
Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader

When a life embodies one or more of these values (or others) and feels engaging to the one who lives it, it is to that extent meaningful. There are narrative values
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
There is a gap between nature and society. The mistake, for which scientism is the name, is the belief that this gap can or should be filled.
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
The point, then, is not to seek an answer to the meaning of life, but to continue to ask the question.
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
Each person, he argued, has a threshold for emotional pain akin to a threshold for physical pain. While some people at the slightest physical pain tend to run to the ibuprofen or painkillers, others seem able to tolerate excruciating physical pain. The same holds for misery.
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
But where is that actual point at which a person “breaks” or comes to believe not only that her life is devoid of value or meaning, but that the world is, too?
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
“Philosophy hasn’t made any progress? If somebody scratches the spot where he has an itch, do we have to see some progress?”
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
Philosophy is not Neosporin. It is not some healing balm. It is an irritant, which is why Socrates described himself as a gadfly.
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
Weber’s idea is that natural phenomena require causal explanation, of the kind given by physics, say, whereas social phenomena require elucidation—richer, more expressive descriptions.
Peter Catapano • Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader
scientism is that it invites, as an almost allergic reaction, the total rejection of science. As we know to our cost, we witness this every day with climate change deniers, flat-earthers and religious fundamentalists. This is what is called obscurantism, namely that the way things are is not explained by science, but with reference to occult forces
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