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On Flag Day, Celebrate America's Core Values of Reason, Rights, and Science
The Rational Argumentator ^ | June 12, 2003 | Dr. Edwin A. Locke

Posted on 06/12/2003 2:27:44 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II

Not since the Revolutionary War has America faced a greater threat to its existence than it does today. A worldwide network of terrorists is bent on destroying us and everything we value. All the more reason to make clear on Flag Day the principles for which we stand.

In this age of diversity-worship, it is considered axiomatic that all cultures and countries are equal. Western culture—and its most consistent and highest expression, America—it is declared, is in no way superior to that of any other culture, not even to tribes of cannibals. To deny the equality of all cultures, claim most modern intellectuals, is to be guilty of the most heinous of intellectual sins: "ethnocentrism." It is to flout the "sacred" (and false) principle of cultural relativism. But the relativists are wrong—absolutely.

There are two fundamental respects in which American culture is objectively the best. The core values and achievements of American civilization—the values that made America great—are:

1. Reason. The Greeks were the first to identify philosophically that knowledge is gained through reason and logic as opposed to mysticism (faith, tradition, revelation, dogma). It would take two millennia, including a Dark Ages and a Renaissance, before the full implications of Greek thought would be realized. The rule of reason reached its zenith in the West in the 18th century—the Age of Enlightenment. "For the first time in modern history," writes one philosopher, "an authentic respect for reason became the mark of an entire culture." America is the epitome of Enlightenment thought.

2. Individual Rights. An indispensable achievement leading to the Enlightenment was the recognition of the concept of individual rights. John Locke demonstrated that individuals do not exist to serve governments, but rather that governments exist to protect individuals. The individual, said Locke, has an inalienable right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of his own happiness. This was the founding philosophy of America. (America made a disastrous error by tolerating slavery, which originated elsewhere, but it was too incongruent with America's core principles of reason and rights to endure and was corrected in the name of those principles.)

The triumph of reason and rights made possible the full development and application of science and technology and, ultimately, modern industrial society. Once man's mind was freed from the tyranny of religious dogma, and man's productive capacity was freed from the tyranny of state control, scientific and technological progress followed. Men began to understand the laws of nature. They invented machinery. They engaged in large-scale production, that is, the creation of wealth. This wealth, in turn, financed and motivated further invention and production. As a result, horse-and-buggies were replaced by automobiles produced by Henry Ford, wagon tracks by steel rails produced by Andrew Carnegie, and candles by electricity harnessed by Thomas Edison. At last, after millennia of struggle, man became the master of his environment.

The result of these core achievements was an increase in freedom, wealth, health, comfort, and life expectancy unprecedented in the history of the world. These Western achievements were greatest in the country where the principles of reason and rights were implemented most consistently—the United States of America. In contrast, it was precisely in those (third-world) countries, which did not embrace reason, rights, and technology, where people suffered (and still suffer) most from both natural and man-made disasters (famine, poverty, illness, dictatorship) and where life expectancy was (and is) lowest. It is said that primitives live "in harmony with nature," but in reality they are simply victims of the vicissitudes of nature—if some dictator does not kill them first.

The greatness of America is not an "ethnocentric" prejudice; it is an objective fact. This assessment is based on the only proper standard for judging a culture or a society: the degree to which its core values are pro- or anti-life. Pro-life cultures acknowledge and respect man's nature as a rational being who must discover and create the conditions which his survival and happiness require—which means that they advocate reason, rights (freedom), and technological progress.

Despite its undeniable triumphs, America and its flag are by no means secure. Its core principles are under attack from every direction—not only by foreign terrorists but by people in our own country—by religious zealots who want to undermine the separation of church and state, and by our own intellectuals, who denounce reason in the name of skepticism, rights in the name of special entitlements, and progress in the name of environmentalism. We are heading toward the destruction of our core values and toward the dead end of nihilism. The Stars and Stripes, which represent the core values and achievements of America, must be waved proudly and defended to the death. And the values underlying the flag must be understood. Our lives depend on it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: america; culturalsuperiority; flagday; freedom; humanrights; individualism; innovation; liberty; multiculturalism; nihilism; primitivism; progress; rationality; reason; rights; savagery; science
Edwin A. Locke, professor of management (emeritus) at the University of Maryland at College Park, is a senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, Calif. The Institute (www.aynrand.org/medialink) promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead.
1 posted on 06/12/2003 2:27:46 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II
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To: G. Stolyarov II
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2 posted on 06/12/2003 2:28:38 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index15.html)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
America is the epitome of Enlightenment thought.

America was an aberration. The French and Russian revolutions and the rise of fascism were the more usual products of "enlightenment thought".

3 posted on 06/12/2003 2:33:08 PM PDT by DPB101
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To: DPB101
No, the French and Russian revolutions were products of Rousseau-style "back-to-nature" socialism, post-Kantian irrationalism, and Marxian class conflict theory. Rousseau, Kant, and Marx had been reactionaries against the Enlightnment. Locke, Voltaire, and Montesquieu were by no means advocates of communism and fascism, nor would they have approved of Robespierre's Reign of Terror.

A Lockean Discourse on Self-Defense, Punishment and Justice: http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/lockeandiscourse.html
4 posted on 06/12/2003 2:40:46 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/index15.html)
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Jefferson wasn't a fan of tyranny either and look where his insistence on a Bill of Rights led. The religion clause of the first amendment now means exactly the opposite of what was intended. Just the outcome Patrick Henry, Benjamin Huntington and Roger Sherman feared.

Despite what Libertarians would like the case to be, America is not the product of "enlightment" and "reason". The American Revolution was a religious war. The Founders were, as P.J. O'Rouke said most eloquently, "Religious nuts with guns."

There was a reforming Christianity taking shape--one which would become Unitarianism and be based at Harvard--but that was only one part, a smaller one, of the ferment of the times. The other was fundamentalism--based at Yale and drawing inspiration from the Great Awakening of 1748.

Puritainism vs reformed Puritanism; Calvinism vs Unitarianism; Christ as the good rabbi vs Christ as the redeemer--that has been the driving force behind American politics since the start. Reason is incidental to the drama. Thankfully.

5 posted on 06/12/2003 3:16:04 PM PDT by DPB101
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To: G. Stolyarov II
Why be in denial that Judaism/Christianity has often played a role in Renaissance and Enlightenment down through the ages?

After all our own Declaration of Independence alludes to a Creator/Author of our existence as a nation.
6 posted on 06/12/2003 3:19:39 PM PDT by kuma
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To: G. Stolyarov II
I will spend Flag Day lamenting and mourning all the freedoms we have lost on every level of government. It grieves me. The more cognizant I am of the true freedom under the Founders, the more I'm sickened at what we've allowed to happen.
7 posted on 06/12/2003 4:39:36 PM PDT by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: G. Stolyarov II
re-read repost
8 posted on 06/12/2003 10:14:35 PM PDT by LiteKeeper (ool)
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
Well, it wasn't exactly a golden age of freedom. The Feds kept out of your business but the states didn't.
9 posted on 06/12/2003 10:21:12 PM PDT by DPB101 ("I just like the tribal culture of a newsroom"--former NYT executive editor Howell Raines.)
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To: Jim Robinson; All; Radix; Kathy in Alaska; kattracks
June 14, 2003: "FLAG DAY"...


June 14, 2003: FLAG DAY

June 14, 2003: "I PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE" -Commentary by Cindy Furnare

June 14, 2003: FLAG DAY.org: "24th ANNUAL PAUSE FOR THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE"

10 posted on 06/12/2003 10:41:39 PM PDT by Cindy
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