Law in Contemporary Society

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Another Lesson from John Brown

-- By AnthonyTiberio - 15 May 2012


AnthonyTiberioSecondPaper 4 - 30 Sep 2012 - Main.AnthonyTiberio
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META TOPICPARENT name="SecondPaper"

Another Lesson from John Brown

-- By AnthonyTiberio - 15 May 2012

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Upon first hearing about John Brown, I remember wishing that he had succeeded in immediately starting the civil war. He would have been idolized as an iconic general that served as a great catalyst for society’s moral evolution rather than a marginalized radical with good intentions. Yet, upon reencountering John Brown via Thoreau, I had a more complicated reaction this time around.
 
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Why is this a good introduction? It doesn't show us your central idea. It puts your past self having barely-remembered thoughts in the center of the frame, which is probably not what belongs there. And it states that you now have a new idea, but doesn't tell us what that idea is. Each of these seems to me a drawback, and I don't see the offsetting advantages.

Many different thoughts and feelings ran through my mind as I reencountered John Brown via Thoreau, but two feelings were particularly salient. First, I again felt admiration for his courage and sacrifice. He knew it was likely to lose his life in but refused to passively acquiesce to the uncontested continuance of slavery. Many people recognized the injustice, but most were in denial or simply chose to wait to rectify it. He forced people to slip further into their denial, to rationalize their complacency, or, in some, to reevaluate their attitudes. This feeling of admiration was naturally coupled with indignation at his being put to death despite fighting on the right side.

This feels blowsy. It could have been one sentence, about your admiration and indignation, but it would have fit better in a paragraph whose primary topic was something else, namely the new central idea you have about Brown. Substantively, I'm puzzled by the indignation. Approximately 110,000 Union soldiers died from wounds received fighting "on the right side." Is Brown's death the cause of more indignation, and if so, why? Are we not indignant about those who died fighting "on the wrong side"? If so, why?

Second, I could not help but pity him. Initially, I thought that my feeling of pity was merely directed towards his hanging, but I realized that I pitied him for the zealous level of conviction he fought with. Upon reflection, this seemed like an appropriate reaction, at least initially, due to the sort of myopic, zealous impression he left me with. In fact, this was part of his portrayal by the news at the time and how many remember him (though, by itself, this is an obviously oversimplified and an unfair characterization; but, as any bit of propaganda and distortion of reality, it often has to have some semblance of truth in order to be effective). My pity directed at him for appearing ‘crazy’ is not a thought that he is not rational or sane, in the traditional sense, but in that his attitude implied that there was no presence of a reasonable amount of self-doubt in his methods. Lacking some self-doubt in one’s actions is unhealthy and cause for concern.

"Unhealthy"? John Brown is a man in the grip of religious enthusiasm. He wants to do God's will, and he knows what God's will is. Maybe that's unhealthy and maybe it isn't. Because I know there is no God, I know that John Brown cannot be doing God's will, but he can be doing what he believes in, and that doesn't seem to me "unhealthy." People who believe in God will have a harder time with Brown, because it is likely that their God's will is something else, and they only believe in doing that. The Virginian white people who hanged him considered themselves to be Christians. Their God's will was that they should eat the fat of the land gathered for them by their slaves. Does that seem to you unhealthy and cause for concern, or only if they didn't have any doubts about it? Is Massa Tom less unhealthy if he trembles for his country when he reflects that God is just?

Though it’s hard to know how one would feel in counterfactual situations, I doubt I would have felt pity had he displayed more reluctance and less confidence in deciding to take up arms in the manner in which he did.

Odd that. Do you feel pity for the murdered Father Abraham? He had more than a little reluctance and lack of confidence, did he not? And wasn't this a component of what made him renderable, despite all the hatred and contempt felt for him during his lifetime, as the Man of Sorrows and Our Greatest President once he was safely dead?

Taking lives as a means to achieving a greater result is almost always a risky bet,

What has this to do with John Brown? He told you and everyone else, again and again, that he did not come to kill slave holders. His intention was to free slaves, he said at every opportunity, under the protection of arms in the hands of people who would not hesitate to use them, and who were feared on that account, as forceful, competent men ready to kill and die. He had made these forays before, killing no one and carrying slaves to freedom, because people were afraid to engage him, knowing that those who did resist his efforts would die.

That's a very different activity than the one you describe. Either you don't believe Brown or you haven't heard him. If the former, why do you not believe him? If the latter, isn't it time?

since it is almost always epistemically very hard to predict whether or not the end will justify it. In this case, it is entirely unclear that emulation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s or Gandhi’s nonviolent, peaceful style of civil disobedience would not have achieved the same or even better results.

Neither of their methods was calculated to do what Brown was trying to do, according to him, which was to carry away slaves into freedom. Not end slavery, not provoke war, not generate support for the abolition cause in the far-away North, not to create remorse in slave holders, but to free slaves. Discussion of tactics must proceed by accepting the given objectives and the allocated resources; that's what separates tactics from strategy. Brown's objectives were the outcome of his strategy, which was made—as he thought—by God. His Lord's will was that slaves be freed, that the naked be clothed, and the hungry fed. He was a man knowledgeable in the logistics of doing, and he was freeing slaves as it could be done. If he had taken upon himself to feed the hungry, he would not have been lobbying food stamp policy: he would have run a food bank.

But, even if John Brown’s taking up arms was the best method to combat slavery at the time, how could he have been so sure about it at the time?

Because he wasn't combating slavery, he was freeing slaves. Because he had gone around the country watching and learning and doing, and this was what he had decided would work. He had tested it and expanded it and he was "scaling it up," as they say in policyland, and he had the confidence of a visionary sustained by his belief in God, like most of the anti-abortion crusaders in the United States, who have all his zealotry and no part whatever of his effectiveness, for reasons so obvious a six-year-old could elucidate them.

It might be unfair to label his killing of slave-owners as a means to eradicating slavery rather than as a foreseen, unintended consequence of trying to end slavery.

It was neither. It was a foreseeable consequence, to which he was indifferent, of the anticipated resistance to his efforts to free particular slaves.

This is probably true; yet, this is a side issue because whether or not one views his killing either as a means or as an unintended but foreseen consequence of his actions is irrelevant to whether or not he should have manifested some expression of self-doubt in the means he chose.

Do you find the self-confidence necessary to being a leader in combat somehow blameworthy despite its evident necessity? Perhaps you can understand why Richard Nixon kept watching while he was in the White House George C. Scott's brilliant performance as General Patton?

Whether or not the killing was a means or was merely foreseen, John Brown knew that death was likely to result from the insurrection, and thus should have displayed more self-doubt about taking this approach.

No, Brown did not know that death was likely. He wasn't starting an insurrection. He was raiding the Armory for weapons and he intended to get away with it. His own view, which I have no military reason to doubt, was that he could have made good his escape if he had been willing to shoot, or even merely risk the lives of, innocent prisoners. But in any event, why would self-doubt have been an appropriate, let alone necessary, attitude of a military commander in his situation?

Whatever one’s response to John Brown, he really forces us to learn about ourselves. It might appear that by focusing on the moral status of his action to fight slavery with violence means that we are missing the lesson; yet, I think that focusing on the moral status of his action is precisely the right issue to focus on. Properly emulating John Brown’s courage to confront systematic injustice, which is hopefully our goal, requires deciding how one goes about doing that. This requires properly developing and revising one’s moral values through careful, honest, and thoughtful reflection. That, in turn, can be done by learning from John Brown’s strengths and his weaknesses. Taking the appropriate action to remedy a wrong requires proper understanding of the nature and severity of the wrong, knowing the possible courses of actions available, knowing how the courses of actions might achieve the intended result and at what cost, and then weighing the considerations together in order to determine the best possible courses of actions.

This graf confuses me. Why does "properly emulating ... courage" require deciding "how one goes about doing"? I should think that emulating courage requires courage, while emulating wisdom requires wisdom. I don't understand how "learning from Brown's strengths and weaknesses" is reflected in the remaining sentence. It describes how to plan anything, right or wrong, moral or moral. Are we to conclude that Brown's strength is courage and his weakness is bad planning? That does not coincide for me with the Brown I know.

As future lawyers, we should follow John Brown’s lead in adhering to and defending our core values when faced with strong opposition. Yet, there is an important qualification. We cannot become too convinced that we are correct in all aspects our of core values. Listening to the worries of others is essential to making the proper revisions to one’s beliefs and values in order to then be in a better position to choose the best means to bring about and defend those values. This requires being open to self-revision. To do this well, we are forced to do a difficult task: simultaneously both strongly clinging to our core values while also revising them in light of new circumstances and new information. Again, being able to revise and supplement one’s values and belief system requires some degree of self-doubt. Performing this balancing act is difficult and I do not mean to chastise John Brown for not performing it perfectly. In fact, maybe he did. Either way, building on his lead starts with realizing the imperfections in ourselves in addition to society’s imperfections. Having the courage to confront society’s imperfections is tremendous, but having the courage to confront these imperfections and having the courage to confront one’s own imperfections is what will enable us to meaningfully practice law and lead a fulfilling life.

This seems to me an odd turn. The hortatory conclusion feels forced to me. Why tell other people what they "should" do? Surely you can give your ideas voice for yourself and let other people decide for themselves what to think. And for all this to come down to the proposition that one should know one's imperfections, while undoubtedly Christian, seems somehow minimizing. Is that what John Brown's body teaches us, mouldering in its grave? Why did so many others see such another lesson or two there?


Eben: If possible, I would like to keep working with you, especially with the focus of improving my writing. Thank you.
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John Brown exemplifies courage. John Brown also exemplifies unbridled courage. Fortunately, unbridled courage can be mitigated with a dose of self-reflection and self-doubt.

We would be wise follow John Brown’s lead in adhering to and defending our core values when faced with strong opposition; yet, there is an important qualification. We cannot become too convinced that we are correct in all aspects of our core values and belief system. Listening to the worries of others and being sensitive to new information and alternative perspectives is essential to making the proper revisions to our beliefs and values in order to put ourselves in the best position possible to choose the best means to bring about and defend those values. This requires being open to self-revision. Being able to revise and supplement one’s values and belief system, in turn, requires some degree of self-doubt. We are forced to do a difficult task: simultaneously cling to our core values while also revising them in light of new circumstances and new information. Performing this balancing act is difficult. While John Brown did not perform this balancing act perfectly, he did have the courage to confront society’s poor values. The next step for us (i.e. where we can learn from his imperfections) is to also have the courage to self-edit our own values and beliefs via the possession of some self-doubt.

John Brown is well-deserving of respect for his courage. He refused to passively acquiesce to the fact that persons were bound to others as property. Many people recognized the injustice, but many were in denial or simply chose to wait to rectify it. He forced these people to slip further into their denial, to rationalize their complacency, or, in some, to reevaluate their attitudes.

Coupled with his courage, however, was his zeal. While not necessarily a shortcoming, his attitude was indicative of a myopic fanaticism that appeared to leave him too confident in his methods. In fact, he is often portrayed this way and is how many remember him. Of course, by itself, this is an oversimplified and an unfair characterization, but it does contain some semblance of truth. He was not irrational or insane, as he is often portrayed, but his attitude implied that there was no presence of some degree of self-doubt in his methods. This is concern for pause. Taking lives as a means to achieving a beneficial result is almost always a risky bet since it is almost always very hard to predict whether or not your intended aim will in fact result. That is, even if the end that would justify the means if the means were successful, as a matter of fact, it is very difficult to know whether the means will be successful. In this case, it is entirely unclear that emulation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s or Gandhi’s nonviolent, peaceful style of civil disobedience would not have achieved the same or even better results. John Brown was rightfully frustrated by this possible approach because he wanted immediate “action!” Rather than aiming to end slavery altogether, John Brown simply aimed to save as many particular slaves as he could. This, he thought, required taking up arms. Perhaps this was so, but he could not have been so confident, and epistemically justified in being so confident, that it was better to attempt to free some individuals (using arms) rather than aiming at a bigger picture solution via nonviolent means – and this justifiable confidence seems needed in order to use the threat of death and killing as a means.

It might be unfair to label his killing of particular slave-owners as a means to freeing particular slaves rather than as a foreseen, unintended consequence of trying to free those particular slaves. This is probably true; yet, this is a side issue. Whether or not one views his killing either as a means or as an unintended but foreseen consequence of his actions is irrelevant to whether or not it would have been better to manifest some expression of self-reflection and self-doubt in the means he chose. While self-doubt is seen as a weakness, and self-confidence essential, for a leader in combat, we can still question whether combat was appropriate in the first place. This is why we pity those who have fought for frivolous causes, even though they did so in a way that a leader in combat ought to have done qua ‘leader in combat.’

Whether or not the killing was a means or was merely foreseen, John Brown knew that serious harm could result from his attempt to free particular slaves. If he did not know this, then he was not deserving of the level of courage that we typically assign to him because courage requires a perceived risk. Since he probably knew that serious harm was likely to occur to not only himself but to others as well, a higher level of self-doubt is apt.

By focusing on the moral status of his action to free particular slaves with the use of force, we are not missing the lesson of John Brown. Properly emulating John Brown’s courage to confront grave instances of injustice, which is hopefully our goal, requires not only having courage in the first place but also requires asking ourselves: how am I going to bring about an end to particular instances of injustice? This requires development and frequent revision of one’s values through careful, honest, and thoughtful reflection. Taking the appropriate action to remedy a wrong requires understanding of the nature and severity of the wrong, knowing the possible courses of actions available, knowing how the courses of actions might achieve the intended result and at what cost, and then weighing the considerations together in order to determine the best possible courses of actions.


AnthonyTiberioSecondPaper 3 - 09 Aug 2012 - Main.EbenMoglen
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Another Lesson from John Brown

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Upon first hearing about John Brown, I remember wishing that he had succeeded in immediately starting the civil war. He would have been idolized as an iconic general that served as a great catalyst for society’s moral evolution rather than a marginalized radical with good intentions. Yet, upon reencountering John Brown via Thoreau, I had a more complicated reaction this time around.
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Why is this a good introduction? It doesn't show us your central idea. It puts your past self having barely-remembered thoughts in the center of the frame, which is probably not what belongs there. And it states that you now have a new idea, but doesn't tell us what that idea is. Each of these seems to me a drawback, and I don't see the offsetting advantages.
 Many different thoughts and feelings ran through my mind as I reencountered John Brown via Thoreau, but two feelings were particularly salient. First, I again felt admiration for his courage and sacrifice. He knew it was likely to lose his life in but refused to passively acquiesce to the uncontested continuance of slavery. Many people recognized the injustice, but most were in denial or simply chose to wait to rectify it. He forced people to slip further into their denial, to rationalize their complacency, or, in some, to reevaluate their attitudes. This feeling of admiration was naturally coupled with indignation at his being put to death despite fighting on the right side.
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Second, I could not help but pity him. Initially, I thought that my feeling of pity was merely directed towards his hanging, but I realized that I pitied him for the zealous level of conviction he fought with. Upon reflection, this seemed like an appropriate reaction, at least initially, due to the sort of myopic, zealous impression he left me with. In fact, this was part of his portrayal by the news at the time and how many remember him (though, by itself, this is an obviously oversimplified and an unfair characterization; but, as any bit of propaganda and distortion of reality, it often has to have some semblance of truth in order to be effective). My pity directed at him for appearing ‘crazy’ is not a thought that he is not rational or sane, in the traditional sense, but in that his attitude implied that there was no presence of a reasonable amount of self-doubt in his methods. Lacking some self-doubt in one’s actions is unhealthy and cause for concern. Though it’s hard to know how one would feel in counterfactual situations, I doubt I would have felt pity had he displayed more reluctance and less confidence in deciding to take up arms in the manner in which he did. Taking lives as a means to achieving a greater result is almost always a risky bet, since it is almost always epistemically very hard to predict whether or not the end will justify it. In this case, it is entirely unclear that emulation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s or Gandhi’s nonviolent, peaceful style of civil disobedience would not have achieved the same or even better results. But, even if John Brown’s taking up arms was the best method to combat slavery at the time, how could he have been so sure about it at the time?
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This feels blowsy. It could have been one sentence, about your admiration and indignation, but it would have fit better in a paragraph whose primary topic was something else, namely the new central idea you have about Brown. Substantively, I'm puzzled by the indignation. Approximately 110,000 Union soldiers died from wounds received fighting "on the right side." Is Brown's death the cause of more indignation, and if so, why? Are we not indignant about those who died fighting "on the wrong side"? If so, why?

Second, I could not help but pity him. Initially, I thought that my feeling of pity was merely directed towards his hanging, but I realized that I pitied him for the zealous level of conviction he fought with. Upon reflection, this seemed like an appropriate reaction, at least initially, due to the sort of myopic, zealous impression he left me with. In fact, this was part of his portrayal by the news at the time and how many remember him (though, by itself, this is an obviously oversimplified and an unfair characterization; but, as any bit of propaganda and distortion of reality, it often has to have some semblance of truth in order to be effective). My pity directed at him for appearing ‘crazy’ is not a thought that he is not rational or sane, in the traditional sense, but in that his attitude implied that there was no presence of a reasonable amount of self-doubt in his methods. Lacking some self-doubt in one’s actions is unhealthy and cause for concern.

"Unhealthy"? John Brown is a man in the grip of religious enthusiasm. He wants to do God's will, and he knows what God's will is. Maybe that's unhealthy and maybe it isn't. Because I know there is no God, I know that John Brown cannot be doing God's will, but he can be doing what he believes in, and that doesn't seem to me "unhealthy." People who believe in God will have a harder time with Brown, because it is likely that their God's will is something else, and they only believe in doing that. The Virginian white people who hanged him considered themselves to be Christians. Their God's will was that they should eat the fat of the land gathered for them by their slaves. Does that seem to you unhealthy and cause for concern, or only if they didn't have any doubts about it? Is Massa Tom less unhealthy if he trembles for his country when he reflects that God is just?

Though it’s hard to know how one would feel in counterfactual situations, I doubt I would have felt pity had he displayed more reluctance and less confidence in deciding to take up arms in the manner in which he did.

Odd that. Do you feel pity for the murdered Father Abraham? He had more than a little reluctance and lack of confidence, did he not? And wasn't this a component of what made him renderable, despite all the hatred and contempt felt for him during his lifetime, as the Man of Sorrows and Our Greatest President once he was safely dead?

Taking lives as a means to achieving a greater result is almost always a risky bet,

What has this to do with John Brown? He told you and everyone else, again and again, that he did not come to kill slave holders. His intention was to free slaves, he said at every opportunity, under the protection of arms in the hands of people who would not hesitate to use them, and who were feared on that account, as forceful, competent men ready to kill and die. He had made these forays before, killing no one and carrying slaves to freedom, because people were afraid to engage him, knowing that those who did resist his efforts would die.

That's a very different activity than the one you describe. Either you don't believe Brown or you haven't heard him. If the former, why do you not believe him? If the latter, isn't it time?

since it is almost always epistemically very hard to predict whether or not the end will justify it. In this case, it is entirely unclear that emulation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s or Gandhi’s nonviolent, peaceful style of civil disobedience would not have achieved the same or even better results.

Neither of their methods was calculated to do what Brown was trying to do, according to him, which was to carry away slaves into freedom. Not end slavery, not provoke war, not generate support for the abolition cause in the far-away North, not to create remorse in slave holders, but to free slaves. Discussion of tactics must proceed by accepting the given objectives and the allocated resources; that's what separates tactics from strategy. Brown's objectives were the outcome of his strategy, which was made—as he thought—by God. His Lord's will was that slaves be freed, that the naked be clothed, and the hungry fed. He was a man knowledgeable in the logistics of doing, and he was freeing slaves as it could be done. If he had taken upon himself to feed the hungry, he would not have been lobbying food stamp policy: he would have run a food bank.

But, even if John Brown’s taking up arms was the best method to combat slavery at the time, how could he have been so sure about it at the time?

Because he wasn't combating slavery, he was freeing slaves. Because he had gone around the country watching and learning and doing, and this was what he had decided would work. He had tested it and expanded it and he was "scaling it up," as they say in policyland, and he had the confidence of a visionary sustained by his belief in God, like most of the anti-abortion crusaders in the United States, who have all his zealotry and no part whatever of his effectiveness, for reasons so obvious a six-year-old could elucidate them.

It might be unfair to label his killing of slave-owners as a means to eradicating slavery rather than as a foreseen, unintended consequence of trying to end slavery.

It was neither. It was a foreseeable consequence, to which he was indifferent, of the anticipated resistance to his efforts to free particular slaves.

This is probably true; yet, this is a side issue because whether or not one views his killing either as a means or as an unintended but foreseen consequence of his actions is irrelevant to whether or not he should have manifested some expression of self-doubt in the means he chose.

Do you find the self-confidence necessary to being a leader in combat somehow blameworthy despite its evident necessity? Perhaps you can understand why Richard Nixon kept watching while he was in the White House George C. Scott's brilliant performance as General Patton?

Whether or not the killing was a means or was merely foreseen, John Brown knew that death was likely to result from the insurrection, and thus should have displayed more self-doubt about taking this approach.

No, Brown did not know that death was likely. He wasn't starting an insurrection. He was raiding the Armory for weapons and he intended to get away with it. His own view, which I have no military reason to doubt, was that he could have made good his escape if he had been willing to shoot, or even merely risk the lives of, innocent prisoners. But in any event, why would self-doubt have been an appropriate, let alone necessary, attitude of a military commander in his situation?

 
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It might be unfair to label his killing of slave-owners as a means to eradicating slavery rather than as a foreseen, unintended consequence of trying to end slavery. This is probably true; yet, this is a side issue because whether or not one views his killing either as a means or as an unintended but foreseen consequence of his actions is irrelevant to whether or not he should have manifested some expression of self-doubt in the means he chose. Whether or not the killing was a means or was merely foreseen, John Brown knew that death was likely to result from the insurrection, and thus should have displayed more self-doubt about taking this approach.
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 Whatever one’s response to John Brown, he really forces us to learn about ourselves. It might appear that by focusing on the moral status of his action to fight slavery with violence means that we are missing the lesson; yet, I think that focusing on the moral status of his action is precisely the right issue to focus on. Properly emulating John Brown’s courage to confront systematic injustice, which is hopefully our goal, requires deciding how one goes about doing that. This requires properly developing and revising one’s moral values through careful, honest, and thoughtful reflection. That, in turn, can be done by learning from John Brown’s strengths and his weaknesses. Taking the appropriate action to remedy a wrong requires proper understanding of the nature and severity of the wrong, knowing the possible courses of actions available, knowing how the courses of actions might achieve the intended result and at what cost, and then weighing the considerations together in order to determine the best possible courses of actions.
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This graf confuses me. Why does "properly emulating ... courage" require deciding "how one goes about doing"? I should think that emulating courage requires courage, while emulating wisdom requires wisdom. I don't understand how "learning from Brown's strengths and weaknesses" is reflected in the remaining sentence. It describes how to plan anything, right or wrong, moral or moral. Are we to conclude that Brown's strength is courage and his weakness is bad planning? That does not coincide for me with the Brown I know.

 As future lawyers, we should follow John Brown’s lead in adhering to and defending our core values when faced with strong opposition. Yet, there is an important qualification. We cannot become too convinced that we are correct in all aspects our of core values. Listening to the worries of others is essential to making the proper revisions to one’s beliefs and values in order to then be in a better position to choose the best means to bring about and defend those values. This requires being open to self-revision. To do this well, we are forced to do a difficult task: simultaneously both strongly clinging to our core values while also revising them in light of new circumstances and new information. Again, being able to revise and supplement one’s values and belief system requires some degree of self-doubt. Performing this balancing act is difficult and I do not mean to chastise John Brown for not performing it perfectly. In fact, maybe he did. Either way, building on his lead starts with realizing the imperfections in ourselves in addition to society’s imperfections. Having the courage to confront society’s imperfections is tremendous, but having the courage to confront these imperfections and having the courage to confront one’s own imperfections is what will enable us to meaningfully practice law and lead a fulfilling life.
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This seems to me an odd turn. The hortatory conclusion feels forced to me. Why tell other people what they "should" do? Surely you can give your ideas voice for yourself and let other people decide for themselves what to think. And for all this to come down to the proposition that one should know one's imperfections, while undoubtedly Christian, seems somehow minimizing. Is that what John Brown's body teaches us, mouldering in its grave? Why did so many others see such another lesson or two there?

 
Eben: If possible, I would like to keep working with you, especially with the focus of improving my writing. Thank you.

AnthonyTiberioSecondPaper 2 - 21 May 2012 - Main.AnthonyTiberio
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Another Lesson from John Brown

 -- By AnthonyTiberio - 15 May 2012
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Upon first hearing about John Brown, I remember wishing that he had succeeded in immediately starting the civil war. He would have been idolized as an iconic general that served as a great catalyst for society’s moral evolution rather than a marginalized radical with good intentions. Yet, upon reencountering John Brown via Thoreau, I had a more complicated reaction this time around.
 
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Many different thoughts and feelings ran through my mind as I reencountered John Brown via Thoreau, but two feelings were particularly salient. First, I again felt admiration for his courage and sacrifice. He knew it was likely to lose his life in but refused to passively acquiesce to the uncontested continuance of slavery. Many people recognized the injustice, but most were in denial or simply chose to wait to rectify it. He forced people to slip further into their denial, to rationalize their complacency, or, in some, to reevaluate their attitudes. This feeling of admiration was naturally coupled with indignation at his being put to death despite fighting on the right side.
 
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Second, I could not help but pity him. Initially, I thought that my feeling of pity was merely directed towards his hanging, but I realized that I pitied him for the zealous level of conviction he fought with. Upon reflection, this seemed like an appropriate reaction, at least initially, due to the sort of myopic, zealous impression he left me with. In fact, this was part of his portrayal by the news at the time and how many remember him (though, by itself, this is an obviously oversimplified and an unfair characterization; but, as any bit of propaganda and distortion of reality, it often has to have some semblance of truth in order to be effective). My pity directed at him for appearing ‘crazy’ is not a thought that he is not rational or sane, in the traditional sense, but in that his attitude implied that there was no presence of a reasonable amount of self-doubt in his methods. Lacking some self-doubt in one’s actions is unhealthy and cause for concern. Though it’s hard to know how one would feel in counterfactual situations, I doubt I would have felt pity had he displayed more reluctance and less confidence in deciding to take up arms in the manner in which he did. Taking lives as a means to achieving a greater result is almost always a risky bet, since it is almost always epistemically very hard to predict whether or not the end will justify it. In this case, it is entirely unclear that emulation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s or Gandhi’s nonviolent, peaceful style of civil disobedience would not have achieved the same or even better results. But, even if John Brown’s taking up arms was the best method to combat slavery at the time, how could he have been so sure about it at the time?
 
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It might be unfair to label his killing of slave-owners as a means to eradicating slavery rather than as a foreseen, unintended consequence of trying to end slavery. This is probably true; yet, this is a side issue because whether or not one views his killing either as a means or as an unintended but foreseen consequence of his actions is irrelevant to whether or not he should have manifested some expression of self-doubt in the means he chose. Whether or not the killing was a means or was merely foreseen, John Brown knew that death was likely to result from the insurrection, and thus should have displayed more self-doubt about taking this approach.
 
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Whatever one’s response to John Brown, he really forces us to learn about ourselves. It might appear that by focusing on the moral status of his action to fight slavery with violence means that we are missing the lesson; yet, I think that focusing on the moral status of his action is precisely the right issue to focus on. Properly emulating John Brown’s courage to confront systematic injustice, which is hopefully our goal, requires deciding how one goes about doing that. This requires properly developing and revising one’s moral values through careful, honest, and thoughtful reflection. That, in turn, can be done by learning from John Brown’s strengths and his weaknesses. Taking the appropriate action to remedy a wrong requires proper understanding of the nature and severity of the wrong, knowing the possible courses of actions available, knowing how the courses of actions might achieve the intended result and at what cost, and then weighing the considerations together in order to determine the best possible courses of actions.
 
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As future lawyers, we should follow John Brown’s lead in adhering to and defending our core values when faced with strong opposition. Yet, there is an important qualification. We cannot become too convinced that we are correct in all aspects our of core values. Listening to the worries of others is essential to making the proper revisions to one’s beliefs and values in order to then be in a better position to choose the best means to bring about and defend those values. This requires being open to self-revision. To do this well, we are forced to do a difficult task: simultaneously both strongly clinging to our core values while also revising them in light of new circumstances and new information. Again, being able to revise and supplement one’s values and belief system requires some degree of self-doubt. Performing this balancing act is difficult and I do not mean to chastise John Brown for not performing it perfectly. In fact, maybe he did. Either way, building on his lead starts with realizing the imperfections in ourselves in addition to society’s imperfections. Having the courage to confront society’s imperfections is tremendous, but having the courage to confront these imperfections and having the courage to confront one’s own imperfections is what will enable us to meaningfully practice law and lead a fulfilling life.
 
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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 "#" character on the next two lines:

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Eben: If possible, I would like to keep working with you, especially with the focus of improving my writing. Thank you.

AnthonyTiberioSecondPaper 1 - 15 May 2012 - Main.AnthonyTiberio
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META TOPICPARENT name="SecondPaper"

Paper Title

-- By AnthonyTiberio - 15 May 2012

Section I

Subsection A

Subsub 1

Subsection B

Subsub 1

Subsub 2

Section II

Subsection A

Subsection B


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 "#" character on the next two lines:

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Revision 5r5 - 22 Jan 2013 - 20:09:48 - IanSullivan
Revision 4r4 - 30 Sep 2012 - 19:18:34 - AnthonyTiberio
Revision 3r3 - 09 Aug 2012 - 21:36:58 - EbenMoglen
Revision 2r2 - 21 May 2012 - 17:28:55 - AnthonyTiberio
Revision 1r1 - 15 May 2012 - 22:14:44 - AnthonyTiberio
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