That's the naturalistic fallacy. Just because pleasure is what a machine creates as its value, doesn't mean that pleasure is transcendentally good. — apokrisis
You're the one accusing me of the naturalistic fallacy?
And I already explained how I am an anti-realist, so I don't think there is any transcendental value
actually out there, just as I don't think there is any transcendental value to money.
We can always ask "so what?" to any normative claim. And we can do the same with pleasure, pain, and compassion. Yet I suspect that anyone who actually says "so what?" to these three things is being extremely disingenuous. You just can't get your arm cut off and shrug it off as a scratch. Our choices depend on an e
valuation of the consequences - pleasure and pain. And so any sort of error theory can
technically be right, but for all intensive purposes we end up acting as if morals actually do exist because we are forced to. Call it the persecution of ethics, perhaps. I like to just call it consistency - regardless of the objectivity of morals, we have moral beliefs and thus must act upon them in a consistent manner.
Just switch from talking about pleasure as qualia and start talking about it as a biological sign - a semiotic mechanism - and you will have arrived at my kind of pan-semiotic naturalism. — apokrisis
But this would require me to systematically ignore the important bits: feeling, downgrading it to some signal and nothing more. Whatever our beliefs in qualia are, you cannot deny that it at least seems as though there is qualia. The manifest image of qualia, something that isn't just plucked away as soon as we realize it is a sign or just a oozy chemical reaction in the brain, if that even makes sense. I continue to fail to see how the ontological status of pleasure and pain actually affects anything, since we already have a phenomenal experience of pleasure and pain that is as intimate as is possible.
No. We must focus on both by focusing on the mutuality of their relationship.
In systems theory, parts construct the whole and the whole shapes its (re)constructing parts. So the focus is on the primary dynamic that drives the self-organisation.
Sorry, but it is a fundmentally complex model of causality. And one has to focus on the irreduciably triadic nature of that holism. — apokrisis
Sorry, but I see no reason to place emphasis on an abstract object that cannot feel, unless it somehow benefits those who can feel. Doing otherwise reminds me of nationalism - you are proud of the country, not of the people that make up the country. But what does it matter if you support the country as an entity in itself, for itself? It's silly.
So there is no payback at all? — apokrisis
Why would there
need to be? We have to find a balance between rational self-indulgence and ethical altruism. If the pain someone else feels would cause us more pain to eliminate, then we aren't committed to helping them. It's equality. The reciprocal relationship here is the distribution of values.
This sounds rather disengaged from life. But how do you define harm and manipulation? Are you going to recognise grades and distinctions? Or as usual, are you treating them as qualitative absolutes? — apokrisis
Being that I am a consequentialist (or a virtue ethicist cum utilitarian, I'm tinkering with that lately), doing vs allowing is just another one of those arbitrary constraints that works well in the legal sense but not in the moral sense, especially once we get rid of any idea of a Just World.
So I define harm as anything, whatever that may be, that results in
feeling bad. A discomfort that cannot be redeemed.
And manipulation would be anything that goes against the interests of the person. It is libertarian in the moral sense - the good for one person cannot be equivocated as the good for another person, but only compared by what the consequences are to other people. We shouldn't just assume that what we feel is good is what others will feel is good, or that any bad we inflict on others will be redeemed somehow - that's where the Golden Rule falls short.
Consequentialism gets unrelenting flak for apparently asking too much of us - yet since when did self-interest have any role in equality? Equality recognizes the similarity between one person and another, and the prioritization of one person, such as ourselves, over another person is inherently unequal.
In any case, I'm a prioritarian and contingent-sufficientarian. We must prioritize the recognition of those who are worse-off within a certain degree: as soon as we get them to this level, then they are "on their own". As soon as we get everyone to this level, we then make another level, continuing refining the equality of experience between people.
If we are standing in a queue, and I am behind you with the need to get to the front, are you going to "harm" me by not stepping aside? Are you going to "manipulate" me by keeping your back firmly turned and ignoring my plight? — apokrisis
Well, let's say I give up my position and go behind you. Are you now obligated to give up your spot to me?
There are some pains and pleasures that are so innocuous and irrelevant that they don't warrant us to consider them. They are, from a consequentialist perspective, inconsequential. Things like paper cuts and bruises, the negative experiences that nevertheless do not manage to
break a person's spirit, or their
mood. The negative experiences that
do break a person's spirit, I would call "terminal experiences", because they remind us of death or a threat to our very existence, and are usually quite painful.
However, in everyday life we often
do give up our spots for those who really need it. A man with a broken finger really ought to give up his spot in line for another man suffering from a heart attack. There's priority in effect here.
But again we are back to your kind of unplaced and scaleless view of morality where there is none of the relativity that comes from relating. The "good" congeals into a mentalistic and immutable substance. It is not the kind of adaptive dynamical principle that lies at the heart of my naturalism. — apokrisis
Of course the good is going to be mentalistic and immutable - most of our phenomenal concepts are static. That's the whole goal of process philosophy, to show how our mental concepts of staticity cannot correlate to the rest of the world.
But that is beside the point. It's a red herring to claim that
our own moral concepts don't even match reality when I have already said that there is nothing like our moral concepts in the objective world. It is an isolated phenomenon in an isolated environment of persons. To apply morality to the entire universe is to equivocate cosmic habit with morality, which is just plain wrong.
For example, you have to introduce the homuncular self that experience its experiences. Pleasure, pain and empathy now become qualia - substantial "mental" properties. And you even start appealing to "me" as a fellow homunculus doing the same thing.
It's a familar way of reducing reality - to matter and mind. But we all know that it doesn't work out in the end. Dualism is good for a while, but in the long-run, it is a philosophical blind alley. — apokrisis
It's a good thing we're not doing metaphysics, then. We're doing (meta-)ethics. It already presumes an un-removable manifest image of man, one of Selves, Qualia, and Free Will. I'm not sure how you get around the fact that pain, no matter what it actually is,
hurts, and that pleasure
feels good, and that it
seems like we have Selves. Indeed the realization that we may not have a Self or any Qualia threatens nihilism, or a dissolution of all value whatsoever. And so any sort of metaphysics of ethics is going to have to work within these parameters unless they want to risk removing themselves from the ethical discourse entirely.