Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts

Nothing Less than Victory: Decisive Wars and the Lessons of History Review

Nothing Less than Victory: Decisive Wars and the Lessons of History
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Publishers Weekly writes many short blurbs for Amazon. And they usually do a great job. Unfortunately, their assertion that Lewis veers close to arguing that "might makes right" is completely wrong. Consider Lewis's take on the Third Punic War--which he says was not a war at all but rather a massacre:
"Rome was wrong; the peace of Scipio Africanus was good, and the Romans could have preserved it by just mediation of the Carthaginian complaints. The Romans appointed a successor to Masinissa in 149; they could have ended the Numidian attacks. It is to Romans' eternal shame--there is no credit due here--that they slaughtered a former enemy that had accepted peace and was living by its word.
"Readers tempted to interpret the thesis of this book as the need for total destruction of an enemy's population centers should consider the decades that followed the Second Punic War, when former enemies were at peace, with the needless sacrifice of that peace in the destruction of Carthage--and the civil unrest and violence that followed in the next generation for the Romans. . . .
"The Second Punic War remains the example of a successful victory," says Lewis at chapter's end. The Third was "a needless and unforgiveable slaughter."
The idea that "might makes right" is nowhere in the above. Nor is it to be found elsewhere in the book. Lewis in fact explicitly states that the opposite is true. After showing how the "relative commitment of each side to its moral cause . . . affected the outcome of [each] conflict," Lewis says that something more than just commitment is involved. "The truth," according to Lewis, "matters"--"the strongest power belonged to those who were, in fact, right, if those who were right knew it."
"This may be unfashionable to say today--in an intellectual climate that sunders fact and value, and understands moral claims as inherently contested matters of opinion--but it remains a demonstrable fact that the Spartan and Confederate slave systems were morally debased and that the freedom upheld by the Thebans and the Union was good.
"The political autonomy upheld by the Greeks, as well as the political relationships between Rome and its Italian allies, was superior to the alternatives presented by Persia and Carthage. Certainly, the war between America and Japan in 1945 was not fought over morally equivalent options--not if peace and prosperity for millions of people are valued.
"The tragedy of Munich is in the failure of the British to recognize that their own moral norms could become weapons when manipulated by a vicious dictator. The British and the Americans--like the Greeks--became truly unbeatable when they grasped how right they really were. As the war progressed, public exposure of the enemy's actions strengthened the victor's knowledge of its own moral rectitude and discredited their former enemies' failed policies in their own eyes."
The overall lesson of Lewis's book is to take ideas seriously, especially moral ideas. Those interested in how such ideas have influenced history will enjoy this clearly-written and often-engrossing book. But they should not look forward to or reject it on the grounds that it supports a "might makes right" viewpoint. It does not. And hopefully this review--or "response" to be correct--shows that.

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Arthur and the True Francine (Arthur Adventures) Review

Arthur and the True Francine (Arthur Adventures)
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As a children's librarian, I must say I'm not fond of many series books. We are always trying to get children to read OTHER books. However, I grew up with Arthur and I do enjoy the books in his series. This is one of the best. It's an excellent story about honesty that portrays children realistically. I hear them talk to each other daily and this is how they talk about their teachers, each other, and school. This one's well worth the read!

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Francine and Muffy are good friends until Muffy lets Francine take the blame for cheating on a test.

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The Servile Mind: How Democracy Erodes the Moral Life Review

The Servile Mind: How Democracy Erodes the Moral Life
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There have been many books over time that have pointed out blemishes within the idea or reality of "democracy" (I use quotes as a way of pointing out that "democracy" has long ceased to mean the process of majority voting and has fast become a stand-in synonym for anything speakers want to say is politically good.)Democracy in America (Penguin Classics) pointed to the potentiality for taking egalitarianism too far. American Democrat and Other Political Writings pointed to democracy's susceptibility to demagoguery. Democracy: The God that Failed: The Economics and Politics of Monarchy, Democracy, and Natural Order points to democracy's potential to erode individual liberty.
This book takes cues from all three to argue, essentially, that democracy is largely responsible for expanding the state, ironically, in the name of "freedom." Why is this ironic? Because the more we allow the state to do or insist that it does in order to "liberate", the more we give it power over us and the more we become less free. In a similar irony, the more we ask the government to do in the name of altruism, the more interest-group-politics result, where we all end up vying for a piece of the government pie at the expense of others.
Another major theme in this book is the idea that democracy is increasingly legislating morality and in so doing, transforming the moral (individual judgment) to the politico-moral (substituting individual judgment with law). Thus, we no longer have to, or get to, think for ourselves about whether an act is right or wrong; we can simply ask whether it is legal or not. We no longer have to use persuasion to convince others not to engage in x act for moral reasons; we can simply lobby the legislators to change their mind for us.
Lastly, in arguments similar to Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse and other works of communitarian theory, our democratic tendency is to focus so much on rights that we forger their corollary: duties. But this work is not arguing for communitarianism per se: it simply suggests that when we focus only on rights, responsibility erodes, and when responsibility erodes, government steps in to impose responsibility from withot, and when that happens - again, an irony - freedom is truly lost. Thus, focusing on rights without responsibilities often ends with dependency on a nanny state to keep order, rather than individuals keeping their own order.
All in all, a thought provoking read. Not quite libertarian, not quite communitarian, but one might say that the book is very conservative (in the vein of Michael Oakeshott). A good read for those unsure about our current tendency to beatify anything and everything deemed "democratic."

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Tightrope Poppy the High-Wire Pig Review

Tightrope Poppy the High-Wire Pig
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With a clever rhyme scheme and beautiful illustrations, Poppy became an instant star at our house. The rhymes stand up to repeated readings and there is nary a stumble when reading the text out loud. Poppy, a precocious pig, believes she can be the star of the circus in a highwire act. After a few stumbles and a little self-doubt, Mom reminds her that "some dreams take lots of trying" and Poppy returns determined to reach her full potential. The message, not at all heavy-handed, has prompted my own little ones to reach for their own dreams (and not a few requests to install a highwire in our back yard.) Quick! Grab your own copy of Poppy. You won't be disappointed with the performance.

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