The premise that is missing:
If reason is the essential attribute for a human's survival and reason provides for human values, then an act is ethical if and only if it contributes to the actor's values derived from reason. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This premise also is needed:
If P1 and P2, then C.
But that claim itself needs justification. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I know it is not [a definition of 'selfish']. — Garrett Travers
Human survival also depends on other means, including ingrained responses (you jump from fire by a natural tendency to avoid its pain well before you reason about it), emotion (enthusiasm, hope, love), physical effort (pushing a rock to not be crushed by it), and cooperation with other humans (except for extraordinary people, survival by oneself with just reason is not likely).
— TonesInDeepFreeze
All of this is involved in the reasoning process, and how your brain determines one's actions. — Garrett Travers
The pain/pleasure response is about the best thing here as far as a natural response to immediate stimuli that ensures survival, so I think you can have that. But, even that is an essential element to: think, understand, and form judgments by a process of logic- or reason. — Garrett Travers
I value fresh air, not from reason,
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If you value it, it's reason. — Garrett Travers
breathing isn't going to get your food, shelter, or skills for continued survival for you. — Garrett Travers
Yes, means of survival are developed by reason, values are secondary. — Garrett Travers
And it requires argument to show that there are not values other than selfishness that are developed with reason
— TonesInDeepFreeze
No, it doesn't. That isn't necessary at all. All values developed with reason. Selfishness is the value in the reasoning faculty to provide life and values. Doesn't matter which values you generate. — Garrett Travers
reason is only part of the means of human survival. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, the things you mentioned are minor parts of survival that could potentially exist outside of : think, understand, and form judgments by a process of logic. — Garrett Travers
If humans survive by reason, and reason is the human's means of surviving and living in accordance with the values produced from reason, then a society that respects that process is the only one conducive to human life. How does that not follow? — Garrett Travers
If reason is the essential attribute for a human's survival and reason provides for human values, then an act is ethical if and only if it contributes to the actor's values derived from reason.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This is completely fair. So, I say we go from there. — Garrett Travers
So, I say we go from there. — Garrett Travers
I value seeing a colorful flower, not from reason, but simply from the unmediated pleasure I get from it
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If you can use thought to enumerate the reason, that's reason. — Garrett Travers
If reason is the essential attribute for a human's survival and reason provides for human values, then an act is ethical if and only if it contributes to the actor's values derived from reason.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
As said another way:
This premise also is needed:
If P1 and P2, then C.
But that claim itself needs justification. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So you should not have suggested that it is. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Reason depends on the biological process of the brain. So one could just as easily say that all reason involves biological process. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"Doesn 't matter which values you generate". On its face, that can't be what you mean, even in this context, since you hold that there are values that are irrational. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Even though, quite arguably, valuing one's life and pleasure and enjoyment of certain values is selfish, it does not follow that (a) all values are developed by reason (which was my point) and (b) that one can't develop from reason also unselfish values (a point I'm adding in response to your response here). — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your argument is that reason should be singled out as the necessary attribute. But then I mention another necessary attribute. But then you say it contributes to reason. But whether the other attributes contribute to reason or not, they are necessary. Without better argument, you are arbitrary to claim that reason is the essential necessary attribute, let alone to further argue that ethical behavior is all and only that which is based on values corresponding to reason. One could as well say that ethics is all and only that which contributes to pleasure and avoidance of pain. Or one could as well say that ethics is all and only that which contributes to survival. Adding that it must be toward life corresponding to "values based on reason" doesn't follow from your premises. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You are shifting the argument. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Okay, go from there. Try to make a logically sound argument for it.
That the proposition impresses Objectivist as overwhelmingly true is not a demonstration that it is true. A demonstration is showing:
"Reason is the essential attribute for a human's survival". (And that has not been shown.)
and
showing that
"Reason is the essential attribute for a human's survival and reason provides for human values"
entails
"An act is ethical if and only if it contributes to the actor's values derived from reason." — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't know what "enumerate the reason" is supposed to mean.
I can use thought to enumerate the emotions I felt yesterday. That doesn't entail that the emotions themselves are reason. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Influenced, of course. Controlled, no. — Garrett Travers
From what I can gather, the brain controls everything. — Garrett Travers
So waking to a room on fire and escaping in a panic - this isn't an example of incoming stimulus controlling the brain? — ZzzoneiroCosm
The brain controls reasoning and also the irrational in the human system(s)?
So the brain, in its control of irrational thoughts, emotions and behavior, is both rational (given to reasoning) and irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
So the brain, in its control of irrational thoughts, emotions and behavior, is both rational (given to reasoning) and irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yes. — Garrett Travers
And how can a person know whether his present thoughts, emotions or behaviors are rational or irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Is it possible to believe a given thought, emotion or behavior is rational when upon closer inspection it turns out to be irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
For example, your behavior right now on this forum: is it possible that while you believe it to be rational it turns out to be irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Yes, I know you hate Ayn Rand. (Except, of course, for you.) :) — ZzzoneiroCosm
P1. if humans are generated by natural processes with reason (logic, rationality, conceptual faculty) being their means of survival.
P2. and if it is only through this conceptual faculty of reason that humans are capable of living a life according to the values he/she develops with said faculty
C. then the only moral system of society is one in which each human is free to pursue their own values to live and achieve their own goals — Garrett Travers
If P1 and P2, then C.
But that claim itself needs justification.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
These are not my premises. — Garrett Travers
P1. if humans are generated by natural processes with reason (logic, rationality, conceptual faculty) being their means of survival.
P2. and if it is only through this conceptual faculty of reason that humans are capable of living a life according to the values he/she develops with said faculty
C. then the only moral system of society is one in which each human is free to pursue their own values to live and achieve their own goals — Garrett Travers
We haven't gotten to the moral justifications portion of this conversation yet. — Garrett Travers
Reason depends on the biological process of the brain. So one could just as easily say that all reason involves biological process.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's specifically what I'll be arguing. — Garrett Travers
I said we'd "start" here. — Garrett Travers
You are shifting the argument.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Nope, that was you. This was my specific argument. — Garrett Travers
On its face, that can't be what you mean, even in this context, since you hold that there are values that are irrational.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's because you didn't analyze the rest of the statement. It does not matter whether you can value irrational concepts, the concept itself is generated through the same process of reason per individual. — Garrett Travers
We're gonna do this one on a separate comment, after I get through your gish gallop. — Garrett Travers
I don't know what "enumerate the reason" is supposed to mean.
I can use thought to enumerate the emotions I felt yesterday. That doesn't entail that the emotions themselves are reason.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If you can describe why you enjoyed something, then such is a matter of reason. — Garrett Travers
Oh no. Here we go again. An Ayn Rand thread... 16 hours and 5 pages. — ssu
Is it possible to believe a given thought, emotion or behavior is rational when upon closer inspection it turns out to be irrational? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Of course. — Garrett Travers
Oh no. Here we go again. An Ayn Rand thread... 16 hours and 5 pages. — ssu
So while believing ourselves to be following our rational self-interest we may in fact be following our irrational self-interest? — ZzzoneiroCosm
In other words, while believing ourselves to be rationally selfish in the Randian sense we may actually be just plain selfish? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Did you not read where I said I was not going to respond unless we took the arguments one at a time? — Garrett Travers
Can you respond to my point about scientific projects? How would a Randian society fund large-scale projects that don't return a realistic return on investment, like the Hubble Telescope and LHC? — RogueAI
P1 and P2 do not entail C. So if you claim C, then you need premises more than P1 and P2. What are those premises? — TonesInDeepFreeze
if humans are generated by natural processes with reason (logic, rationality, conceptual faculty) being their means of survival. — Garrett Travers
PFC: "This region is implicated in the most human of behaviors, such as social interaction, moral judgment, fairness, self-control, prediction of the future, and decision making in conflict situations.88-9" — Garrett Travers
Sensory Data Accrual: "In everyday life, we choose between options with multiple attributes. The attributes of an option (e.g., shoes) can be qualitatively different (aesthetics and expenses) and are associated with positive or negative values. For successful choice behavior, individuals need to integrate the different values into an overall subjective value." — Garrett Travers
Data Sifting: "People can conceptualize the same action (e.g. ‘riding a bike’) at different levels of abstraction (LOA), where higher LOAs specify the abstract motives that explain why the action is performed (e.g. ‘getting exercise’), while lower LOAs specify the concrete steps that indicate how the action is performed (e.g. ‘gripping handlebars’). Prior neuroimaging studies have shown that why and how questions about actions differentially activate two cortical networks associated with mental-state reasoning and action representation, respectively" — Garrett Travers
Concept Informed Behavior: ""The activation signature of a concept is a composite of the different types of knowledge of the concept that a person has stored, and each type of knowledge is stored in its own characteristic set of regions" — Garrett Travers
That's a knock on your philosophy. The LHC and Hubble and moon landing and ISS have been net goods. Not huge net goods, but net goods. — RogueAI
PFC is implicated in most human behaviors. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Integration of multiple values informs our choices. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Cortical networks work together to process various levels of abstraction. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Different regions of the brain work together to store and integrate knowledge. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Different regions of the brain work together to store and integrate knowledge.
All this to say the brain controls everything? Am I following? — ZzzoneiroCosm
All human thoughts are informed by sensory data used to inform further action in a feedbackloop. What actions that are life-sustaining are not classified by this description? — Garrett Travers
"A matter of reason" (a vague rubric) is not what's at issue. What is at issue is whether the original mental events were reason. If there is a difference between emotion and reasoning, then my emotions yesterday were not reason. The fact that I can later use reason to think about the emotions I once had doesn't make those emotions themselves reason. Otherwise, any mental state is reason. — TonesInDeepFreeze
First, you elide my point. Whether P1 or P2 are true, they do not entail C. — TonesInDeepFreeze
All formed from sensory data: Reason — Garrett Travers
We obviously don't agree, but you have made a spirited defense of Randian philosophy! I salute you! — RogueAI
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