I don't think the analogy holds. Both camps (if there even are two camps) both spit out fundamentalists. But the bigger problem is that the goal and values of secular ethics is smuggled in from another source and this is an issue raised in the article itself. This echo's Nietzsche's complaint that secular ethics is resting on the Christi…
I don't think the analogy holds. Both camps (if there even are two camps) both spit out fundamentalists. But the bigger problem is that the goal and values of secular ethics is smuggled in from another source and this is an issue raised in the article itself. This echo's Nietzsche's complaint that secular ethics is resting on the Christian set of values. I don't see how your analogy could possibly escape this problem.
I don't think the analogy holds. Both camps (if there even are two camps) both spit out fundamentalists. But the bigger problem is that the goal and values of secular ethics is smuggled in from another source and this is an issue raised in the article itself. This echo's Nietzsche's complaint that secular ethics is resting on the Christian set of values. I don't see how your analogy could possibly escape this problem.