Law in Contemporary Society

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RobLaserFirstPaper 5 - 06 Apr 2010 - Main.EbenMoglen
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 (Also -- and this is a totally dispassionate way to talk about an atrocity -- I think the child soldier problem is more commonly identified with the wars in Congo, Sierra Leone, and Liberia than the present war in Darfur. The previous war in southern Sudan also had child soldiers. I think I may have met one, he's a banquet houseman at a Hyatt I organized. Really quiet guy. I never asked him about it of course....Anyway, I'm not an expert on the current Darfur conflict. Mr. McDougall? would know what the prevalence of child soldiers is there.)

-- AmandaBell - 09 Mar 2010

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I find it harder than Amanda does to identify a conflict in my own life between two nonexistent abstract personifications. (Being neither a Christian nor a man with a family may of course also be relevant.)

Regardless of the extent to which we identify with these abstractions, we might take your argument the short way across by saying that Christianity is a universalising faith, which seeks to explain that all people are children of one common Creator, redeemed by the sacrifice of his only begotten Son. But people take their identities most easily (perhaps a sociobiological argument would be helpful here?) from a family, a clan, or some other small community, whose creeds explain not universality, but particularism.

Yours, then, becomes, or wishes to become, a normative argument for particularism: Judaism or Hinduism (the religions that explain not why people are the same, but why they are different) writ small.

In truth, I would expect this to seem to many readers, as it seems to me, very small game not worth hunting. "Whatever floats your boat," is surely the answer, even if one has an opinion of one's own. As for whether John Brown is the universalist he thinks he is, or the particularist you find an ingenious way to claim him for, seems to be of no moment whatever: he has made clear what he means to do and why he means to do it. The rest, as Thoreau is the first to admit, is not even commentary.

So what seems to me most useful in the revision of this essay, besides the elimination of all the various little distractions that could be pruned away, is a clear statement of what's at stake. If this is a fight between straw men, readers will do right to withhold their attention.

 
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You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" on the next line:
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Revision 5r5 - 06 Apr 2010 - 01:41:04 - EbenMoglen
Revision 4r4 - 09 Mar 2010 - 05:40:57 - AmandaBell
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