Talk:Moral clarity: Difference between revisions
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The phrase moral clarity is not merely a conservative buzzword. I recently saw it on the wall of the Free Speech Movement cafe at UC Berkeley. The plaque ascribed moral clarity to Mario Salvio, leader of that movement back in the 1960's. [[User:Juan Ponderas|Juan Ponderas]] |
The phrase moral clarity is not merely a conservative buzzword. I recently saw it on the wall of the Free Speech Movement cafe at UC Berkeley. The plaque ascribed moral clarity to Mario Salvio, leader of that movement back in the 1960's. [[User:Juan Ponderas|Juan Ponderas]] |
Latest revision as of 07:52, 12 September 2024
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The phrase moral clarity is not merely a conservative buzzword. I recently saw it on the wall of the Free Speech Movement cafe at UC Berkeley. The plaque ascribed moral clarity to Mario Salvio, leader of that movement back in the 1960's. Juan Ponderas
Article seems to be completely off-base
[edit]According to this NY Times article, the term "Moral clarity" arose in the 1950s and its use is no longer dominated by conservaties. E.g. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez used it in 2018 in reference to herself. This article needs to be completely rewritten with a wider range of sources. It's also worth looking into whether moral clarity is sufficiently similar to [moral conviction|] that it would be appropriate to treat them as the same topic. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 05:45, 5 March 2022 (UTC)