[net.philosophy] In Defense of Rationalization

jbf@ccieng5.UUCP (Jens Bernhard Fiederer) (04/12/84)

In defense of rationalization

	As Laura says, there are two ways of deriving an ethical system.
One is to take "self-evident" axioms, and deduce their consequences.  The
other, which she contemptuously calls "rationalization", is to select the
conclusions you find palatable, find a set of axioms from which you can
deduce them, and work with these.

	On the face of it, the former alternative seems the nobler, the
cleaner.  The trouble is, when a disciple of this alternative manifests
the "self-evident" axioms, one invariably disagrees.  "I could come up
with a much better, more self-evident, set of axioms!", one cries.  Then
one examines the consequences of the presented axioms, and deduces
absurdities from them.  

	If one wants to salvage ones reputation as a purist, perforce
these absurdities must be accepted.  After all, desiring to choose ones
axioms for their reasonable consequences would be RATIONALIZATION, and
no purist would want to be accused of THAT.

	Those of us with fewer scruples SEARCH for our 'axioms', and change
them when their consequences seem inconsistent.  We may exclude an axiom
from our Weltansicht if that axiom leads to incompatible conclusions.  Of
course, we may call this inductive reasoning rather than 'rationalization',
but perhaps that is just rationalization at work....

	Over the years, I have built an ethical model that suits me very well,
and allows me to appreciate other people as they are, rather than as I think
they should be.  Why should I separate myself from my rationalizations, just
because someone claims bloodless axioms are purer?

	Jens Bernhard Fiederer
-- 
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