? If something is said to be right or wrong in Ethical terms, doing so must be based on values that have already been accepted. — RW Standing
Right or Wrong for specific issues would be defined in relation to the end-values, or rather within them. if we do not relate basic values so as to produce end-values then 'right and wrong' becomes a fashion show. I think that reads clearly? — RW Standing
If something is said to be right or wrong in Ethical terms, doing so must be based on values that have already been accepted. — RW Standing
May be, but your opinion doesn't make it so. How about developing an argument, best with at least a little research and thought on the topic.In my opinion... is fundamentally flawed. — Fooloso4
May be, but your opinion doesn't make it so. How about developing an argument, best with at least a little research and thought on the topic. — tim wood
Let's take, for example, ethics and morals: synonymous, to start with. But some philosophers assign different meanings to the terms. — tim wood
And, do you take ethics to have anything of an imperative or compulsive "should, had better" aspect? — tim wood
Are all ethics mutable, changeable? Some? None? — tim wood
You start with "care," — tim wood
... and history records that some people have cared about horrible things. — tim wood
WORK out a model for 'life' and ignore the terms 'good' and 'bad' and demonstrate that for debate — RW Standing
Too much! If you mention care as the basis of ethics then you have decided on what appeals to you and made this the basis of ethics. — RW Standing
Ethical values are all that relate to and define life. — RW Standing
? If something is said to be right or wrong in Ethical terms, doing so must be based on values that have already been accepted. What choice do the values provide ? — RW Standing
Care and what may appeal to me are not the same. — Fooloso4
And, do you take ethics to have anything of an imperative or compulsive "should, had better" aspect?
— tim wood
Not in any absolute sense, that is, not if they are understood as apodictic, autonomous, and universal. The question of what I should do and what I taught my children that they should do and what would be better in a particular situation is part of ethics, but the answers are situated.
Are all ethics mutable, changeable? Some? None?
— tim wood
I would say that ethical deliberation and determination are not independent of culture. That does not mean cultural relativism but rather that we cannot step outside of the ways in which we understand ourselves, our political and social relations, our values, and so on. — Fooloso4
Doesn't he mean that care, as a basis of ethics, appeals to you? — Terrapin Station
Which is to say, if I read you right, that ethics/morality (EM) are not a priori. — tim wood
If one were inclined to speak this way, we might say that care is the a priori condition for ethics. — Fooloso4
I'm confident you know, probably better than I, that a whole branch - tree - of EM, as deontology, is based in reason. Arguably then a priori, but at a cost of being general instead of specific. — tim wood
the attempt to ground ethics in reason, understood as apodictic, autonomous, and universal, is fundamentally flawed. — Fooloso4
And that leaves "situation." Reading into you, I infer that for you the situation is the given, the "from-which" that you depart from to consult such as you think relevant to resolve the situation that is always already yours. — tim wood
In terms of EM based in reason, I would argue that the given is reason itself. One encounters the situation and seeks to apply reason to it, the process as it happens requiring some art and creativity, in the same way that mathematics can. — tim wood
"Not independent of culture": agreed. But at the same time not subject to it absolutely. — tim wood
And I think the argument that reason could have been a means to transcend in thought if not in practice the evils of (that) culture would be compelling. — tim wood
Being on the deontological side, v. utilitarianist — tim wood
I look for the greater good in the maxim of reason. — tim wood
A choice between moral or immoral action. But this choice is relevant to normative ethics, not meta-ethics (basis of ethics).If something is said to be right or wrong in Ethical terms, doing so must be based on values that have already been accepted. What choice do the values provide? — RW Standing
And this is relevant to descriptive ethics.Before the deluge. I started this off not with founding ethics in reason. But with using reason to classify and arrange ethical values diagrammatically. In the way they logically relate. — RW Standing
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