I have undoubtedly created confusion based on what I perceive as worldviews, and a tendency to think in terms of conflicting or incompatible ones. It's perhaps best if I simply withdraw the question.
I wonder what Robert Reich's response would be. (I read his article in full only a few minutes before yours so it was still fresh in my memory.) Do you think both worldviews can be true?
Honest question from an honest confusion on my part (not a challenge or a "debate"): Which two worldviews would those be?
I feel that many people feel that "the problem is always some other individual, never anything I identify with" qualifies as a worldview, rather than a move to personal innocence and part of the "freedom from responsibility" culture.
I wouldn't personally ask if a Worldview was "true", and hopefully wouldn't be misinterpreted as suggesting one was “false”, as I don't believe true/fale/etc applies to Worldviews.
I have undoubtedly created confusion based on what I perceive as worldviews, and a tendency to think in terms of conflicting or incompatible ones. It's perhaps best if I simply withdraw the question.
I wonder what Robert Reich's response would be. (I read his article in full only a few minutes before yours so it was still fresh in my memory.) Do you think both worldviews can be true?
Honest question from an honest confusion on my part (not a challenge or a "debate"): Which two worldviews would those be?
I feel that many people feel that "the problem is always some other individual, never anything I identify with" qualifies as a worldview, rather than a move to personal innocence and part of the "freedom from responsibility" culture.
I wouldn't personally ask if a Worldview was "true", and hopefully wouldn't be misinterpreted as suggesting one was “false”, as I don't believe true/fale/etc applies to Worldviews.