the basis for bi-lateral agreement between extremist factions.

The war powers article stands as the source for all the news that is used to justify action. The lack of written legislation for a standing armed force has been used to authorize many wars to justify an established military.

It allowed for the invasion of the Middle East, when negotiation and the use of counter-terrorist units as allowed by the foreign government in the particular area of concern would have been more practical and reasonable as a military response.

History of US Army
wiki Early National Period

The Continental Army was disbanded as part of the American distrust of standing armies after the Revolutionary War. Irregular state militias became the new nation's sole ground army, with the exception of a regiment to guard the Western Frontier and one battery of artillery guarding West Point's arsenal.

The Legion of the United States, was established between June and Nov. 1792 at Fort Lafayette, Pennsylvania, under Major Gen. "Mad" Anthony Wayne. The newly formed Legion moved in Dec. 1792 to an encampment downriver on the Ohio near Fort McIntosh named Legionville to train.

The Legion moved by barge down the Ohio to a camp named Hobson's Choice two miles from Fort Washington (Cincinnati) on the western frontier In September 1793. There it was joined by units from the Kentucky Militia.

Their assignment was to advance to the site of St. Clair's earlier defeat, recover the cannons lost there and continue to the Miami capital at Kekionga to establish U.S. sovereignty over northern and western Ohio and beyond.

The Legion was renamed the United States Army after Wayne's death in 1796.