[A lecture for students and the general public, recently delivered at Bloomsburg University, by yours truly.]
In the course of human affairs, after we have duly reflected on the great trends of our time, and we have spare time for personal self-examination, a question may present itself, to every thinking person, of his or her place in society, and his or her own virtues or vices of character. More to the point, at the present stage of history, in age of “greed is good” capitalism, of raging Facebook and reality TV narcissism, and of defensive unwillingness to entertain an opposing perspective—in short, with a rising cultural tide of assholery—it behooves each of us to contemplate the possibility that we ourselves are, or are prone to become, an asshole.
The question ranks among the least profound of philosophical questions of all time. And yet it is both necessary and an occasion for useful philosophy. How can we say whether we are or are not an asshole without knowing what an asshole is, without knowing what the term “asshole”
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