
Menu
- Home
- HBS Hosts
- Our Story
- Listen
- Seasons
- Season 12
- Season 11
- Season 10
- Season 9
- Season 8
- Season 7
- Season 6
- Season 5
- Season 4
- Season 3
- Season 2
- Season 1
- Afterthoughts
- Themes/Series
- Guest Episodes
- HBS Goes To the Movies
- Deep Dives
- Politics
- Ethics
- Technology
- Pop Culture
- Race and Racism
- Gender/Sex/LGBTQ+ Concerns
- Environmental Issues
- Professional Philosophy / Higher Ed
- Minibar Episodes
- Contact
- Support Us!
- Search
A very interesting discussion and I look forward to reading Lewis’ “manifesto.” I found myself remembering Shulamith Firestone’s recommendations for abolishing the family and Mary Midgley’s critique of Firestone’s radical feminist recommendation. As Midgley notes in The Ethical Primate, “Some degree of partiality is, then, built into our social nature. It shows itself, not just in favouring kin, but more widely in the way we form attachments, or fail to form them, with all the people who are of importance to us. We are not creatures capable of loving everybody equally, nor even of understanding fully why we do love some people more than others. Attempts to turn us into such creatures – such as those of the Stoics – have usually ended by seriously damaging the whole capacity for love, not by distributing it on rational principles over the whole population.” I wonder how relevant this observation [which I find persuasive] is to Lewis’ manifesto.