![]() ![]() The rider can sometimes nudge the elephant one way or the other, but no one should be in any doubt that the elephant is making the important moves. The arresting image Haidt gives for our sense of morality is that it's like a rational rider on top of an intuitive elephant. What's more, in most instances, it's the outrage that will be setting the agenda. How dare anyone pass off such gratuitously offensive images as works of art? Shouldn't they be stopped? Jonathan Haidt, who gives a version of this thought experiment in his provocative new book, wants us to know that reason and instinctive outrage are always going to co-exist in cases like this. On the other hand, it would be surprising if they did not also feel disgusted and affronted. ![]() Liberals know the reasoned arguments for freedom of expression and the importance of being consistent on matters of principle. ![]() ![]() How would you feel if you walked into an art gallery and saw an image of King submerged in urine or Mandela smeared with excrement? Are you deeply offended by works of art such as Andres Serrano's Piss Christ, which depicts Jesus as seen through a jar of urine, or Chris Ofili's The Holy Virgin Mary, which shows Mary smeared with elephant dung? So offended that you think they ought to be banned and the galleries that display them prosecuted? No? OK, then try replacing the religious figures in these pictures with the sacred icons of progressive politics, people such as Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela. ![]()
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