Hi Platt,
Eisenhower said the rights of EVERY person.
So I don't know how you can ask if these are sufficient and not believe in a
collective morality. These rights are spelling out a collective morality.
So far as if these are sufficient, I would say it sounds like a good starting
point. I would like to see EVERY indiviudal have them and then evaluate the
quality of the individual/social morality to see if it is sufficient.
>
My original question was whether the list of rights
>enumerated by Pirsig was complete. So far, that question hasn't been
>answered, at least directly.
>
>.freedom of speech
>.freedom of assembly
>.freedom of travel
>.trial by jury
>.habeas corpus
>.government by consent
>
>
>"Eisenhower was a product of and a believer in . . . the rights of every
>person:"
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