You have a strange understanding/confusion about nominalism then. — TheWillowOfDarkness
You missed it. Terrapin Station was most insistent. — Banno
You want me to stay on my own topic.
A thread has a life of its own. Better to treat the topic as a strange attractor than a fixed point. — Banno
For what it's worth, I think we are mostly in agreement; it's just that I insist on the inclusion of that (to me) all important "if" in our explanation of moral principles; I don't believe they can stand on their own without it. — Janus
A better foil might be the Will to Power: conscientiously acting so as to achieve power for oneself. How consistent could such an approach be? Could this lead to one flourishing? — Banno
And this presents neatly the problem with the open question argument. Is it good to conscientiously acting so as to achieve power for oneself? "No, but I don't care". — Banno
Hm. Not to speak for Andrew M, but I would say instead that one who claims to transcend morality in the way described cannot come back and claim to be doing the right thing. That's one consequence of being beyond good and evil. — Banno
How do we get to needs that aren't dependent on wants? — Terrapin Station
For example, you only need food and water if you want to stay alive. If you want to die via a hunger strike, you rather need to avoid food and water. (Well, avoid water in that case if you want it to be quicker.) — Terrapin Station
No, it's a natural and pragmatic standard. It's hard to get much useful work done when people keep randomly dropping in to pop you off and take your stuff.
— Andrew M
What? I don't understand why you think that it's natural, or rather, if you think that it's natural, why your analogy was with something obviously artificial, namely monetary value. — S
"If life has value then ..." in an ordinary sense. — Andrew M
Everyone having their own arbitrary preferred standard is no standard at all. — Andrew M
From an evolutionary perspective, we want food and water because we need them to survive. — Andrew M
We just need to say how it would be that life (or anything) has value outside of what anyone thinks about it. — Terrapin Station
I don't know of anyone who thinks that moral stances are arbitrary, by the way. — Terrapin Station
Isn't it a fact that we need a lack of food and water to not survive (ceteris paribus, that is)? — Terrapin Station
your antinatalism makes little sense — Terrapin Station
Not sure of your point — Andrew M
Yeah, but if you are aware of Aristotle well enough to come up with eudaemonia, I shall assume you are just as aware there is something antecedent to it, and necessary for it. Or at least qualifies its meaning. — Mww
And I would also ask if you think ethics, the general domain from which eudaemonia arises, re: “living well” or some such, is the same as morality? If so, I submit that the participants in the train hypothetical and all such manufactured moral dilemmas have precious little to do with the general conception of “living well”. — Mww
Isn't it a fact that we need a lack of food and water to not survive (ceteris paribus)? — Terrapin Station
And what is valuable to a human being — Andrew M
Make it valuable for a human being, if that helps. I'm talking about what is valuable for human beings independently of personal opinions or preferences. — Andrew M
Yes, I'm also saying that the (implicit) values of life and well-being are part of the natural function of being human. — Andrew M
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