HALF-FULL REPORT 07/05/19
Welcome to the Fourth of July HFR!
It’s America’s Birthday, when the most noble document in human history was ratified and made public, the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776.
The word Aristotle would use for “noble” above is kalon. Often translated as noble and honorable, or badly mistranslated as beautiful in the sheer physical sense, kalon for Aristotle is a term of morality. The kalon is the morally noble, morally honorable, morally admirable – thus it is the morally beautiful.
We don’t have a word for this in English, and may be elusive to grasp for it expresses a philosophical aesthetics – not in the crude popular sense of that term as subjective sentiment regarding art or music, but elegantly embodying an objective moral truth.
Thus when we refer to “America the Beautiful,” we mean something vastly more than its physical beauty like amber waves of grain and purple mountain majesties. We mean America the Kalon, America the Morally Beautiful.
And that is because of the moral beauty of our country’s founding principles stated in our Declaration of Independence. Its essence is expressed in the second sentence, the most magnificent statement of a moral ideal in human history:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
Note it states an ideal towards which it is America’s moral duty to strive. Since humans at any time are imperfect, it is irrelevant that the ideal’s authors were imperfect in our eyes now, such as some owned slaves who were not granted these rights.
It is highly likely, for example, that a future generation of Americans will condemn ours today for allowing the unforgiveable immorality of infanticide, of mothers murdering their own children fully capable of surviving out of their wombs. Perhaps they will demand any statues or memorials to our pro-abortion politicians be torn down.
Further, for however much America has not lived up to its moral ideals in the 243 years since 1776, it has nonetheless lived up to them to a greater degree than any other nation on earth.
The perfect must not be the enemy of the good, we must not be compared to some political heaven but to other societies here on earth. Where else are people freer to control their own lives, granted more liberty, or capable of pursuing their own happiness?
Let its critics carp. The fact remains that America for all its faults and flaws is still morally beautiful, deserving of our love and admiration.













