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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 10, 2023

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Living without [your heart] would make no difference to you, assuming such a thing were possible. How can such a thing be said to have any value?

I don't need to use STEM to answer that; I can use the humanities, specifically referencing the laconic "if". Or perhaps the quip about counterfactuals attributed to Abraham Lincoln. Or I can use STEM, formal logic, and note that

Assume A

A -> B

B

B

is bad logic -- that is, that if you assume A (I can live without my heart) and prove B (my heart has no value) under that assumption, you cannot validly say you have proven B without that assumption.

We can say that something is necessary without thereby saying that it is valuable - and rightly so!

Seems unlikely, without some sort of sophistry you'd need formalisms to avoid.

The man who went out of his way to honor his own heart, who gave it a rank ordering of value higher than his own blood relations, would rightly be called perverse - even though, in the last analysis, he can live without his kin, but he cannot live without his heart.

This could mean at least two things. Either we expect a man to value his kin greater than his life -- in which case the fact that his heart is necessary to his life is not sufficient to make it more valuable than his kind. Or we somehow expect him to value his kin less than his life but more than his heart which is necessary to it.... which is incoherent, as Shakespeare might be able to tell you.

If you conduct yourself with dignity, should you not bristle at the imperiousness of science? Should you not chafe at the seemingly ineluctable demands it makes upon you?

Miguel de Cervantes might be able to tell you the results of such chafing. Or Rudyard Kipling.