The original faculty applicant under consideration was a “supporter of South African Apartheid.” He hasn’t committed to any fact that could be untrue, he has a preference. Most people would classify it as a moral (or immoral) preference.
For the empirical facts you see, you’ve projected a utilitarian viewpoint on the guy which he just may not have. But let’s even go with that. Aren’t judgments of whether apartheid is better or worse than other systems still moral judgments?
Looking back at the quote, Friedman is just so wrong about the Marxist. He’s saying that a Marxist would be an asset in a physics department but not an economics department. Wrong. I’m opposed to Marx and his theories, but given intellectual history, of course a Marxist would be an asset in an economics department.
(And yes, he didn’t literally say the Marxist wouldn’t be an asset, only that they didn’t “need” to hire him. But interpreted that way, the Marxist as asset versus Marxist not strictly needed is an apples to orange comparison with little point.)
The original faculty applicant under consideration was a “supporter of South African Apartheid.” He hasn’t committed to any fact that could be untrue, he has a preference. Most people would classify it as a moral (or immoral) preference.
For the empirical facts you see, you’ve projected a utilitarian viewpoint on the guy which he just may not have. But let’s even go with that. Aren’t judgments of whether apartheid is better or worse than other systems still moral judgments?
Looking back at the quote, Friedman is just so wrong about the Marxist. He’s saying that a Marxist would be an asset in a physics department but not an economics department. Wrong. I’m opposed to Marx and his theories, but given intellectual history, of course a Marxist would be an asset in an economics department.
(And yes, he didn’t literally say the Marxist wouldn’t be an asset, only that they didn’t “need” to hire him. But interpreted that way, the Marxist as asset versus Marxist not strictly needed is an apples to orange comparison with little point.)