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In Defence of Moral Error Theory

Moral error theorists typically accept two claims - one conceptual and one ontological - about moral facts. The conceptual claim is that moral facts are or entail facts about categorical reasons (and correspondingly that moral claims are or entail claims about categorical reason); the ontological claim is that there are no categorical reasons-and consequently no moral facts-in reality. I accept this version of moral error theory and I try to unpack what it amounts to in section 2. In the course of doing so I consider two preliminary objections that moral error theory is (probably) false because its implications are intuitively unacceptable (what I call the Moorean objection) and that the general motivation for moral error theory is self-undermining in that it rests on a hidden appeal to norms. | Direct Link to PDF

Moral Minds: The Nature of Right and Wrong

THE CENTRAL IDEA of this book is simple: we evolved a moral instinct, a capacity that naturally grows within each child, designed to generate rapid judgments about what is morally right or wrong based on an unconscious grammar of action. Part of this machinery was designed by the blind hand of Darwinian selection millions of years before our species evolved; other parts were added or upgraded over the evolutionary history of our species, and are unique both to humans and to our moral psychology. These ideas draw on insightsfrom another instinct: language. | Direct Link to PDF (e-book)

Oxford Studies in Metaethics

The full book is available online for free:Oxford Studies in Metaethics is designed to collect, on an annual basis, some of the best new work being done in the field of metaethics. I’m very pleased to be able to present this third volume, one that has managed so successfully to fulfill the aims envisioned for the series. | Direct Link to Book

Moral Judgment

i. Moral rules are held to have an objective, prescriptive force; they are notdependent on the authority of any individual or institution.ii. Moral rules are taken to hold generally, not just locally; they not only proscribebehavior here and now, but also in other countries and at other times in history.iii. Violations of moral rules involve a victim who has been harmed, whose rightshave been violated, or who has been subject to an injustice.iv. Violations of moral rules are typically more serious than violations ofconventional rules. | Direct Link to PDF

Boredom? ADHD?

John Plotz in the New York Times: Their Noonday Demons, and Ours

These days, when we try to get a fix on our wasted time, we use labels that run from the psychological (distraction, “mind-wandering” or “top-down processing deficit”) to the medical (A.D.H.D., hypoglycemia) to the ethical (laziness, poor work habits). But perhaps “acedia” is the label we need. After all, it afflicted those whose pursuits prefigured the routines of many workers in the postindustrial economy. Acedia’s sufferers were engaged in solitary, sedentary, cerebral effort toward a clear final goal — but a goal that could be reached only by crossing an open, empty field with few signposts. The empty field is the monk’s day of spiritual contemplation in a cell besieged by the demon acedia — or your afternoon in a coffee shop with tiptop Wi-Fi.

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The Boundaries of Justice

The overarching concern in the idea of justice is the need to have just relations with others—and even to have appropriate sentiments about others; and what motivates the search is the diagnosis of injustice in ongoing arrangements. In some cases, this might demand the need to change an existing boundary of sovereignty—a concern that motivated Hume’s staunchly anti-colonial position. (He once remarked, “Oh! How I long to see America and the East Indies revolted totally & finally.”) Or it might relate to the Humean recognition that as we expand trade and other relations with foreign countries, our sentiments as well as our reasoning have to take note of the recognition that “the boundaries of justice still grow larger,” without the necessity to place all the people involved in our conception of justice within the confines of one sovereign state.

Amartya Sen, in The National Review, "The Boundaries of Justice."

What Position Will Win the TOC?

First, I just want to give a shout-out to the Mountain Brook tournament in Birmingham. This is the second year I've been, and once again the hospitality and timeliness have been exceptional. Jeff Roberts really goes out of his way to bring good judges to the tournament and put on a good show (and the MB students do a great job keeping things running). If you live in the South and don't make it to this tournament, you're missing out!On to the substance of today's post: what position will win the TOC?

I'll try not to answer my own question (since I'm more interested in others' thoughts), but I will say this: debaters are doing themselves a strategic disservice by running away from the plausibly true positions on this topic. I describe the loss as a "strategic" one, because I'm reasonably certain that no one will be persuaded by pedagogical risks.

The debates that start off on dubious premises (thanks to ridiculous case positions) almost always become side-tracked by theoretical and procedural questions that can rarely be resolved predictably. This is especially true in elimination rounds against strong competitors—the marginal utility of a "non-stock" position is significantly diminished when assured that your opponent will either shift the debate to theory or respond with an even more "outside the box" argument. The race to the bottom of absurdity can quickly become a counterproductive exercise, or one that at best terminates in a coin-flip decision.

While I hesitate to make any predictions, I certainly hope that high-level debates will explore the contextually unique accounts of self-defense that tend to permeate this topic in real-world discussion. I believe that the most researched account of this issue can and should take center stage. Off-the-wall positions may be decisive in prelims and lesser tournaments, but the most consistently and universally successful positions are true ones.

What do you expect to see come out on top?

Three Judging Practices That Need To Stop by Adam Torson

All of these practices are tempting, but a moment’s reflection should suggest to most judges that they are inappropriate.

1. Speaker Point Games

Enough with the paradigms that promise increased speaker points for goofy behavior. You might think it’s hysterical to promise a thirty for bringing you a cookie, saying “supercalifragilisticexpialidocious,” or dancing a jig, but it’s not. Judging is not about you – the debaters aren’t there for your entertainment.

If it were harmless fun nobody would care, but speaker points matter. They affect who you debate in prelims (especially later in a tournament when brackets are smaller), whether you break, and out-round seeding. On more than one occasion I have seen a speaker point game change who breaks and who doesn’t. It’s not fair, and it should stop.

2. Berating Debaters

A certain amount of irritation at poorly debated rounds is natural, but it’s stunning how often judges go way over the top. Expressing outrage at the state of debate or the obnoxiousness of some particular practice may be cathartic, but it’s hardly constructive. Getting angry and berating debaters is self-indulgent; the oral critique is not about your anger. It is reprehensible to be proud of making a debater cry.

Sometimes anger is appropriate, as when a debater is rude or patently offensive, but this is relatively rare. Yelling at someone because they made an argument you don’t like suggests a dramatic lack of perspective – the kids are learning what a good argument is, people have different views on what a good argument is, and students are coached in different ways. The RFD is not about showing off how smart you are or how much you know about debate. Get over yourself and make your comments constructive. You are not entitled to adjudicate a tournament full of mistake free rounds.

3. Calling Tons of Evidence

Everyone seems to want debaters to be clearer, but many of us engage in a practice that incentivizes exactly the opposite. The debaters’ opportunity to effectively convey the meaning of their evidence is the constructive. Figuring out what evidence means after the round and making it part of the decision calculus is blatant intervention. There are judges who routinely call virtually every argument read in the round and reconstruct their flow on that basis. Give me a break.

I suspect this is mostly motivated by ego – none of us likes to admit that we didn’t understand an argument. But – I feel like a broken record – it’s not about you. It is unfair and pedagogically unsound to vote for arguments you straight up don’t understand – even more so when you are doing things like supplying evidence comparison for the debaters. Have enough courage to admit when you don’t get something, even at the risk of teenagers thinking you’re not as smart as they otherwise would.

Interview with a Champion: Josh Roberts

In the weeks leading up to NFL Nationals in Birmingham, Alabama, VBD will be interviewing previous champions of the prestigious tournament. Our first interview was with the 2011 champ, Josh Roberts, who debated for Northland Christian School in Houston, Texas. 

David Branse wins the Sunvitational Round Robin

Congratulations from David Branse from University for defeating Jake Steirn from Cypress Bay on a 5-0 decision (Maeshal Abid, Matt Kawahara, Loren Eastlund, Chris Castillo, Student Vote) to win the 2014 Sunvite Round Robin! 

David Branse wins the Sunvitational Round Robin

Congratulations from David Branse from University for defeating Jake Steirn from Cypress Bay on a 5-0 decision (Maeshal Abid, Matt Kawahara, Loren Eastlund, Chris Castillo, Student Vote) to win the 2014 Sunvite Round Robin! 

9 Issues Facing the LD Community by Mike Bietz

I originally wrote this article for the NDCA in March of 2008. A lot has changed in Lincoln-Douglas Debate since 2008. Over the next few weeks I'll try to elaborate and evaluate on my statements from almost 4 years ago.9 Issues Facing the Lincoln Douglas CommunityOriginally published for the NFL Rostrum, April 2008.

The NDCA is probably seen by most as an organization whose primary purpose is to serve coaches in the policy debate community. Unfortunately, given the initiatives spearheaded by the NDCA are more likely focused on policy debate and therefore the view that they are a policy-oriented organization is not unfounded.

Since I was elected to the board, I have seen a lot of desire by other board members to see LD membership in the NDCA grow, and for the NDCA to do more to engage the LD community – especially the coaching community.

The first initiative that was executed since I have been a board member (which began back in October or November 2007), was the creation of the NDCA-L, a listserv for coaches. One does not have to be a member of the NDCA to join the NDCA-L. This, along with many other services provided by the NDCA is free and requires no obligation on your part.

The creation of the NDCA-L will hopefully allow coaches to discuss issues in a forum that might be free of the distraction and devolving discussions that take place on a lot of web-based message boards.

Anyone who knows me probably knows that I preface a lot of what I say in a way that acknowledges that, although I may write authoritatively on a wide-variety of debate-ish subjects, I actually believe that I am no expert. I cannot write for the community and what I say should be questioned and dissected. Debate, in its nature, is an agonistic activity.

In having run a number of the projects started by Victory Briefs, like the Institute, the website, the books and the tournament, I come across a number of coaches who think there are a lot of things that need changing in the way Lincoln-Douglas is run, or the path that it is on. In this article I hope to highlight some of the issues that I have heard coaches discussing and perhaps we can have some discussion on the NDCA-L, or better yet, in person.

These issues are not in any particular order of importance and are not necessarily unique to the LD community.1. A Lack of Discussion by CoachesThis weekend I’m sitting at the JV/Novice Championships at Woodward Academy. The tournament is primarily a policy tournament and therefore during the NDCA meetings that we are having, the majority of the coach attendees are policy coaches. What I, and other LD coaches noticed is that their coach community tends to be more willing to discuss things in person. LD coaches don’t get together and do that. We rarely make time at tournaments to sit down as a coaching community and talk about things that are bothering us, practices we may want to praise or dissuade. Instead, a lot of discussions that do take place are done through backchannel emails or instant messaging where stories are embellished and there is never a chance for clarification and dialogue. We need to make time at tournaments where we can get together and talk and try to understand each other.

2. Evidence and ResearchA typical citation that is read in a debate round is simply an author’s last name. Qualifications, publication and year are rarely given, and rarely checked. I was at the NDT a couple weekends back and watched and listened to a few debate rounds. In nearly every round, evidence comparisons were being made which, in many cases, including comparing an author’s qualifications. I understand why LD has a culture of ignoring citations. To some degree the lack of proper citation is a holdover from the old days of LD when the authors quoted were obvious and known philosophers and political theorists (Rawls, Aristotle, Kant, etc).In addition to citation, there are two more issues that we are facing when it comes to research and evidence. First, there needs to be some consensus of what it means for something to be “published.” As the Editor-and-Chief of VictoryBriefsDaily.com, I’m not sure if I’m comfortable with what is written on VBD being cited as evidence – whether that be articles or comments. Although, if we allow other credible blogs or credible commenters, then maybe “Bietz from VBD in 2008” is an inevitable citation in the future. As a community we need to discuss what passes as proper evidence.

The second big issue is how evidence is read in round in the context of strikethroughs, underlining, etc. There should be some community norm for how evidence is cut and what is available for opponents to read during a round.

3. OpennessAs LD is becoming more complex, it is important that we create a culture of openness. Two issues:First, I am shocked how many debaters ask observers to leave the room (or in some instances a hallway) to “protect” their positions from being heard. The community norm ought to be that once a case is read, it is no longer private. Flow-sharing and scouting happens at tournaments. The problem in the status quo is that it is done covertly and amongst friends. This leads to a lot of hurt feelings, awkward situations, the exclusion of non “in” debaters or teams, and charges of unethical behavior.Second, more discussion online needs to be less about the rules of debate and more about what happens in debate rounds. To some degree VBD ought to take some responsibility for the lack of substantive debate-topic discussions. However, whenever there is an attempt for people to discuss arguments, people seem to guard their own positions too much.

4. Flex-prep/Cross-xAs a judge I’m always uncomfortable when I hear one debater, a minute before the round starts or right before CX time begins say, “We’re using flex-prep, right?” As there is no way to resolve a conflict between a debater that wants to use flex-prep, and one that does not, we need to come to some consensus. I would recommend the following: a three-minute cx period must occur in a round. Time not used in CX cannot be transferred to prep-time. However, debaters can feel free to ask questions during their own prep time.

5. Topic selectionToo much pressure is put on the committee at the NFL tournament to come up with 10 good topics. The topic selection process ought to begin earlier in the year and more formalized in the submission requirements. In September the NFL should take submissions of topics and potential wording. Submissions should have to follow some format wherein the author must provide a short essay that outlines the major issues involved, the debatability, what is at stake, and a short bibliography. In December, the submission process is closed and the committee begins to choose the 10 topic areas. In April or May, the 10 areas are released as well as 3 to 5 possible wordings for each resolution for the community to vet. During this time the community can submit ideas for wording. At the NFL tournament, the committee spends its time on the wording based on the community vetting.

6. Bid fetishAs the years go on, the bid-counting and the desire to attend tournaments that have bids exclusively has become absurd. There are a couple of problems:First, only tournaments that have TOC bids are truly able to have their tournaments be effective fundraisers.Second, students who do not travel or do not care about the TOC are seen as second-class debaters by the national circuit.Third, tournaments that do have bids are able scale back on providing a good experience while at the same time raise their prices because the bids are seen as so valuable.

7. Local / National circuit bifurcationTeams that are exclusively national circuit or that are exclusively local have made the gap between the two circuits wider than ever. We talk bad about each other and tell stories that embellish the problems with the “other.” To local circuit coaches and teams, the national circuit is ruining debate. To national circuit coaches and teams, the local circuit is backwards and lame.I certainly respect the fact that some people will make choices about how they want their team to be. The problem arises when the justification for choosing which circuit on which you debate has to be because of something wrong with the other type. I don’t like that my students have to feel uncomfortable when we debate at home, and I feel bad that more local schools don’t attend our TOC-qualifier.

8. Judge trainingThere should be three minimal explanations made to all judges before tournaments:First, judges should be reminded that judges ought to leave their preconceived notions about the resolution ought to be left at the door and that their decision should be based on what is said in the round.Second, judges should be told that flowing is a requirement. Just like we expect referees in high schools sports to have some minimal training and certification, judges in debate should try to fit their process of adjudication into a way that is at least somewhat predictable for debaters.Third, with only some exception, judges at the varsity level should be expected to disclose their decisions. In my mind this is also related to the openness issues. It is unfair that some students know decisions and their records and some debaters do not.

9. Program retentionDebate is becoming more democratized and that is a good thing. What I mean by this is that there seems to be more debaters competing at tournaments from schools that may not have had a team ever, or at least in many years. The community failure takes place when we do not convert these “one-off” teams (a team with just 1 or 2 kids who sort-of do it on their own) into full-fledged debate programs. We need to talk to the administrations of these schools to ensure that some longer-term solution can be put into place. The number of teams that last 3 or 4 years and then die is far too high.

I hope these 9 issues can act as a catalyst for discussion about LD Debate. LD is not to a point where any of these things are necessarily emergencies. However, without some discussion, and in some instances a consensus, we could be making it more and more difficult to operate as a community.

I also hope that many of you in the LD community will consider joining the NDCA. As an organization we can do a lot of good for the activity.

If you have any comments or questions, please feel free to email me at bietz@victorybriefs.com.

Stanford Seeks Hired Judges

Hello HS Judging Community,The Stanford Debate Society is seeking judges for its upcoming High School Invitational from February 11-13, 2012 in Palo Alto, CA. We can use judges in all categories, but are highly interested in hiring for Varsity Policy & Lincoln Douglas debate. We will pay up to $25/round ($15/one flight) for your services.



Certain highly preferred judges may be contracted for the entire tournament and offered a package deal including housing/transportation. Feel free to inquire if you believe you are one of these people.



Please contact Brian Manuel (brian.manuel@stanforddebate.com) if you are interested in judging, as soon as possible.

For complete information, please read our invitation located at www.snfi.org



Thank you and we look forward to you joining us at Stanford!!



Brian Manuel
Director of Policy Debate
Stanford Debate Society
Stanford University

Paradigms and Principles: A Round-Up

Adam Torson posted a number of articles discussing different aspects of judging paradigms with the purpose of coming up with some norms in LD judging. For those who may have missed, here is a round-up of all of them:Withholding Advice... Is it appropriate for a judge to withhold advice in post-round critiques so that weaknesses in a debater’s case position or strategy can later be exploited by the judge’s own students ...

Ballot Writing... Should judges write comments and/or a reason for decision on the ballot? ...

Miscut Evidence... What should judges do when debaters use miscut evidence? ...

Must Arguments be on the Flow... Should judges require that an argument be noted on the flow in order to vote on it?...

2AR Theory... How should judges evaluate new theory in the 2AR?...

CLEAR!... A. Should judges yell “clear” when debaters are speaking unclearly?

B. If so, under what circumstances is it appropriate to yell clear?...

Paradigms... A. Should a judge’s declared paradigm be subject to in-round argumentation?...

Northwest Round Robin Field Report

From Jeff Gans, Director of the Northwest Round Robin:

I'm pleased to announce the field for the fourth Northwest Round Robin, which will be held this Sunday at Eastside Catholic. The NWRR aims to bring together the best debaters and judges in the region for a relaxing, fun, and challenging event that offers lots of practice and feedback.

LD features two judges per round voting independently with extensive oral critiques every round and a midday workshop on Theory in LD. There are six rounds breaking to finals.

LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATEBainbridge High School (WA) — Alex TeicheBainbridge High School (WA) — Haley Brandt-ErichsenEastside Catholic High School (WA) — Derek HollidayGig Harbor High School (WA) — Austin BallardHarvard-Westlake (CA) – Adam BennettHarvard-Westlake (CA) – Aneri AminTahoma High School (WA) — Connor DurkinWenatchee High School (WA) — Colton Smith

Congress features a three-hour preliminary session and a three-hour “Scenario” session. This year’s scenario will concern Israeli/Irani relations.

CONGRESSIONAL DEBATEEastside Catholic High School – John HoltEastside Catholic High School – Kyle HendrixGlacier Peak High School (WA) – Dan MillerKamiak High School (WA) – Aiden SkogheimNewport High School (WA) – Frankie OrricoNewport High School (WA) – John AdlerRidgefield High School (WA) – Tyler BieberThomas Jefferson High School (WA) – Ed ChoiThomas Jefferson High School (WA) – Jina Yi

Congratulations to all the NWRR participants!

Blake Results

Triple Octafinal Round Results

Apple Valley JG Advances without debatingLoyola BO Advances without debatingEvanston EB Advances without debatingApple Valley LS Advances without debatingScarsdale GK Advances without debatingHarvard Westlake MC (Neg) defeated Evanston GDWDM Valley MN (Neg) defeated Saint Thomas Academy EPKent Denver SM Advances Over Kent Denver DKScarsdale AD (Aff) defeated Walt Whitman NKWDM Valley MS (Neg) defeated Annie Wright ABHarvard Westlake AK Advances Over Harvard Westlake ABSt. Louis Park RS (Aff) defeated Hopkins MBWalt Whitman JL (Neg) defeated WDM Valley NLHockaday AZ (Aff) defeated Iowa City SFHopkins SG (Neg) defeated Bronx Science SSEastside Catholic DH (Neg) defeated Jackson JRHockaday MC (Neg) defeated Evanston EDWDM Valley JL (Neg) defeated Robbinsdale Armstrong AUScarsdale ZE (Neg) defeated South Portland ECHockaday RB (Neg) defeated Okoboji JAHarvard Westlake AS (Neg) defeated WDM Valley JSLexington AH (Aff) defeated Harvard Westlake JEScarsdale SN (Neg) defeated Hopkins ATCESJDS EL (Neg) defeated Lexington PZScarsdale BF (Neg) defeated Hockaday CCScarsdale GR (Neg) defeated Meadows SMKent Denver AW (Aff) defeated Ankeny GLSt. Louis Park LS (Neg) defeated Saint Thomas Academy EWSaint Thomas Academy MT (Aff) defeated Harvard Westlake BGLoyola MH (Aff) defeated Bainbridge Island ATHockaday KQ (Aff) defeated Carpe Diem Speech & D JMMeadows EH (Neg) defeated Saint Thomas Academy SD

Double Octafinal Round Results

Meadows EH (Neg) defeated Apple Valley JGLoyola BO (Aff) defeated Hockaday KQEvanston EB (Neg) defeated Loyola MHApple Valley LS (Aff) defeated Saint Thomas Academy MTScarsdale GK (Aff) defeated St. Louis Park LSHarvard Westlake MC (Aff) defeated Kent Denver AWWDM Valley MN (Aff) defeated Scarsdale GRKent Denver SM (Neg) defeated Scarsdale BFCESJDS EL (Neg) defeated Scarsdale ADScarsdale SN (Aff) defeated WDM Valley MSHarvard Westlake AK (Neg) defeated Lexington AHSt. Louis Park RS (Neg) defeated Harvard Westlake ASWalt Whitman JL (Neg) defeated Hockaday RBHockaday AZ (Aff) defeated Scarsdale ZEWDM Valley JL (Neg) defeated Hopkins SGHockaday MC (Neg) defeated Eastside Catholic DH

Octafinal Round

Meadows EH def. Hockaday MCLoyola BO def. WDM Valley JLHockaday AZ def. Evanston EBWalt Whitman JL def. Apple Valley LSScarsdale GK def. St. Louis Park RSHarvard Westlake MC over Harvard Westlake AKWDM Valley MN def. Scarsdale SNKent Denver SM def. CESJDS EL

Quarterfinal Round

Meadows EH (Neg) defeated Kent Denver SM (Catherine Tarsney, Josh Roberts, Liz Scoggin)

Loyola BO (Aff) defeated WDM Valley MN (*Zhou, Emily Massey, Jennis)

Hockaday AZ (Neg) defeated Harvard Westlake MC (McNeil, Theis, *Brundage)

Scarsdale GK (Neg) defeated Walt Whitman JL (Ruff, Holguin, van Elswyk)

Semifinal Round

Scarsdale GK (Aff) defeated Meadows EH (Holguin, Zhou, Catherine Tarsney)

Loyola BO (Neg) defeated Hockaday AZ (van Elswyk, Emily Massey, Theis)

Final Round

Scarsdale GK (Neg) defeated Loyola BO (Zhou, Catherine Tarsney, *van Elswyk)