I am rethinking this normative theory; because I don’t think it works anymore. — Bob Ross
What if I also treat myself as a means to an end? — Philosophim
You can’t: it violates FET. — Bob Ross
Right off the bat, maybe I shouldn’t comment, being more a subjective moralist than a normative ethicist,
…..in which is violated the fundamental moral condition, re: the worthiness of being happy. The argument is that he who is a moral agent in the strictest sense of the idea is thereby worthy of his being happy, which is the same as his happiness being given by his accordance with his own moral law.
so if you claim I should not treat myself as a means to an end because it violates the FET, there’s something wrong with the FET.
The something wrong might be as little as….. an end cannot be a desired goal, as you say, but is instead a necessary accomplishment
Now, ethically speaking, or, speaking from the perspective of a community predicated on moral agency, which just is a kingdom of ends in its strictest sense, putting the pieces of this particular puzzle together, you get to the conclusion that, if all members of the community are worthy of the happiness they each have, they must have all acted in accordance with a subjective moral principle. And if they are all happy within the community, which is the same as all happy with each other, they must have all acted in accordance with a subjective moral principle common to each member. Another name for a principle common to all which abide by it, is a universal law. And that subjective command which adheres to such law, is a categorical imperative, the formula for which in a community would be, then, treat each member as an end in himself, just as I treat myself.
Disclaimer: without “happiness” as the fundamental human aesthetic condition, re: what everybody wishes he had, and without “worthiness of being happy” as the fundamental human moral condition, re: what everybody ought to have, and a method for relating one to the other, none of the above is of any use and can be disregarded without fault.
….an end cannot be a desired goal, as you say, but is instead a necessary accomplishment.
-Mww
I didn’t understand the distinction here between “desired goal” and “necessary accomplishment”: could you please elaborate? — Bob Ross
Notwithstanding my quibble with happiness being necessarily the core of moral agency, I think this makes sense; but my issue is, although it is very practical, that it isn’t a commitment one has simply by being committed to being rational — Bob Ross
….why should I care about being a member of a kingdom of ends? — Bob Ross
Instead, I think, it would be much more convincing (especially to the layman) if it followed from the avoidance of a logical contradiction — Bob Ross
After all the metaphysical reductionism, desire is a mere want, the satisfaction of which is anything sufficient for it, hence, contingent. A desired goal may be specific in itself, but makes no allowance for its satisfaction, which may still, then, remain contingent. An accomplishment indicates a satisfaction in itself, a particular goal, but a necessary accomplishment manifests as a satisfaction of a specific goal achievable only under a certain condition, hence not contingent.
This relates to the topic at hand iff the adherence to a subjective principle from which an act according to a categorical imperative the principles prescribes follows, is the one and only permissible means leading to a necessary accomplishment, re: worthiness of being happy.
In this way, a guy may be worthy of being happy, even if the prescription from his own principles cause him to act in such a way he feels no happiness at all.
Happy and happiness are just words, those alledged “fuzzy concepts”, that represent a specific kind of feeling. One could use righteousness, positive well-being, or the like. The word as used here is meant to indicate a fundamental human aesthetic condition. Call that whatever you like, I suppose
In a system where the agent is a causality, contradiction is impossible
If there were such a thing, and it was a universal condition, there would be no need to, e.g., turn the other cheek, or, engage in the ol’ eye-for-an-eye routine. And that would make everybody happy, or if not so much happy, then at least to release them from having to worry about being a target of them.
Takes an awful lot of presuppositions for this all to work, but none of them are particularly far-fetched.
…..the ‘desire’ is just the want for something; whereas the ‘accomplishment’ is the happiness it may bring us upon achieving it—correct? — Bob Ross
consequently acquire happiness, when we have performed something worthy or perhaps have a character that is worthy (virtuous). Correct? — Bob Ross
this is predicated on the assumption that everyone would subjectively agree to this, and I don’t think most would. — Bob Ross
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