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Posts Tagged ‘practical morality’

I keep thinking about how astonishingly rich I would be if I lived at the average level of wealth for a US citizen, and I just can’t do it. So I’m interpreting my vow this way now: I will work to reach this country’s average wealth, but then I will live by the median income [...]

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I could say “average is rich” is a spiritual truth. It means we share the enormous wealth of the world, and therefore we’re all rich in a world where there’s no need and no desperation, no greed and no exploitation.
But I believe in practical morality. As I’ve thought about the morality of wealth, I’ve wrestled [...]

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My vow a few days back to live as though everyone in the US had a fair share of the wealth doesn’t bother me because it seems too hard—it seems too easy. It frees me from empty subjectivity. It calls for objective data that needs updating, but I can use dated information for now:
How much [...]

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poukledden posted a fine Tolstoy quote:
Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.
- Leo Tolstoy
aquaeri answered it nicely:
Sweeping generalisation, M. Tolstoy. I’m always trying to figure out how to change myself so I can become someone who can actually change the world.
Mystics start from a valid premise: when two people [...]

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my vow

It’s odd to make vows in the USA. Maybe it’s because the vows that are expected here are ones no one should accept: promises to keep company secrets, to settle out of court, and to support a country even when it’s wrong. Or maybe it’s because our politicians and CEOs only keep promises when they’re [...]

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