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jake-head-shot.jpgJake Young is a MD/PhD student at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in NYC getting a PhD in Behavioral Neuroscience. He holds a BS and MS in Biological Sciences from Stanford University. If a volcano were to erupt Pompei-style in Central Park, his body would be preserved in a scoliotic posture over his lab desk. Archeaologists would later conclude that he spent most of his day training rats to perform tricks, until he went blind building electrical equipment by hand using a dissecting microscope. But, still, he died happy...because science is cool.

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« Dude, what the hell is happening to the cranes in NYC? | Main | Political Quote for Today »

Political Philosophy of the Day: Does Illegitimacy equal moral indefensibility?

Category: Philosophy
Posted on: May 30, 2008 2:33 PM, by NotoriousLTP

Will Wilkinson takes anarchist Crispin Sartwell over the proposition that an illegitimate state is therefore a morally indefensible state:

The point is: Showing that the state is not legitimate does not deliver anarchy because "If the state is not legitimate, then it is not morally defensible" is a false premise. The existence of a moral justification, in terms of flourishing, say, doesn't entail final moral justification, since there is no fact of the matter about the final authoritative moral vocabulary.

Read the whole thing.

Hat-tip: Marginal Revolution

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Comments

1

I haven't read Sartwell's book, so I don't know quite how he's using the notion of legitimacy. In it's broadest sense, though, legitimacy just amounts to rational justifiability. Problem is that we probably wouldn't all agree on what counts as a rational justification. But suppose the intuition behind the enlightenment was actually sound, and rationality represents an objective standard. Then I think we'd have to acknowledge the validity of Sartwell's inference from illegitimacy to moral indefensibility. Morality, after all, is a rational enterprise, one concerned with the soundness of the reasons we adduce for various actions.

At least that's how things look to this anarchist.

Posted by: bob koepp | May 30, 2008 7:49 PM

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