X-Message-Number: 33026
Date: Wed, 3 Nov 2010 13:55:42 -0400
Subject: Off topic article...but potentially relevant "New Morality Ar...
From: Rudi Hoffman <>

--20cf30549e7104b127049429c095

Hello, Cryonetters:

One of my clients forwarded me an article which I found to be brilliant.

While it may be somewhat off topic, it also counters and responds to the
arrogance that academics hold for producers and free enterprise.  I wish I
would have written this article, as I agree with almost all of it.  Although
actually getting one's head around the idea that business tycoons, who
enable voluntary value-for-value transactions, are actually better MORAL
exemplars than a "saint" or "politician" who gives away someone elses work
product, takes some deprogramming.

At the very least, it will annoy David Stodolsky.  Who occasionally annoys
with his pronouncements, especially politically.

This statement of David's, for instance, deserves rebuttal if not ridicule:
(quoting dss)

Richard "Selfish Gene" Dawkins was one of the leading fanatics. He developed
a following of libertarians pushing social darwinism as their religion. The
social instability following from these socio-economic trends has
contributed to the growth of religion in general. The CryoCare fiasco showed
how this nonsense played out in the cryonics community.
The growth of religion, economic collapse, and the failure to mobilize group
survival instincts in marketing have all contributed to the current
stagnation in sign ups. For a cryonicist to support this nonsense is
suicidal.

(end quote)

Wrong on several levels, David.  To keep this post short, I will simply
reprint article here:  I think most thinkers on this list will like this as
much as I did.

(Article start)

Our moral code is out of date
By Yaron Brook and Onkar Ghate, Special to CNN
September 16, 2010 3:26 p.m. EDT

Editor's note: Yaron Brook is president of the Ayn Rand Center for
Individual Rights and a columnist at Forbes.com; Onkar Ghate is a senior
fellow at the center. Brook is one of the speakers at The Economist's "Ideas
Economy: Human Potential" conference in New York.
(CNN) -- Human progress requires good ideas.

Consider how just two fundamental ideas have ushered in the modern world.
Rewind a scant 600 years, and modern science doesn't yet exist.

Men and women live and die in squalor and filth, largely ignorant of the
germs that ravage their bodies and of the natural laws that govern the
universe, instead imploring an alleged supernatural force to help them
navigate this vale of tears.

But thanks to minds such as Galileo, Sir Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur and
Charles Darwin, this is not how we face the world today. They taught us our
method of knowing: careful, mathematically precise observation, step-by-step
inference and generalization, and systematic, evidence-based theory
building.

They had the courage to challenge entrenched authority, toss aside
superstition and defy popes. As others followed the trail the first
scientists blazed, human knowledge advanced dramatically.

Thanks to a second idea, this explosion of knowledge broke the confines of
the laboratory and ivory tower. Another daring group of thinkers challenged
political authoritarianism.

Kings and aristocrats were swept aside to make way for the rights of man.
This idea gave birth to a new nation, our beloved America, in which the
individual was free to think and pursue his own happiness. A new person
arose: the industrialist.
Slandered as robber barons, what these individuals actually did was earn
fortunes by studying the discoveries of science and commercializing them.

A mind-boggling array of inventions and products ensued: automobiles, oil,
radios, antibiotics, refrigeration, electricity, washing machines, air
conditioning, indoor plumbing, airplanes and on and on, to our present world
of personal computers and cell phones.

Try to imagine life without all of this. It's not easy.

But as far as we've come because of these two ideas, human progress demands
implementation of a third idea to complete the scientific and political
revolutions. We're still beholden to the past in ethics.

Although few of us would turn to the Old Testament or the Quran to determine
the age of the Earth, too many of us still turn obediently to these books
(or their secular copies) as authorities about morality. We learn therein
the moral superiority of faith to reason and collective sacrifice to
personal profit.

But the more seriously we take these old ethical ideas, the more suspect
become the modern ideas responsible for human progress. The scientists in
their laboratories did not demonstrate the superiority of faith. Thomas
Jefferson in his Declaration did not proclaim the superiority of collective
sacrifice. Why should we think these ideas are the path to moral
enlightenment?
Perhaps, of all the damage these antiquated moral ideas do to human
progress, the most significant is how they distort our conception of moral
ideals.

Ask someone on the street to name a moral hero; if he isn't at a loss, he'll
likely name someone like Jesus Christ or Mother Teresa. Why? Because they're
regarded as people of faith who shunned personal profit for the collective
good. No one would dream of naming Galileo, Darwin, Thomas Edison or John D.
Rockefeller.

Yet we should. It is they, not the Mother Teresas of the world, that we
should strive to be like and teach our kids the same.

If morality is judgment to discern the truth and courage to act on it and
make something of and for your own life, then these individuals, in their
capacity as great creators, are moral exemplars. Put another way, if
morality is a guide in the quest to achieve your own happiness by creating
the values of mind and body that make a successful life, then morality is
about personal profit, not its renunciation.

Monetary profit is just one of the values you have to achieve in life. But
it is an eloquent representative of the whole issue, because at its most
demanding, as exhibited by a Bill Gates or a Steve Jobs, making money
requires a profound dedication to material production.
The fact that earning money is ignored by most moralists, or condemned as
the root of evil, is telling of the distance we must travel.

In effect, we need to turn the Billionaire's Pledge on its head.

The world grants, at best, no moral recognition to Gates and Buffett for the
personal fortunes they've created, but it awards them a standing ovation for
giving their profits away. But the standing ovation belongs to the act of
creation, the profit they brought into their own lives and anyone who traded
with them.
If morality is about the pursuit of your own success and happiness, then
giving money away to strangers is, in comparison, not a morally significant
act. (And it's outright wrong if done on the premise that renunciation is
moral.)

Science, freedom and the pursuit of personal profit -- if we can learn to
embrace these three ideas as ideals, an unlimited future awaits.

(End quote)

There...that ought to generate some observations and discourse on ideas that
matter.  I can already hear the academics howling...especially those who
have never actually engaged in the practice of enabling prosperity promoting
free exchange.

Reasonably Respectfully,

Rudi




-- 
Rudi Richard Hoffman CFP CLU ChFC

World's Leading Cryonics Insuror rudihoffman.com
Former Board Member Financial Planning Association fpafla.com
Board Member Salvation Army salvationarmy.org
Member Alcor Life Extension Foundation alcor.org,
Member Cryonics Institute cryonics.org
Certified Financial Planner(TM) CFP Board of Standards
Member World Transhumanist Association http://transhumanism.org/
Securities offered through Broker Dealer Financial Services Corp. Member
FINRA and SIPC.

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