Everyday you can grow in integrity and know you are
becoming a better and moral person if you understand and practice the choices
presented here.
Key General Idea:
All reality has structure. If a
thing’s structure is kept in tact, it
is good. If it has been harmed in any
way to that extent it is bad. Structure
is the “law” of a thing’s being.
Key Specific Idea:
Your person is structured. That
structure is openness, freedom,
transcendence. You are open to evidence
and people. You can choose to face and accept evidence; you can choose to be
open to people and be willing to trust them.
If you do so you will be rewarded immediately with knowledge (from
evidence) and with friendship (from trust).
If you close your mind to evidence, you will be punished immediately
with ignorance about your surrounding world.
That ignorance can be the source
of both bodily and mental harm. If you close yourself off from people, you
will be punished immediately by loneliness.
Consequently, the basic act of integrity is your decision to stay open,
to become by choice what you are by structure, namely open to reality and to
people. That is the basic moral law and
it always carries with it obligations;
and those obligations are sanctioned by immediate rewards/punishments.
Method:
Critical thinking, abstract or
philosophical thought. The essay has
been in development over four years and has been reviewed by teachers and high
school students, In general, teachers
felt it was too difficult for students.
Two good students found those versions quite good. Assumption:
If the students can handle the abstract thought of geometry, for
example, the formulae for area, volume, area of a circle, circumference of a
circle, the Pythagorean formula, they can also handle philosophical thought.
They are capable of critcal thinking--provided the philosophical definitions
are used as consistently as the math definitions. Geometry can be taught; integrity and basic morality can be
taught too.
Definitions: There are many, but the fifteen most important are listed
here. All will be explained in the
course of the essay and used in exactly the same way throughout. The student will see that these and the
other definitions are valid. Challenge:
if the student thinks the definition is inadequate, let him/her develop another
that is clearly distinct from all the others.
1. Why can’t
a couple learn French by adopting and living with a French baby?
Ans. Because
the French baby is free from all language limitations and is open to learn any
language that is part of his personal environment.
2. Is
freedom an action or a permanent state of being? Explain.
Ans. It is not an action but rather a permanent
state of being from which can come transitory free action.
3. Give two
other words for freedom.
Ans.
Openness or transcendence.
4. What is
the fundamental act of respect for your freedom?
Ans. “I will stay open, affirm my transcendence, I
will face evidence.”
5. What is
the root of all moral evil?
Ans. The
root of all moral evil is the lie.
6. What does
correlative mean? Give two examples of
realities that are correlative to one another.
Ans. Two
terms are so related that having one without the other is to have something
that has no meaning. For example, a
boat without a body of water to
navigate or a threaded bolt without a nut similarly threaded, male without
female (female without male).
7. What is
the correlative to the human person?
Ans. The
other human person(s).