Unshakable certainty(conviction) in one's own thought/belief is not always 'a bad thing'. It is certainly not enough for one to be a sociopath. All sociopaths may have such conviction, but not everyone with such conviction is a sociopath. — creativesoul
Here we're getting into the realm of that which did not exist in it's entirety prior to our account of it. Such is true of many common notions, including many used in ethical/moral discourse. — creativesoul
I work from a criterion for thought/belief which is universal. There are no examples to the contrary. — creativesoul
The Fox and the Grapes is a story that teaches a moral lesson. — creativesoul
I do find the notion of intuition to be without a common referent that existed in it's entirety prior to our accounts of it. It's use - without delineation - leaves me wondering what the speaker is talking about. Given that it is being claimed to give rise to moral judgment, I wonder if that is indicative of a claim regarding initial emergence/source/origen of all moral judgment or if it simply points out that some moral judgment happens automatically after one has a basis of moral thought/belief from which to judge. — creativesoul
The Fox and the Grapes is a story that teaches a moral lesson.
— creativesoul
It’s an example of cognitive dissonance. The moral is to not lie to ourselves? What does it matter if we lie to ourselves if there are no other selves? In any case, we’d only lie to ourselves in this way because we have an image of ourselves that we’re interested in maintaining in relation to others.
A story of moral sour grapes might be something like a wolf (a more social species) eating a whole rabbit by itself and not sharing it with the pack. Because the wolf has a strong self image of strictly adhering to pack norms, not to mention that pack exile could mean death or at least no longer having the potential for gene propagation, the wolf chooses to believe that he wasn’t at fault and blames the rabbit for being a little sour, and claiming that none of the other wolves would have wanted it. It was actually virtuous of him to not subject the pack to the sourness of the rabbit, so he comes to believe and claim. — praxis
I do find the notion of intuition to be without a common referent that existed in it's entirety prior to our accounts of it. It's use - without delineation - leaves me wondering what the speaker is talking about. Given that it is being claimed to give rise to moral judgment, I wonder if that is indicative of a claim regarding initial emergence/source/origen of all moral judgment or if it simply points out that some moral judgment happens automatically after one has a basis of moral thought/belief from which to judge.
— creativesoul
I think that intuition can be both instinctual and conditioned by culture, and we can also intentionally condition ourselves. — praxis
Like thought/belief, there are different 'levels' of evolutionary complexity. — creativesoul
At a certain level, the explanatory usefulness of the role of evolution in the source of morals becomes exhausted. — Merkwurdichliebe
At a certain level, the explanatory usefulness of the role of evolution in the source of morals becomes exhausted. In all subsequent discourse, the role of evolution is automatically implied as a necessary factor in the source of morals. Any further talk of it is redundant. — Merkwurdichliebe
We'll have all the time in the world to talk about that when we get there. It's about much more than the role of evolution. I don't talk in such terms to begin with. There's much more to it than meets the eye... — creativesoul
You still open to the idea of existential quantification? — creativesoul
Pre-linguistic thought/belief must exist in such a way that it is able to evolve into linguistic.
Agree?
If so... we're done talking about the role of evolution. — creativesoul
Yes, I think it is worthy of investigation. — Merkwurdichliebe
I asked because I've already been using it throughout. Universal claims, while being prone to reductio, are nonetheless the strongest possible justificatory ground, especially when they are verifiable/falsifiable.
That's exactly what's been going on. — creativesoul
I asked because I've already been using it throughout. Universal claims, while being prone to reductio, are nonetheless the strongest possible justificatory ground, especially when they are verifiable/falsifiable.
That's exactly what's been going on.
— creativesoul
I had that feeling. — Merkwurdichliebe
We look at what's left and assess it's relevance/adequacy for deducing a universal criterion. — creativesoul
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.