You misunderstand me. I'm not arguing for "undecidability" or moral neutrality or that people sit on the sidelines. People should certainly decide on what they think is right, based on their morals, and then act on it.
What I'm criticizing is the idea these activists and their approach is objectively wrong, which is what it appears that Peterson is advancing. That based on his analysis of limited iterable games and such, that he can determine that some subset of activists are provably detrimental to society in the large sense. And so he can say with certainty that some of these activists should not be acting on what they think is right, based on their morals, unless they choose do it in one of the limited fashions that he has deemed acceptable.
Regarding my claim that your position strikes me as too close to Derridean undecidability for my liking, your response here is actually corroborating that claim, not countering it. My reason for saying that is because you immediately targeted the concept of objectivity, which is always (and necessarily) the first target of anything even remotely poststructuralist/postmodernist.
So the undecidability argument goes (as taken from that link that I posted):
"A decision cannot be wise, or, posed even more provocatively, [it] must actually be mad (DPJ 26, GD 65). Drawing on Kierkegaard, Derrida tells us that a decision requires an undecidable leap beyond all prior preparations for that decision (GD 77), and, according to him, this applies to all decisions and not just those regarding the conversion to religious faith that preoccupies Kierkegaard. To pose the problem in inverse fashion, it might be suggested that for Derrida all decisions are a faith and a tenuous faith at that since were faith and the decision not tenuous they would cease to be a faith or a decision at all (cf. GD 80)."
Regarding your post here, how is your position that there is no way to determine whether or not people are objectively right/wrong in what they think/do
not promulgating undecidability? To avoid this charge, you'd have to nominate something in the absence of the concept of objectivity - even if it's only a selective/strategic absence and not a radical absence as promulgated by Derrida and his ilk - that could motivate decision-making. But what kind of moron acts without thinking that what he's doing is objectively correct? And who would argue that people
should act without thinking that what they're doing is objectively correct? Furthermore, how can you reconcile the position that a person should decide on what they think is right and act accordingly with the position that a person who decides that today's activism is objectively wrong is (objectively?) wrong? On what (non-objective) ground(s) have you decided that?
It seems to me like you're struggling to come up with a way to have your cake and eat it. You say that you're not "arguing for 'undecidability' or moral neutrality or that people sit on the sidelines," but that's the logical endpoint of your argument. Either you're promulgating undecidability or the alternative that you're trying to formulate is not coherent enough to be viable (or, frankly, sensible). Perhaps I'm still misunderstanding you, but it seems like you're trying to work your way out of an internal contradiction and I've yet to get a handle on anything in your attempts to do so that makes sense to me.
Incidentally, this may not be as relevant as I think it is, but maybe this little detour into Cartesian philosophy will bring some of what we're discussing into clearer focus. In the
Meditations, Descartes observes that "the pressure of things to be done does not always allow us to stop and make such a meticulous check" - this despite the fact that such meticulous checking is, according to Descartes himself, the only way to “unquestionably reach the truth.” This apparent aporia, which was noted upon the initial publication of the
Meditations by Marin Mersenne, seems to echo what you think is an aporia in Peterson's position.
In response to Mersenne, Descartes not only pragmatically acknowledged that "from time to time we will have to choose one of many alternatives about which we have no knowledge, [and that], once we have made our choice, so long as no reasons against it can be produced, we must stick to it as firmly as if it had been chosen for transparently clear reasons," he also referred his readers to his earlier
Discourse on Method, where he had posited the following:
"Since often enough in the actions of life no delay is permissible, it is very certain that, when it is beyond our power to discern the opinions which carry [the] most truth ... we at least should make up our minds to follow a particular one and afterwards consider it as no longer doubtful in its relationship to practice but as very true and very certain inasmuch as the reason which caused us to determine upon it is known to be so. And henceforward this principle [should be] sufficient to deliver [people] from all the penitence and remorse which usually affect the mind and agitate the conscience of those weak and vacillating creatures who allow themselves to keep changing their procedure."
Am I totally off-base for thinking that Descartes was working his way through something similar or am I right to think that maybe there's something here that can help you to clarify whatever you think I'm not clear on?
THe Civil Rights Era certainly had its Rosa PArks, MLK's, and Malcolm X's. But there were also protests and sit ins and whatever organized by college students, by people with no formal education.
This neither contradicts nor refutes anything that I said. Your point is that the Civil Rights era had
both its Rosa Parks, MLKs, and Malcolm Xs
and student protests and sit-ins. My point is that our current era has
only student protests. And much stupider protests that contradict countless fundamental democratic principles (to say nothing of logical and moral principles) at that.
You call the modern activism "vague, directionless disaffection and resentment" but is through these starts and stops and fits that formal leadership arise. To return to the Civil Rights Era, MLK wasn't the first step of that era. It was an era that literally spanned decades. An MLK only arose after decades of "vague, directionless disaffection and resentment".
There was nothing vague or directionless about the Civil Rights era. Seriously, analogizing the Civil Rights era to today's student protests is an insult to Civil Rights activists. For one reason among many, to analogize Civil Rights era activism to today's activism is to imply that black people weren't capable of understanding or justifying their actions and that their attempts to do so produced irrational and immoral nonsense.
So, no, we have not seen where this road leads.
Peterson's argument is that we have. And this is an extensive argument that he has gone over in great detail on more than one occasion. This is what I meant when I said that he has history on his side: We
have seen where this road leads and where it leads is objectively terrible.
If someone disagrees with their goals, go challenge their goals.
Peterson has been doing that for quite some time now