In closing, I would just like to say that we should always try to find a way to view the glass half full, and in this case, I think that it is safe to say that Hume, a man who wrote extensively about the moral value of aesthetics, would not want a building this ugly named after him.
https://dailystormer.su/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screen-Shot-2020-09-13-at-12.01.39-PM.png
Hume believed that there was a link between beauty and deformity and vice and virtue. Looked at through that lens, it is more fitting that this building be named after George Floyd than David Hume.
>In closing, I would just like to say that we should always try to find a way to view the glass half full, and in this case, I think that it is safe to say that Hume, a man who wrote extensively about the moral value of aesthetics, would not want a building this ugly named after him.
https://dailystormer.su/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Screen-Shot-2020-09-13-at-12.01.39-PM.png
>Hume believed that there was a link between beauty and deformity and vice and virtue. Looked at through that lens, it is more fitting that this building be named after George Floyd than David Hume.
(post is archived)