> Not every idea is worthy of rational and moral consideration
Sure they are. If you can't justify your beliefs (or rejection of other beliefs) rationally from some set of principles or axoims, you can't claim that they're valid or that anyone else should abide by (or even respect) them.
Maybe the premises are something that you or others disagree with (e.g. to take one that we probably both disagree with: human value is predicated on intelligence), but if you can't argue from some set of premises, your beliefs are meaningless and invalid (and, almost always, inconsistent and hypocritical).
> sometimes it is not weakness to reject even a proposition, simply humanity and a recognition of the underlying motive
Can you read minds to discern motives? If not, then this is a false assertion.
Sure they are. If you can't justify your beliefs (or rejection of other beliefs) rationally from some set of principles or axoims, you can't claim that they're valid or that anyone else should abide by (or even respect) them.
Maybe the premises are something that you or others disagree with (e.g. to take one that we probably both disagree with: human value is predicated on intelligence), but if you can't argue from some set of premises, your beliefs are meaningless and invalid (and, almost always, inconsistent and hypocritical).
> sometimes it is not weakness to reject even a proposition, simply humanity and a recognition of the underlying motive
Can you read minds to discern motives? If not, then this is a false assertion.