Mmm, that's good. It seems that a strict understanding of immanence -- the notion that there is only this world, always becoming, and not some deep (e.g., Platonic) structure or divinity with a separate existence -- points this way. Anarchism also seems to suggest as much.
Kant's categorical imperative (only do what you'd want everyone to do) may have value as a hypothetical, but it also has value on the liberal path to do-what-the-fuck-I-say-or-else. What's the problem with liberalism, you ask leadingly? This sort of if-everyone-would-just projection, perhaps, is part of it, though I'll be damned if I'm gunna stop projecting just like that.
2 comments:
Devin,
This was brief, and perhaps because so short, eminently useful to me.
I'm stuck, as it were, on the cases of the Gracchi and Livius Drusus, in my own head. Seems relevant, somehow...
Good to hear.
Wish I knew more Roman history.
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