Hi,
an Open Source advocate is likely to be either 1) Confused [...]
Sorry I don't see how describing someone as confused about a subject implies a moral judgment about the individual.
Perhaps it would be clearer if I qualified this as 'confused about what Free Software stands for"
I would ask that we do NOT label anyone, neither Free Software or Open
Source advocates as "confused". This is absolutely not consistent with the FSFE's view. It implies a moral superiority which isn't a view we'd be happy to project.
I am confused about lots of things, but I don't think that makes me a less human person, does it to you?
I think education is perhaps the best intervention here, not moral philosophy and I also think in software design, confusion is to be expected, not buried in the sand.
A person can be confused about one thing, and clear on another. This is my experience.
It's also possible that a person is confused more generally, in terms of their aptitude for conceptual thinking perhaps such as people with brain trauma or because of mental health, and again - I don't see that as a good basis for any moral judgment.
I am not in the habit of judging people by their mental clarity generally, and even less so on their mental clarity about Open Source or Free Software which are very slippery concepts that (clearly) do require clarification from time to time, even for people that are rational and knowledgeable thinkers on the subject.
If you are mistaking my description of what I see merely as imperfect cognition about certain concepts as a moral judgment, and you think that is against FSFE's view, then I'd like some justification that the FSFE's view matches that interpretation.
In passing, if you are in the habit of making such judgments about people yourself, then I think we are not going to agree on much anyway?
/ mat