so we've got to play the cards we were dealt. — VagabondSpectre
How is that not drawing mental correlations between an 'object' of physiological sensory perception(another person in this case) and oneself? — creativesoul
Actually we're not discussing our disagreement. I agree with the crucial importance of empathy, emotion, and innate potential. I disagree with your account. You're overstating the case. — creativesoul
There is a logical gulf in your argument. — Banno
Because it's an emotional response. Understanding that someone is suffering is mental. Feeling something yourself because you understand that someone is suffering is emotional — VagabondSpectre
Babies think people cease to exist when they leave the room... — VagabondSpectre
Some want us to believe that Jane does all of this without ever making a connection between her mom's behavior and Jane's own remembered experience of times just like these. — creativesoul
Rubbish. Now babies have conceptions of existence? Next you'll be saying that they perform calculus. — creativesoul
Babies do not understand emotion in any way that is even remotely close to the kind necessary for having empathy for another. — creativesoul
I don't want an objective morality, I want a morality that objectively serves humans. — VagabondSpectre
The most coherent description of morality is that it's a a cooperative strategy between two or more parties that is designed to be mutually beneficial... — VagabondSpectre
Morality begins when one starts to take the other into consideration. — Banno
So morality is expediency. — Banno
That's exactly wrong. Morality begins when one starts to take the other into consideration. — Banno
Whack a mole is tiresome. — creativesoul
What does it mean to take the other into consideration though? How should we treat them per moral consideration? — VagabondSpectre
I think I do it by being honest: because if you don't consider other people then they will likely retaliate, so if you value life, liberty, prosperity, and happiness, you might want to consider cooperation instead of conflict. — VagabondSpectre
And how's it going so far? Folk generally agreeing with you, are they? — Banno
Again, you are not doing ethics, you are doing game theory. — Banno
Can one act morally without thinking morally? — creativesoul
Is that act moral in and of itself, or is it moral because we say so? Does what we point out require language? If so, then what's moral in and of itself requires language, does it not? — creativesoul
Morality is conventionally understood as a code of behaviour. Do codes of behaviour require shared meaning? I would say so. Shared meaning requires a plurality of agents with common meaningful language — creativesoul
There is no such thing as innate moral intuition. — creativesoul
Codes of conduct are necessary when different community members have conflicting ideas regarding what should or should not be done. — creativesoul
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