Maverick Philosopher

Nihil philosophicum a me alienum puto

To promote independent thought about ultimates. Philosophy, commentary on the passing scene, and whatever else turns my crank. Since 4 May 2004. By William F. Vallicella, Ph.D., Gold Canyon, Arizona, USA. Motto: "Study everything, join nothing." (Paul Brunton) Latin Motto: Omnia mea mecum porto. Turkish motto: Yol bilen kervana katilmaz. (He who knows the road does not join the caravan.) All material copyrighted.

Work and Money, Living and Livelihood

Attitudes toward work and money are curious. People tend to value work in terms of money: an occupation has value if and only if it makes money, and the measure of its value is how much money it makes. If what you do makes money, then it has value regardless of what it is. And if what you do does not make money, then it lacks value regardless of what it is.

(show)

Posted by William F. Vallicella on Monday October 24, 2005 at 1:42pm
Celinda Stickles (mail) (www):
I've noticed the same thing with those who take care of children. A paid childcare worker gets a lot more respect then a stay at home mother(or dad). (My son just peeped over my shoulder and on reading this said, "Not you, Mom!" Some things money just can't buy.)

Anyway, I see the benefits of organization and funding in the ability to influence culture as a whole. Both religion and philosophy at their best can have a positive impact on cultures not just indiviuals. The drawbacks are that it opens the door to corruption. The larger the organization grows or the longer its been around the less pure the content of what they are providing is. This allows bad philosophy or religion to negatively effect the culture.

I know the church has periodically gone through periods of 'revival' where conflict within or pressure from without has helped to check the growth of the organization and clean up the corruption. Has the same thing happened in philosophy? It seems to me this cyclical movement in and out of power seems to be the only way to both keep things healthy and have an impact.
10.25.2005 1:49pm
Bill Vallicella (mail) (www):
Celinda,

Agreed. Although equity feminism has been good for women in various ways, gender feminism has led to the unfortunate denigration of motherhood, on which no price can be put. The equity/gender feminism distinction is from Christina Hoff Sommers.
10.25.2005 4:33pm
Account:
Password:
Remember info?
1. Leaving comments is a privilege, not a right. The site administrator is under no obligation to accept comments at all, let alone from any particular person. And to underscore the obvious: nothing in the nature of a weblog requires that it accept comments from readers.
2. Disallowing comments from a particular person, or deleting an offensive, off-topic, or otherwise substandard comment, has nothing to do with censorship. People who think otherwise confuse censorship with lack of sponsorship. I am under an obligation not to interfere with anyone's exercise of legitimate free speech rights. But I am not under any obligation to aid and abet anyone's exercise of free speech rights, legitimate or illegitimate.
3. The Comments area is not an open forum for anyone to say anything about any topic. As the name implies, it is primarily for commenting on the author(s)' posts. But to comment on them, one must have read them. And if I have spent three hours on a post, a reader will not understand it in thirty seconds. Secondarily, the Comments area is to facilitate civil discussion between and among commenters as long as the discussion remains on-topic.
4. Some undesirables: The skimmers, those who cannot read but only read-in. The sophists who, abusing argument, argue for the sake of argument. The ideologues, those who are out for power, not truth. The uncivil. The illogical. The politically correct. Worst of all, perhaps, are those who exemplify the anti-Socratic property: those who think they know what they don't know. If Socrates was famous for his learned ignorance, these types are marked by their ignorant unlearnededness.