- #666
Hobin
- 137
- 2
SHISHKABOB said:I can understand that, to a person who values reason, fundamentalism would be considered to be a bad thing. However, to a person who values the ideals of fundamentalism, fundamentalism would not be a bad thing. The values of fundamentalism that I am talking about come from the wikipedia page on fundamentalism.
The thing is that everyone is reasonable when it comes to their daily activities. You don't expect 'X' to suddenly mean 'not X'. Or, for a less alien example: when changing a flat tire, you're using reason to determine the best course of action. The problem is not that fundamentalistic people have a certain set of beliefs, but that one of these beliefs is 'reason does not apply to our set of beliefs'.
I may very well be wrong, of course. Although I have never met anyone who didn't care that their beliefs were unreasonable (in other words, though people may have held fundamentalist beliefs, the people I met always believed they were being reasonable, as opposed to 'reason does not apply'), I cannot be sure that no one has. Maybe I've just been very lucky. Though, to be perfectly honest, I don't see what can be gained by arguing about whether reason should be valued or not. After all, such an argument would require the use of reason. I kind of expect people to value reason. Silly me.
SHISHKABOB said:In my opinion, believing in absolutism in this sense leads to conflict with people who have differing opinions on the specifics of the standards of whatever absolute morality they believe in. This is why I do not think that a person like Romney, who apparently opposes fundamentalist Islam, is a good choice for a president, because he would end up conflicting with those people instead of possibly ending up with a good compromise.
I don't see how this should be a problem. That's what diplomacy is for.
Let's assume for the moment that I am the president of the United States. Personally, I'm opposed to fundamentalism of any kind - and thus also to fundamentalism in Islam. Does this mean that I would end up angering a whole bunch of people because of my opposition to their beliefs? Of course not. The fact that I disagree with people does not mean I will oppose them whenever they can - after all, these people still affect the rest of the world with their beliefs. You don't need to be neutral to their beliefs to see that a good compromise is better than making a lot of people very angry. This has much more to do with tact and diplomacy than with my own beliefs.
Thus, as for your question "how can we have peace when there are fundamentalists out there", the obvious answer is that being against fundamentalism does NOT mean I want to 'kill them all', or something equally barbaric. Can't I simply disagree, while still being nice to fundamentalists?
(The question remains whether Romney is capable of such tact, of course. I know too little about the man to argue one way or another.)