article: GONDOLATOK AZ ÛRHAJÓBAN
GONDOLATOK AZ ÛRHAJÓBAN Joseph B. Juhasz és Lester ShepardI. A vezérférférfiú alkonya? Nem akarok lenni se úr, se szolga. Hérodotosz, 3.8.32. A hetvenes évek vége felé Warren G. Bennis, a Cincinnati Egyetem rektora, hatttyúdalt énekel a nagy vezérek letûnésérõl. “Volt idõ, mikor a vezér döntött, pont. Egy Henry Ford, egy Andrew Carnegie egyszerûen ukázokat adott […]
article: The Need for an Ethic Based on Global Consensus
THE NEED FOR AN ETHIC BASED ON GLOBAL CONSENSUS Commentary broadcast on KPBX Spokane Public Radio, 2/29/00 by Lester A. Shepard In Austria – the country where Hitler was born – a new political party is emerging at the polls as number one. Its charismatic leader, Haider, has openly praised the Nazis. Haider’s rise to […]
article: Commercialization of the Internet
TRUTH FOR SALE – THE COMMERCIALIZATION OF THE INTERNET Commentary Broadcast on KPBX Spokane Public Radio 3/23/00 By Lester A. Shepard The shift from military to economic power has been one of the major salutary developments of the past fifty years. Certainly, we continue to witness regional flare-ups taking a tragic toll in human lives, […]
article: Great Prison and Casino Builders
Commentary Broadcast on KPBX Spokane Public Radio, 5/8/01 By Lester A. Shepard If you are familiar with the controversy over the new 12-million-dollar jail in nearby Kootenai county, a recently published report might interest you. Joseph Hallinan’s “Going Up the River: Travels in a Prison Nation” examines the rationale behind the US having a steadily increasing […]
article: Radio Sports
An abbreviated version of this commentary was read on KPBX Spokane Public Radio on June 13, 2001 Recently a Coeur d’Alene high school athlete died of cardiac arrest. We know that such incidents are not uncommon. In many schools undue pressure to excel at athletics contributes to a culture of hostility and exclusion that will […]
article: On Terrorism
By Lester A. Shepard Commentary Read on KPBX Spokane Public Radio 10/16/01 The recent terrorist attacks, which exceeded in scope and devastation all previous atrocities of their type, have highlighted with graphic horror the need to make peaceful civilians secure from violence. The perpetrators belonged to an organization that has cells in numerous countries, and […]
article: On Intolerance
This country is the envy of the world. It has achieved virtually the highest living standards of any land. Though the distinction between standard of living and quality of life is valid, I would argue that on the whole the impact of technology has been positive. Undeniably industrialization, unsustainable development, or the opportunities for misinformation […]
article: Budapest Not Dazzled by Bush Acrobatics
Our president’s apocalyptic brand of spreading freedom and democracy throughout the galaxy, though said to rely on confidential tips from God, has so far been less than spectacularly successful. Moslem rage has been whipped up by our armed intervention; Iraq is becoming a training camp for terrorists; global public opinion condemns American unilateralism, human-rights violations, […]
ISSUES IN APPLIED ETHICS: 7.1. Rights
ISSUES IN APPLIED ETHICS 7.1.The Game of “Who is Right?” – What is Right, and What are Rights Anyway? People usually quote the saying “might is right” as a reproachful, resigned, or ironic comment to mean that it is not supposed to be. This constitutes a perfect example of the clash of the two contradictory […]
ISSUES IN APPLIED ETHICS: 7.2 guilt
ISSUES IN APPLIED ETHICS: 7.2. Guilt It is interesting to note that in English guilt means both “culpability” and “remorse,” as if the spirit of the language itself wished to pander to the notion that they are the same. In truth they refer to very different phenomena. Even at an elementary level we should distinguish […]
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