Message-ID: <Pine.NEB.4.51.0301270850280.18576@panix3.panix.com>
From: Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com>
To: Cyb <cybermind@listserv.aol.com>,
"WRYTING-L : Writing and Theory across Disciplines" <WRYTING-L@LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CA>
Subject: Today's mail - boys, girls, and humans
Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2003 08:50:40 -0500 (EST)
Today's mail - boys, girls, and humans ROXANA <bonogirl_1999@yahoo.com>, saber ver <info@saberver.com>, writing about them, so I might as well write about them, too. And my girls BKramm@t-online.de, blendaboy@yahoo.com, britoexplicito@hotmail.com, A weekend search turned up no trace of four teenage boys who >collections in human sexuality and Asian Studies. humanitarian needs for the Iraqi people as well as spare parts to humanitarian needs for the Iraqi people as well as spare parts to > imagining the worst of every human being > imagining the worst of every human being > imagining the worst of every human being prosista de quinta y un ser humano de d=E9cima."El maestro del arte de = From owner-humanist@Princeton.EDU Mon Jan 27 02:11:07 2003 Return-Path: <owner-humanist@Princeton.EDU> Sender: Humanist Discussion Group <humanist@Princeton.EDU> To: humanist@Princeton.EDU From owner-humanist@Princeton.EDU Mon Jan 27 02:15:30 2003 Return-Path: <owner-humanist@Princeton.EDU> Sender: Humanist Discussion Group <humanist@Princeton.EDU> X-To: Humanist Discussion Group <humanist@Princeton.EDU> To: humanist@Princeton.EDU Reader <b>D. K. Hernandez</b> says the <b>"dehumanizing" surveillance systems</b> described in <b>Dan Farber's</b> "<a href="http://cl.com.com/Click?q=89-h28bQ-JFrV5LkOrepwOjZ00GLWlR" ><b>A day at the office in 2013</b></a>" are already a part of corporate life today. "It will take decisions by both management and worker to determine whether our business future will be a unified system of people helping people, or divided in conflict between parasites, victims, and parasite-fighters." would be much more costly in human lives and material destruction than relevant articles on the environment, development, human rights, U.S. justifies the infringement of civil or human rights (at home / or abroad), or other issues connected with human rights violations by the Communist http://human-nature.com/nibbs/issue84.html Subject: are all human impulses morally good? Take for example the rapist. It may well be that generating rapist inclinations is an Evolutionary Stable Strategy for a small proportion of genes in the gene pool. Does that mean we should say rape is a good thing as it is grounded in human nature? Or maybe we should say, the odd rape is a good thing, as long as it doesn't get out of hand? Or take the prospective war with (or liberation of) Iraq. People have divergent and in many cases well argued views as to whether or not this would be a good thing. The moral arguments are based on a range of highly complicated factors. Both the pro and anti war camp asre presumeably effected by the same human nature so if that is all there is how do we make sense of such complex moral judgements. > legal treatment of non-humans, among many others. Certainly science can and has > been misused, but so has every other intellectual tool that we humans have thus > > http://human-nature.com/nibbs/issue84.html > > knowledge. Individual humans in modern societies are far from human somatic cell engineering, and ===