Which may explain why I'm still alive, Ursula. Mitigatedly yours, Walter C. Okshevsky (Michael Jackson Chair of Spiritsuality and Morals) Talisker College of Single Malt and Columbian Coffee University of Dundee Scotland UK P.S. Yes, alas, it does look like I have wasted my precious malt on Phil. He has failed, on all counts, to convert to this wonderous conception of the good (for no right reasons) - having confused Glenn's liver with a very nice 18 yr. old Glenlivet. And he didn't stay around long enough for a game of chess! P.P.S. Does Taylor allow for the possibility that moral spaces or frameworks admit of moral assessment on grounds or criteria that are not themselves part of any moral space or framework? If not, why not? Is Kant wrong? Is there really no non-circular, non-question-begging justification of a moral space/vocabulary as Rorty would have us believe? You have 75 minutes.(Sorry, I'm buried with tests at this time of season.) Quoting Ursula Stange <Ursula@xxxxxxxxxx>: > There was another study which seemed to show that coffee mitigated the > ill effects of alcohol on the liver. Sounds like good news...I think > you had to drink lots of coffee and lots of alcohol to get the effect, > though. > Enjoy... > Ursula > > Omar Kusturica wrote: > > >*I've long been given to drinking large amounts of > >coffee (mostly at daytime) as well as large amounts of > >alcohol. (mostly at nightime) I've always thought > >about them as opposite extremes, I guess that I'll try > >to rethink the relation now. (Though it will probably > >have to wait until I am in the coffee stage.) > > > >O.K. > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > To change your Lit-Ideas settings (subscribe/unsub, vacation on/off, > digest on/off), visit www.andreas.com/faq-lit-ideas.html > ------------------------------------------------------------------ To change your Lit-Ideas settings (subscribe/unsub, vacation on/off, digest on/off), visit www.andreas.com/faq-lit-ideas.html