Robert Kane

Robert Kane Order Description Simply read the reading and answer the questions Robert KaneEssay 500 word essay on the following: Robert Kane (make sure you cite the text when answering the following questions): 1 What does Kane describe as the two "consequences" of the Tower of Babel regarding conflicting views on morality? What two concepts does Kane describe as the underlying problems associated with the consequences? Can you relate to these ideas in your own life? How? 2 How does Kane use the story of C.S. Lewis’ “Perelandra” to depict the dilemma of “Loss of Moral Innocence?” Have you ever experienced this problem/dilemma in your own life? Can you give some examples? 3 What does Kane propose, in the end, as a way forward through the “moral maze” of our modern context? Explain his concept of “openness.” 4 Give an example from our contemporary context where this paradigm might apply; and explain why you think Kane’s views would be helpful. Be sure to cite the source of the news story. Through the Moral Maze ROBERT KANE teaches philosophy at the University of Texas and has written books on ethics and free will. His primary focus is on questions of the ethical pluralism and tolerance, and he summarizes those concerns here. A TOWER OF BABEL The ancient image of the Tower of Babel has been used by more than a few modern writers to describe the current state of discourse about ethics and values. There is no one “spirit of the times,” but many-too many in fact-too many competing voices, philosophies, and religions, too many points of view on moral issues, too many interpretations of even our most sacred documents, our Bibles and Constitutions. Only the most unthinking persons can fail to be affected by this pluralism of points of view and not wonder, as a consequence, about the truth of their own beliefs... Among the consequences of the modern Tower of Babel is a pervasive temptation to embrace relativism, the view that there are no objective or “absolute” values that hold for all persons and all times. Judgments about the good and the right, it is said, can only be correct for some persons or societies or times, but not for all persons, societies, or times. In support of such a View, there are widespread doubts about the very possibility of making absolute or universal judgments that transcend our always limited points of view. New trends in the social sciences and humanities, some of them with popular names like “postmodernism” or “post-structuralism,” make much of the fact that all our views about the world are historically and culturally conditioned. We always see things from a particular point of view (a “conceptual framework,” or “language game,” or “cultural tradition”). How can we therefore show that our point of view, or any other, is the right one and competing views wrong, when we must assume the basic presuppositions of some particular point of view to support our claims? How can we climb out of our historically and culturally limited perspectives to find an Archimedean point, an absolute standpoint above the particular and competing points of view? This problem haunts the modern intellectual landscape. One sees variations of it everywhere in different fields of study, and everywhere it produces doubts among reflective persons about the possibility of justifying belief in objective intellectual, cultural, and moral standards. Many modern thinkers, to be sure, deplore the resulting drift toward relativism or skepticism, arguing that we need to restore belief in objective truth and value. But it is one thing to say this and another to show how it can be done. For the problem of finding an Archimedean point above the pluralism of competing points of view is a complex one, which thinkers have been wrestling with for centuries. I no longer believe the older ways of solving this problem will work as they did for past generations... If we are not to drift into relativism, therefore, some new ways of thinking about the problem of value are needed. Alasdair MacIntyre is right, I think, to say that the current state of moral discourse is one of grave disrepair, but I am not entirely satisfied with his or any other contemporary suggestion for repair. Some fundamental possibilities, it seems to me have been overlooked in all traditional and modern searches for absolute value... The root of present problems about values, is the existence of a pluralism of points of views about the right way to live, with no evident ways of settling disagreements between them. The ancient Tower of Babel is a fitting image for this modern condition... Mircea Eliade, the distinguished historian of religions, has said that what religions provided for their believers through the ages was a spiritual centering. Primitive peoples often identified a sacred mountain or some other place near their home as the center of the universe. The axis of the world went through that point and reached directly to the heavens. It was the spiritual center of their world and the place through which people