Bio
24 year old active duty soldier/economics major/secularist stationed at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska who passes the time with informal logic (induction and deduction), history (especially Russian history), and free market economics. Contact me at michaellabeit@gmail.com. I blog at labeit.economicpolicyjournal.com. You may pronounce "Labeit" as "La Bite" or "Lobby et" (though a friend of mine says the French pronounce it as "La Bay" so I might just switch over to that - it sounds sexier). My Facebook page is www.facebook.com/michael.labeit


Re: Cognitive Dissonance
Scott Reusser
Michael Labeit
This does not entail a contradiction. Darwinism is a descriptive theory, not a prescriptive one.
However, Michael, liberals often seem resistant to accept human society in Darwinist terms, even in a descriptive way. For instance, to liberals unequal outcomes are usually evidence of some injustice -- prejudice, sexism, lack of fair play of some sort or another -- and not a logical result of differing abilities or aptitudes.
That does entail a contradiction.
I don't think so. Humans can spare themselves of the effects of Darwinism via laws and social norms. Animals cannot, thus liberals do not expect them to. Liberals do not deny the fact that there are differing abilities and aptitudes among humans - certainly not.