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coberst
07-25-2009, 07:51 AM
Police and Professor: who had moral high ground?

Can both simultaneously occupy the moral high ground?

The NYTimes published a news article that ignited “a national discussion about race and law enforcement unfolded after the arrest of Henry Louis Gates Jr., Harvard’s prominent scholar of African-American history. Professor Gates was arrested for disorderly conduct July 16 at his home in Cambridge, Mass., as the police investigated a report of a possible break-in there. The charge was later dropped, and the Cambridge Police Department said the incident was “regrettable and unfortunate.” President Obama said the police officer had acted stupidly.

Are experiences, meaning, and comprehension pertinent to the facts?

Did the police officer and the professor “see” the same thing?

The police officer saw himself once again going into a dangerous situation in order to preserve law and order; in this dangerous situation he saw a potentially dangerous black man giving him a hard time just like so many others have done.

The well respected university professor saw a police officer harassing him because he is a black man; just as many police officers constantly harass him and all black men because almost all Irish police officers harbor racial hatred for all African Americans.

I claim that both the policeman and the professor had made moral decisions of the highest meaning. Both made decisions affecting the interrelationships of the community in its widest variables.

The Scientific Method seeks to bracket [fence out] meaningfulness. The scientific method hates bias and bias is one form of meaning. Bias causes the individual to often distort “truth”. In the lab bias is the enemy, i.e. meaning is the enemy.

Religion seeks to bracket the word “morality”, i.e. to create a fence protecting the “word” from outside influence. Religion seeks to bracket human critical thought. I was raised as a Catholic and went to Catholic schools and was taught by nuns. I learned quickly that to “entertain” impure thoughts (thoughts about sex) or questions about my religion were sinful and had to be confessed to a priest in the confessional.

What is meaning?

Meaning is not a thing: meaning is a creatures’ association with an object.

Meaning and epistemology (what can we know and how can we know it) go together like a “horse and carriage”. Epistemology is about comprehension and comprehension is about meaning.

Comprehension can be usefully thought of as being hierarchical and formed like a pyramid. At the base is awareness followed by consciousness. Awareness is the beginning of comprehension; it begins with preconceptual and unconscious happenings in our brain. Consciousness adds to awareness the focus of our attention on this object that results from awareness. We are aware of much and we are conscious of little. When I walk in the woods I am aware of much and become quickly terrified by the consciousness of a shape that makes me think bear.

Knowing follows consciousness on this pyramid. Knowing is followed by understanding. Understanding is at the pinnacle of the pyramid of comprehension.

Meaning follows comprehension side by side. Meaning begins with awareness and grows with consciousness and knowing. At the pinnacle of the pyramid is the creation of new meaning through the process of our understanding, which organizes into a gestalt that which is known. The understanding at the pinnacle of comprehension is that rare moment of eureka when all becomes clear after a great struggle to understand a complex matter. Understanding is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle where our knowledge are the pieces of the puzzle.

JWHooper
07-25-2009, 07:57 PM
Philosophy is all around us. We must ignore the truth of literature at this point, because we have to admit the professor is smarter than the police at literature. Once police reads the literature, he/she will cry a lot, because the emotion behind the words of truth is actually the beauty of the philosophical nature of biology.

JWHooper
07-25-2009, 07:59 PM
Police thinks that moral behind philosophy is the lie, but professor has the same but the difference of fact behind the biological law of literature. Papers are made out of tree, but once we eat the tree, then we should fully assume that we can read the stanzas behind the truth of the professor's genius behind the literature, in another words Ph.D in nature of biological dimension of literature of philosophical truth of Shakespearean sonnets.

eric.bell
03-29-2010, 10:01 PM
The police officer saw himself once again going into a dangerous situation in order to preserve law and order; in this dangerous situation he saw a potentially dangerous black man giving him a hard time just like so many others have done.

The well respected university professor saw a police officer harassing him because he is a black man; just as many police officers constantly harass him and all black men because almost all Irish police officers harbor racial hatred for all African Americans.

I really enjoyed the thread - but...you are prejudicing your arguments with assumptions that you can hardly prove: For one you have already planted a seed of doubt into your readers mind, when you say that the police officer saw a potentially dangerous black man and not simply that he saw a potentially dangerous man. Second - though I agree it was quite obvious that the Professor assumed that the officer was racially descriminating against him - you say "just as many police officers constantly harass him and all black men." True, racism sadly does exist, but has he been harassed by an officer of the law in the past? Do you know this to be fact? Lastly, you make this blanket statement that "almost all Irish police officers harbor racial hatred for all African Americans"; and yet you offer no proof, which might confirm this rather overly-presumptuous statement. COberst, you have committed a disservice to yourself and your writing, as well as those who read your post, by tainting the story from the get-go.