can we please stop pretending that the way we live our lives is actually determined by the philosophical system of morality that we just invented. — fdrake
What I'm trying to criticize is an absence of care about ethical decisions here on the forum, people only care about them insofar as they are potential defeaters or supporters for ethical proposals or ethical systems. Ethics, then, is empty of applied content on here. — fdrake
They're almost certainly not independent lines of inquiry though. Do you think it would be normal for someone to study normative and meta-ethics all their life and gain no insights into how to not be a jackass? — fdrake
But can we please stop pretending that the way we live our lives is actually determined by the philosophical system of morality that we just invented. — fdrake
If using ethical systems in your day to day life is an important part of ethical philosophy, it is a glaring omission that we speak about what structures ethical decisions without caring about what they prescribe for us to do or how they structure our thoughts about what is right, wrong and permissible. Is there much of a difference between any two normative or meta-ethical theories in terms of how their adherents would make ethical decisions? If not, they're empty ideas. About ethics while being indifferent to how to live our lives. — fdrake
Examples of how your ethical system has guided you towards certain actions towards people? — fdrake
If we can accept this notion that ideas are inventions of the mind, that ideas are, when it comes down to it, only interpretations of something, and if ethics, in fact, is taken to refer to real other persons who exist apart from my interpretations, then we are up against a problem: there is no way in which ideas, on the current model, refer to independently existing other persons, and as such, ideas cannot be used to found an ethics. There can be no pure practical reason until after contact with the other is established.
Given this view towards ideas, then, anytime I take the person in my idea to be the
real person, I have closed off contact with the real person; I have cut off the connection
with the other that is necessary if ethics is to refer to real other people. This is a central
violence to the other that denies the other his/her own autonomy. Levinas calls this violence
"totalization" and it occurs whenever I limit the other to a set of rational categories,
be they racial, sexual, or otherwise. Indeed, it occurs whenever I already know what the
other is about before the other has spoken. Totalization is a denial of the other's difference,
the denial of the otherness of the other. That is, it is the inscription of the other in
the same. If ethics presupposes the real other person, then such totalization will, in itself,
be unethical. — Anthony Beavers on Levinas
For example, I don't steal or deceive people in order to grow my business. — @Agustino
My adherence to my system of ethics prevents me from choosing such means to achieve my ends. Values give motivation, they are goals - why you live your life. Stealing, deception, etc. these are at most means, but they cannot be values or ends-in-themselves. My system of ethics influences me in the means I choose to achieve the values that I have. However, I think one's values are to an extent or another given.Can you give me some derivation or heuristic that gives motivation not to steal or deceive people from your system of ethics? — fdrake
The best guide as to how to act is conscience; which consists in moral imagination and intuition. It is direct and has no need of a system, although it can be helpful to present moral intuitions as maxims. — Janus
But I think there's some place for ethical systems. For example, if you're speaking with someone who has much different ethical intuitions from you, appealing to their self interest in terms of their decisions' consequences for them can help bridge the gap. — fdrake
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