That would only be the case if that person felt that behaving violently, cruelly, etc. was immoral.Perhaps one's authentic natural self is violent, cruel, demanding, and if so then only way to behave morally is to be inauthentic, — Cavacava
maybe that is what authenticity is, the acceptance of one's own fundamental weakness and the willingness to act toward others, not naturally, but as dictated by norms. — Cavacava
The only thing with that is that "societies should flourish" or "it's better for societies to flourish" (or whatever similar formulation) isn't objective. — Terrapin Station
So you don't believe that there are minds and existents that are not minds?And I agree with Wayfarer that the subjective/objective distinction is just a tool of thought, not something to be found as part of reality. — Agustino
And of course there's some who would deny that society should flourish - we call those people discontents, who have a morality of there own entirely dissimilar to that of everyone else's. — darthbarracuda
Yeah, I'd agree that there are such facts--although most of the conventional moral stance-related things that people claim to be such facts I think are highly dubious as such. In other words, I don't think it's at all clear that societies couldn't allow murders, rapes, etc. and persist. — Terrapin Station
Re the way I use the terms, subjective simply refers to minds--or we could say, "in" or "of" minds, and objective is the complement--"outside" of minds.That is very confusing for me. What do you mean there are minds and existents that are not minds? Mind is not purely subjective, neither is the world purely objective. — Agustino
Okay. Then I don't think there's any such thing as purely "subjective" and "objective". I also don't think things are "in" minds. Rather minds are in existence.Re the way I use the terms, subjective simply refers to minds--or we could say, "in" or "of" minds, and objective is the complement--"outside" of minds. — Terrapin Station
Because you think that everything is some "blurry" combo of mental and not-mental?Okay. Then I don't think there's any such thing as purely "subjective" and "objective". — Agustino
Okay, so thoughts, desires, etc. aren't "in" or "of" minds in your view?I also don't think things are "in" minds. Rather minds are in existence. — Agustino
Again - mind to me is not purely subjective, so this question doesn't make sense in my framework.Because you think that everything is some "blurry" combo of mental and not-mental? — Terrapin Station
Thoughts, desires, etc. can be objective states of the world. It's objective that X is thinking Y. Furthermore, certain experiences can objectively demand certain feelings - such as when your mother dies, you don't start laughing - you start crying.Okay, so thoughts, desires, etc. aren't "in" or "of" minds in your view? — Terrapin Station
Oh, I thought you were saying that nothing is purely subjective in the context of how I use the terms. You mean in the context of some alternate way that you're using the terms.mind to me is not purely subjective, — Agustino
The question you asked depends on a framework. The framework involves certain presuppositions about thoughts, reality, and how they relate together. For example you presuppose a distinction between subjective and objective. But this framework is precisely what I am denying. So of course I don't have an answer to your question - the question simply doesn't make sense under my framework, it's a false problem.Also, per however you're using the terms, you'd not actually be answering the question I asked, which is whether thoughts, desires etc. aren't "in" or "of" minds in your view. If mental phenomena can be objective per whatever definition you're using, saying that thoughts and desires can be objective doesn't answer the question I asked. — Terrapin Station
Do you think that the flourishing of society is, in itself, good? i.e. no matter what the discontents think, they're wrong when they wonder if society maybe shouldn't keep going? — darthbarracuda
For example, a society may inevitably be based on the consumption of other animals - a carnivorous society. Being the progressives we are we might look down on such a society; such a society should be abandoned, eliminated, because its members eat other animals (organic cannibalism). — darthbarracuda
Why would judgments of good or bad be relevant to my point of view? Surely my point is that morality - as it pragmatically exists in the real world - is beyond such obviously absolutist and subjective terminology. — apokrisis
Again, if I had to judge flourishing in terms of some universal and absolute telos, I would point to the Universe's thermodynamic imperative. Flourishing in the natural sense - the sense we can actually see and measure as what reality is all about - is the maximisation of entropification. — apokrisis
So "goodness" would be defined by a system being good at that. And "badness" by a failure to degrade entropy gradients. — apokrisis
A fighter pilot - able to get through 14,000 gallons per hour once he kicks on the after-burners - must be the highest form of life that exists on the planet. No wonder they are our heroes. ;) — apokrisis
But then plants have feelings too. And then why shouldn't we respect the rights of the minerals of the earth, the gases of the atmosphere? — apokrisis
Yes, we progressives ought not only eliminate ourselves, but eliminate all animals (as they are barbaric consumers too), and even all plants (as they too show no respect for minerals and gases). — apokrisis
And yet it seems all a mite ... impractical? — apokrisis
But the question I'm talking about there didn't have anything to do with subjective/objective. It was about the relationship between thoughts and mind in your view.The question you asked depends on a framework. The framework involves certain presuppositions about thoughts, reality, and how they relate together. For example you presuppose a distinction between subjective and objective. But this framework is precisely what I am denying. So of course I don't have an answer to your question - the question simply doesn't make sense under my framework, it's a false problem. — Agustino
Without absolutism you end up getting either arbitrary subjectivism or inertness (i.e. an inability to decide what to do - nevertheless an action in the objective sense). — darthbarracuda
But this equivocates flourishing. — darthbarracuda
A hammer is good at hammering nails, but that doesn't make it morally good. A gun is good at killing people, but that doesn't make it morally good nor morally good to kill people. The point being made is that the mind, being a microcosm, has its own rules, its own system. It doesn't follow the same rules that a general model of the entire universe does. — darthbarracuda
No offense but really you need to step down from this holistic picture for second and realize that nobody but yourself actually considers fighter pilots to be the highest form of life, and if they did, it would be for their apparent heroism (risk)/sacrifice and not for their entropification. — darthbarracuda
Separating yourself from this particular zone we call Earth in favor for a holistic picture ends up ignoring Earth entirely. — darthbarracuda
What, no, plants don't have feelings, neither do minerals. I'm talking about sentient organisms, the only things of moral weight. — darthbarracuda
Say you're an animal that just got caught and is about to be roasted on a fire. You beg and plead to be let go, but in the end the hunter calmly tells you that what he is doing is perfectly acceptable, because he's increasing entropy. Furthermore he tells you that you ought to accept this and be glad you are being roasted alive. — darthbarracuda
So you're a moral conventionalist. Our abilities dictate our responsibilities. A great way to excuse immoral habitual behavior. History dictates value. — darthbarracuda
You take life so seriously! Why do you object so strenuously when I put it in terms that you claim to support - framing it as an absurdity? — apokrisis
Ah, dualism. Or are you finally going to define "mind" in objective and physicalist fashion here?
What limit to caring now marks your usual slippery slope metaphysics now we have introduced this sly boundary term of "sentience"? — apokrisis
Yep, let's pose crazy scenarios as a last resort when our arguments are falling apart. — apokrisis
Yep. Just turn everything I have said into something different. Chalk up another victory for yourself. Imagine the round of applause. — apokrisis
Experience is what makes morality in the first place. — darthbarracuda
Yep, let's ignore legitimate scenarios because it threatens the cohesion of our worldview. — darthbarracuda
In my opinion, no generalization like that is going to wind up being accurate. "Good" and "bad" are just indicators of preference, and people have different preferences, for different sorts of reasons.We as humans seem to be both bad and good at our core. Perhaps being good means acting in accordance with one's self, and being bad is acting out of accord with what we believe in, 'sinning' against one's self. — Cavacava
Perhaps being good means acting in accordance with one's self, and being bad is acting out of accord with what we believe in, 'sinning' against one's self. — Cavacava
That's certainly a point of view. But that extreme subjective position - one that is only supported by naive realism and its implicit Cartesian dualism - is precisely what is the topic of discussion.
You are claiming subjectivity as the ontological basis for moral necessity. I am replying that morality is better understood in terms of "objective" reality - in terms of whatever general purposes or constraints nature might have in mind. — apokrisis
Talking animals and philosophising hunters? Is this Narnia where our legitimate scenario takes place? — apokrisis
But if we grant this craziness, then what actually follows? A sensible animal - if it is indeed taking the hunter at face value - would suggest a way to provide the hunter with an even better meal to their mutual benefit. — apokrisis
Being the most intelligent organisms on the planet, we ought to use this intelligence for the benefit of all sentients, not to subjugate them. Avoid speciesism. — darthbarracuda
But why call this morality? It offers no clear guide as to how to act except in general rules, and places the emphasis on something other than people. — darthbarracuda
Instead of trying to make morality a global holistic thing, make it an isolated and domain-specific phenomenon. Morality is all about choices. You're making it so that it has nothing to do with the people making the choices. — darthbarracuda
You're basically justifying murder and/or torture simply because you can get away with it (the animal can't fight back, the animal can't offer alternatives - as if the animal's life should even be on the gambling table to begin with, might=right). — darthbarracuda
Instead the animal is senselessly thrown into a situation that it could not consent to, cannot escape, and is forced to endure extreme pain and fear so you can have a snack. It's cannibalism and barbaric. You're arguing that the animal should have been sensible enough not to walk into the trap that we set, or have been sensible enough to run away from the gunshot in a zig-zag fashion. But it's somehow the animal's fault that it got trapped and eaten? We humans get off scotch free? — darthbarracuda
Being the most intelligent organisms on the planet, we ought to use this intelligence for the benefit of all sentients, not to subjugate them. Avoid speciesism. — darthbarracuda
The hunt both benefits from and enhances intelligence. You impose this supposed duty on humans to benefit other species because they are like us yet fail to follow through the logic that if they are like us they should also be bound by the same duty. — Barry Etheridge
If, by the way, you are cryptically arguing your way toward the moral superiority of vegetarianism, as it certainly seems, then I think it would be fairer to all if you exposed that to more focused scrutiny. — Barry Etheridge
At the cosmological level, it is "morally good" to maximise entropy. (Although of course in attributing finality or purpose to the Universe, we would only be doing that in the weakest possible sense. And there is no reason why we can't do both those things.) — apokrisis
A measure of the intelligence and foresight of a social system will be how good it is at making some right decision on the issue. — apokrisis
So yes. Morality can be built up from first principles in natural fashion. — apokrisis
My argument is that a secure morality is one built from the ground up on natural principles. If we can see what nature wants of us, then we can tell in measurable fashion how close we are to what it says is good. That creates a context in which we can make actually meaningful and useful choices. — apokrisis
As you can tell, I have no problem with what is in fact actually natural. So natural=normal. And unnatural=questionable. — apokrisis
Again a degree of behavioural variety is also natural. So I don't have any fundamental objection to veganism. I would only want to see it "done right" - done as an actually healthy diet. — apokrisis
But I live somewhere where we buy meat over the counter after it has been humanely reared and humanely slaughtered. — apokrisis
And if indeed a lamb has a happy life in a paddock, safe from all the usual diseases and predation, then dies instantly and painlessly, could you still morally object to it ending up on my dinner plate? — apokrisis
Cosmic tendencies are not equivalent to morality, though. — darthbarracuda
But only after realizing that they correspond to the golden rule, as you said. Which isn't building from naturalistic first principles. Unless you consider the golden rule to be one of these first principles, which is rather ad hoc. — darthbarracuda
see the various societal constructions meant to curb the triumph of entropy. — darthbarracuda
There is no justification for killing animals unless it's out of self-defense - and even then this is often caused by a violation of the animal's own territory, it's own "home". — darthbarracuda
Yes, because husbandry is not as perfect as you make it seem. It's absurdly easy to market one's meat as "humanely raised" by a couple easy fixes to the farm that doesn't help the animals much. — darthbarracuda
That's exactly what killing other animals for no reason is: murder. Since when did we have the right to decide how long a creature lives? Since when did we have the right to own another sentient? — darthbarracuda
Since when did we have the right to decide how long a creature lives? — darthbarracuda
Since when did we not have the right? It is assumed in all the major moral and religious codes in history and prohibited by none of the world's legal systems. — Barry Etheridge
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