Are you the kind of person you'd want in your community?. — tim wood
No actual person needs adversity prior to his/her birth. — schopenhauer1
Do you know of any law that is a law just because it is a law? — tim wood
Then the entirety of your argument would be "don't murder because I prefer people not murder." — Hanover
If you really adhere to Emotivism, you'll have to explain how it is at all rational to engage in ethical debate, considering you're admitting that your arguments are only valid to you. — Hanover
You are having a problem with "wasn't needed in the first place". — schopenhauer1
It is not as simple as being an individuals decision to do as s/he pleases. — Athena
Nope, I am not. I am just saying to prevent adversity, not that some actual person is benefiting from it. — schopenhauer1
In your view, apparently, the possibility for objective morality is predicated on the ability of both mental and non-mental machinations, such that both are embedded with a moral stance. — Mww
Doing heroin, meth, cocaine, and other drugs doesn't even fall in the same category as "skiing, sailing, abseiling, skydiving, rock climbing, scuba diving, racing, rugby, bowling, reading, sewing, playing video games, going to the cinema, discussing philosophy..." — Wallows
If you're going to say it's immoral to do drugs or immoral to illegalize drugs or assert any position on morality, you have to first assert what criteria you use to determine what is moral and then explain how those criteria are or aren't satisfied. — Hanover
But you can probably tell where this is going in regards to being an analogy for antinatalism. — schopenhauer1
I have all kinds of faith based reasons why I believe in God, non of which I feel a need to defend, and non of which I feel should be attacked — Rank Amateur
Yet I know of no rationale argument that supports we have the ability to make any such claim — Rank Amateur
Presumably you intend that anything one has knowledge of is “mental” and that which we do not have knowledge of (regardless of it being a brain state of a kind as well) is not “mental”. Is that right? — DingoJones
Within the brain, the autonomic nervous system is regulated by the hypothalamus. Autonomic functions include control of respiration, cardiac regulation (the cardiac control center), vasomotor activity (the vasomotor center), and certain reflex actions such as coughing, sneezing, swallowing and vomiting. Those are then subdivided into other areas and are also linked to ANS subsystems and nervous systems external to the brain. The hypothalamus, just above the brain stem, acts as an integrator for autonomic functions, receiving ANS regulatory input from the limbic system to do so.[3]
I use the terms so that all you have to ask is, "Is this a mental phenomenon?" If the answer is "Yes," then necessarily it's subjective and not objective. If the answer is "No," then necessarily it's objective and not subjective.
Brain phenomena qualifies as being part of everything that's not mental phenomena (objective). — Harry Hindu
I really don't see what the big deal is. — Harry Hindu
