As Schopenhauer tells us, the aesthetic response is to what is of no practical significance to us. It is what transports and transforms our consciousness. — Janus
Agreed: all models are simply models, and can never be what they are modeling. — Janus
Obviously, morally significant behavior has actual effects on people's lives, in fact that is what defines it. — Janus
The source of morals cannot be found in human biology, therefore the belief that it can is rubbish.
— praxis
Morals have to be found in biology, because they can't occur elsewhere. To occur elsewhere, we'd need meaning, preferences, etc. to be able to occur elsewhere, but they don't occur elsewhere. They're brain phenomena. — Terrapin Station
If A causes B, it doesn't imply that A is identical to B, does it?
And if A is not identical to B, then A or, whatever makes A obtain, isn't literally the source of B, because we only have B elsewhere. How does it make sense to say that A is the source of B when A isn't itself B? — Terrapin Station
You're not claiming that people's lives do not have a mental component, presumably. So how is this evidence of moral significance being extramental? — Terrapin Station
As it is said, there is no good answer to a stupid question. — Janus
Why does a cause have to be identical to what it causes? This makes no sense me, what is the utility of thinking about it that way? — DingoJones
survival-of-the-fittest
But then I am forced to consider why evolution would develop such a redundant mechanism as emotion to begin with.
I'm not a scientist and strongly doubt such scientific studies exist. Also, I didn't claim that moral stances can't occur in brains. — praxis
Is moral order or moral frameworks biological? — praxis
Why does a cause have to be identical to what it causes? — DingoJones
When I light a match, the chemicals on the end are the source of the flame, aren’t they? — DingoJones
When I light a match, the chemicals on the end are the source of the flame — DingoJones
It's not just the chemicals at the end of the match, but processes, too, and the chemical changes that happen due to those processes. That is the source of the flame. — Terrapin Station
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