it seems to be more of a reification. — Janus
it's just a pile of rubble. — tim wood
Why does he say that he cannot use the term intuition if they are to become knowledge? — Atharva Dingankar
There is an argument, or maybe just an interpretation, that if morality presupposes a will, and all wills are good, then every man who is a moral agent possesses a good will. If true, the good mark of a man can’t be that which is presupposed in him.
— Mww
I don't understand. — tim wood
obligation under the law may well be mandatory, but determining that law may involve some art. — tim wood
Credit to everyone posting except the OP (that's me) — tim wood
I acknowledge that my imagining what they might say is an anthropomorphic projection. — Janus
I think such the tendency, the need even, to anthropomorphize is inevitable; we cannot but think in our own terms. (...) We just need to remain mindful of what we are doing. — Janus
rests on its own Ararat — tim wood
There is not the good? — tim wood
Sense? Nonsense? — tim wood
Or not.... — tim wood
"Good," to start with, is left undefined. — tim wood
But here's the problem, if I think it's immoral to serve if given the option not to, I would then have to say that anyone with the option to not serve shouldn't do it. — SightsOfCold
I am aware, that were I personally to find myself engulfed in a sufficiently terrible predicament then, (...) I would nonetheless cry out to God to save me with a desperateness I presently cannot vicariously suspect. If, no matter your convictions, you personally think otherwise of yourself then I would say you are mistaken. — Robert Lockhart
So, meanness comes from arrogance? — schopenhauer1
That's not an exception. It was never a sound syllogism in the first place. — creativesoul
On your view, what constitutes sufficient/adequate ground for us to acquire knowledge regarding the thought/belief content of language-less creatures? — creativesoul
It's usually not a good sign..... — creativesoul
...immediately refuses to accept the terms..... — creativesoul
I reject the proposition/statement:"Language-less creatures draw correlations that are given from instinct" on the following grounds...
You:
1. Being given presupposes a giver. Unnecessarily multiplying entities is unacceptable on my view.
2. Correlations are not given to the non linguistic thinking/believing creature..... — creativesoul
Is it not an error of equivocation, to suggest that just because a language-less creature, e.g., preserves his well-being instinctively, he is drawing correlations?
— Mww
What difference does that make? It would not be an error I've made.......
All I’m saying is that it would be an error of equivocation, if instinct is entirely sufficient to explain our observations of action/reaction in language-less creatures. It would not be such an error, if the theory of thought/belief in language-less creatures is demonstrated as being predicated necessarily on correlations they actually make, and make in some manner that cannot at all be mere instinct.
................Drawing correlations between different things begins happening long before the creature becomes aware of their own mental ongoings. — creativesoul
I would not dare claim to know what it's like to be a language less creature. (...) I can clearly set out the basic elemental constituents of both language-less thought/belief and apple pie nonetheless. — creativesoul
All thought/belief consists entirely of mental correlations drawn between different things. — creativesoul
With a non linguistic creature all of those things are directly perceptible. — creativesoul
There are no false statements in a sound syllogism. It is impossible to falsify a true statement. — creativesoul
Those premisses cannot be verified. Logical possibility alone(argument by definitional fiat) is inadequate ground for belief. Some valid syllogisms predicated solely on rational premisses can most certainly be falsified. — creativesoul
See my critique of the OP's first premiss... — creativesoul
Imagine a language-less creature that has just touched fire for the first time. (...) All that is needed is a creature capable of drawing correlations between their own behaviour(the touching) and the pain that immediately ensued. — creativesoul
What we're reporting upon(the thought/belief of a language-less creature) is not existentially dependent upon language. Our report most certainly is. — creativesoul
Definition and conception are not required for rudimentary level thought/belief..... — creativesoul
What does the thought/belief of a creature that has never spoken about it consist of? — creativesoul
An earlier assertion of yours stands in direct contradiction with thought/belief existing on a rudimentary level prior to definition.....
(Maybe. Depends. I’d love nothing more than to be shown a self-contradiction that isn’t merely a misunderstanding)
......Some(non-linguistic, rudimentary, basic) thought/belief exists in it's entirety prior to language....
(Certainly. Wouldn’t disagree at all. I am familiar with how it may be called)
......Definition and conception are not required for rudimentary level thought/belief.....
(Ehhhh.....starting to lose me here)
.......Thought/belief are more than sufficient for cognition, just not meta-cognition.....
(Denied!!! I think.)
.......Pure Practical Reasoning is metacognition.
(Yes, in a way, but still only one of two kinds of metacognition)
Kant can't take account of this. — creativesoul
A proper report does not change the truth conditions of what it's reporting upon. — creativesoul
All thought/belief formation requires one thing to become sign/symbol, a different thing to become significant/symbolized, and a creature capable of drawing a correlation between different things. — creativesoul
Some moral value(thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour) is prior to language acquisition. — creativesoul
I submit it is a natural condition of being human that there exists a sub-system of intrinsic values necessarily incorporated into the cognitive apparatus
— Mww
.........What does all that even mean?
.........A natural condition. All humans have it. Intrinsic values. "Intrinsic" seems redundant.
.........Remove it. — creativesoul
It would not be part of the cognitive apparatus required to have some moral value. — creativesoul
One can also just use language. — creativesoul
Being acquainted with one's own rationality is a situation that requires different things — creativesoul
What must be valued? (...) What do all people value, regardless of their individual particular circumstances? — creativesoul
On my view, moral values consist entirely in/of thought/belief. — creativesoul
All thought/belief consists of both objective and subjective things. So, moral values are neither. — creativesoul
Did I answer your initial question to your satisfaction? — creativesoul
What is it for any rational agent that it is absolutely impossible not to value, such that it must be valued necessarily? — Mww
It needs only to meet our definitions. — creativesoul
