all phenomena is a product of the mind. — Merkwurdichliebe
Terrible analogy. — Merkwurdichliebe
It means that only photographs exist... — praxis
The entire world of the camera in your analogy is comprised of photographs. — praxis
According to the physical world. — praxis
This is false. — Terrapin Station
If anything we are discussing can be accused of having a priori significance, it is the notion of thought/belief. 8n relation to the tabula rasa of thought/belief, any cosmological or neurobiological explanation are as much a matter of a posterior understanding as any explanation concerning the ethical or its source. — Merkwurdichliebe
So it is a more primitive morality, more closely related to the autonomic processes of the nervous system, whereas a more sophisticated mode of morality would render the autonomic process so insignificant as to bypass any potential effect it may have on subsequent behavior or disposition. — Merkwurdichliebe
What is it that assigns phenomenological significance to my immediate sensory experience? The mind. — Merkwurdichliebe
Have you come up with a coherent account of shared meaning yet? — creativesoul
Have you come up with a coherent account of shared meaning yet?
— creativesoul
I've had a coherent account of how meaning works for decades. I don't know if I explained it to you in any detail or not in the past.
We need to clarify, by the way, just how you're using "shared" there. We'd not be talking about different instances of the same (exact, logically identical) thing, because there are no such things in general (I'm a nominalist). — Terrapin Station
Don't let me get off topic. Let's experiment.
If we establish (not really) an incontestable premise in thought/belief, then let's just pretend, how would we begin to flesh out a method?
Perhaps you can enlighten me here with a hypothetical test run. And then, perhaps, run the "source of morals" through it. — Merkwurdichliebe
Look in the cupboard for a red cup. Inside it you will find coffee. You cannot dip your finger into that red cup of coffee. — creativesoul
You are a writing machine.creativesoul
A blank slate overstates the case. — creativesoul
If we must speak in terms of a priori and a posteriori, then I suppose the above makes a fair point. However, I personally reject that framework as a result of it's inherent inadequacy. In fact, I reject all historical philosophical metaphysical frameworks for the very same reason. They are all based upon dichotomies such as subject/object, mental/physical, internal/external, subjective/objective, and others. None of these dichotomies can coherently arrive at a framework capable of taking proper account of that which consists of both, and is thus... neither. Thought/belief is one such thing. — creativesoul
All explanations of thought/belief are themselves existentially dependent upon pre-existing thought/belief. That is to say that all explanations of thought/belief are metacognitive endeavors(they require thinking about thought/belief). Thought/belief cannot be pointed at. It does not have a spatiotemporal location. So, unlike thinking about physically perceptible things, thinking about thought/belief requires quite a bit more than just brains/nervous systems replete with physiological sensory perception and the innate ability to experience the effects/affects of basic emotion(contentment/discontentment/fear). — creativesoul
It does not draw and maintain the actual distinction between thought/belief and thinking about thought/belief. I — creativesoul
I wouldn't call the common core of all thought/belief 'primitive morality'. Primitive thought/belief? Sure. Not all thought/belief is rightfully called "morality". Rather, morality is codified thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour(thought/belief that is moral in kind).
Morality is codified moral belief. Laws. — creativesoul
You and I both know that the position I'm arguing for rings true in a multitude of ways and has the broadest possible scope of rightful application(s). Don't we? — creativesoul
Again, it's switching to "what is it that changes focal lengths?" so that we're suddenly talking about cameras qua cameras instead. — Terrapin Station
The presupposition of correspondence to actual events happens prior to language. — creativesoul
If the attribution of meaning happens prior to language, then any and all positions arriving at and/or relying upon the contrary are wrong in a very specific sort of way. — creativesoul
All thought/belief (all correlation) presupposes the existence of it's own content(regardless of subsequent further qualification). — creativesoul
The presupposition of correspondence to actual events happens prior to language. — creativesoul
In moral foundations theory (Jonathan Haidt, Craig Joseph, Jesse Graham), it's proposed that moral judgment is primarily given rise to by intuition, with reasoning playing a smaller role in most of our moral decision-making. Conscious thought-processes serve as a kind of post hoc justification of our decisions. — praxis
The theory suggests that we have unconscious intuitive heuristics which generate our reactions to morally charged-situations, and underlie our moral behavior. When people explain their moral positions, they often miss, if not hide, the core premises and processes that actually led to those conclusions.
The main evidence for the theory comes from studies of "moral dumbfounding" where people have strong moral reactions but fail to establish any kind of rational principle to explain their reaction.
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