Are some ideologies more objectively correct than others? (Abolitionists used ostracism and violence to prevail against those who would return fugitive slaves south. Up until the point of violence, many of their arguments were “soldiers.” One such “soldier” was Spooner’s “The Unconstitutionality of Slavery”—from the same man who later wrote “the Constitution of No Authority.” He personally believed that the Constitution had no authority, but since it was revered by many conformists, he used a reference to it to show them that they should alter their position to support of abolitionism. Good for him!)
If some ideologies are more correct than others, then those arguments which are actually soldiers for those ideologies have strategic utility, but only as strategic “talking points,” “soldiers,” or “sticky” memes. Then, everyone who agrees with using those soldiers can identify them as such (strategy), and decide whether it’s a good strategic or philosophical, argument, or both, or neither.
Are some ideologies more objectively correct than others? (Abolitionists used ostracism and violence to prevail against those who would return fugitive slaves south. Up until the point of violence, many of their arguments were “soldiers.” One such “soldier” was Spooner’s “The Unconstitutionality of Slavery”—from the same man who later wrote “the Constitution of No Authority.” He personally believed that the Constitution had no authority, but since it was revered by many conformists, he used a reference to it to show them that they should alter their position to support of abolitionism. Good for him!)
If some ideologies are more correct than others, then those arguments which are actually soldiers for those ideologies have strategic utility, but only as strategic “talking points,” “soldiers,” or “sticky” memes. Then, everyone who agrees with using those soldiers can identify them as such (strategy), and decide whether it’s a good strategic or philosophical, argument, or both, or neither.