Confusion
"Let it be said that when we encounter
thoughts that seem unintelligible, the fault may not be ours. . . .
Sometimes obscurity is really the best that can be achieved in an honest
effort to express subtle and elusive truth. . . . Any effort to give
voice to our deepest feelings and thoughts is liable to be unavoidably
vague at times. Truth is greater than both our thoughts and our language."
[Daniel C. Maguire, The Moral Choice 37, 39 (New York: Doubleday,
1978)]
"Who knows what form the forward momentum
of life will take in the time ahead or what use it will make of our
anguished searching. The most that any one of us can seem to do is to
fashion something--an object or ourselves--and drop it into the confusion,
make an offering of it, so to speak, to the life force." [Ernest
Becker, The Denial of Death 285 (New York: MacMillan, 1973)]
"Can we really relate the various aspects
of our lives in any way that makes moral sense? The proposal that we
might try to is bound to surprise people brought up on the idea that
it simply is not possible to think effectively at all about problems
of value. . . . It is not that people have really given up trying to
deal intelligently with their moral problems, and certainly not that
they have stopped arguing about them. In practice, we all constantly
have to make choices about priorities--about the general direction in
which life ought to go--and we use our heads in dealing with these choices
as we do over any others. But we tend to quail at the idea that these
choices commit us to come kind of general moral reasoning about what
matters. We have been trained to talk as if valid reasoning is only
possible inside certain narrow professional limits, primarily those
of `science'. We therefore often use a mask of general scepticism to
avoid liability for our informal thoughts. We declare moral bankruptcy
in advance." [Mary Midgley, Wisdom, Information and Wonder: What is Knowledge
For? 34 (New York: Routledge, 1991)]
"What is new about our present situation
is that our best moral wisdom can conceive of no alternative. We seem
able only to suggest ways to make the game more nearly fair. We are
unable to provide an account of morality worthy of requiring ourselves
and others to suffer and thus releasing us from the prison of our own
interests." [Stanley Hauerwas, The Peaceable Kingdom:
A Primer in Christian Ethics 9 (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre
Dame Press, 1983)]
"In examining the knowledge of those
around him, Socrates found not only were people making false claims
to knowledge, but that these claims prohibited them from thinking critically.
His task was then to purge people of their opinions, that is, of unexamined
prejudgments that would prevent them from conducting an inquiry. Thus,
Socrates's task was to bring others to an acknowledgment of their ignorance." [Larry Churchill, The Teaching of Ethics and Moral Values in Teaching:
Some Contemporary Confusions, 53 J. Higher Educ. 296, 305 (1982)]
Social Worlds 
