What's good in and by itself? Love of your country? Love of your mother? Love of your spouse? Then you get into immediate contention of what's good if someone has a different coutry of his or her own, or differnt mother, or different spouse, and you at the same time have to share resources that are not enough in quantity for all involved.
I contest therefore, based on the above, that there can be a uniform deontological agreement, This renders deontology useless.
Outcomes? I save my country, my mother, my spouse. Even at the detriment of your country, your mother, your spouse.
Again, teleology can't have a uniform agreement. This renders teleology useless. — god must be atheist
Your answer hinges, it seems to me, what's "good" or "right" and what's "wrong".
What's good in and by itself? Love of your country? Love of your mother? Love of your spouse? Then you get into immediate contention of what's good if someone has a different coutry of his or her own, or differnt mother, or different spouse, and you at the same time have to share resources that are not enough in quantity for all involved. — god must be atheist
This seems like a ridiculous argument. A lack of uniformity doesn’t render either useless - anymore than the fact that there is no uniform time rendering time useless. — Possibility
I can honestly say I do not think I'm suited toward direct debate with the intolerant and while I can make a point of understand and empathising from afar, I do not have the temperance required (Yet) to do that in a direct way, it would just become a circular shouting match at some point I'm sure. — Mark Dennis
I personally have experienced a sense of perhaps arrogant duty toward attempting to gain political office. Yet some of the very institutions one would have to enter have been made inherently corrupting. Now, you might say this shows lack of strength of conviction but in reality it's a desire to toe the line between being just, righteous and being self righteous. — Mark Dennis
I'd like to hear more of your thoughts on this and am very open to suggestions of analytic prescriptive ideas. What do you think I or others here should do other than have these collaborative discussions with each other? — Mark Dennis
However within a human universe of discourse there are some things which are objectively valuable to all of us and when you are serving the collective you are serving yourself too. — Mark Dennis
The getting that something for MY country is good for ME, but it's devastatingly BAD for YOU and YOUR country. This is a contradiction, not just a lack of uniformity. — god must be atheist
No, there is no contradiction. Any apparent problems are resolved when we explicitly acknowledge that "good" is a relative term. So the situation you describe is good for you, but NOT(good) for your neighbour. — Pattern-chaser
How would you define contradiction, Pattern-chaser? "Paul is tall. Paul is not tall." Wouldn't you say that's a contradiction? — god must be atheist
I maintain there is a contradiction, at the same time that I agree with you that "good" is a relative term. I say this because "good" even as a relative term can't be taken as "not good". Something that is not itself at the same time IS a contradiction. — god must be atheist
You're neglecting context, I think. If X is good for me, but NOT(good) for you, there is no contradiction. — Pattern-chaser
Ultimately this is a question of a fundamental belief. — Pantagruel
Clearly, there is lots of evidence for altruism. It seems that you don't accept it. — Pantagruel
This is not a perception problem; it is a problem of not thinking the process entirely through.Clearly, there is lots of evidence for altruism. — Pantagruel
It's like when Dan Dennett argued there were no good reasons to believe in god...because he couldn't come up with any. — Pantagruel
The application of Normative ethical relativism to the lay person tends to go something like this. "You can't say x about culture y, that is just how they do things, you can't tell them they are wrong." So; A) there are no universal norms and B) ideas of moral right or wrong are relative to the society in which people are raised and in which they live. Doesn't B sound a lot like a universal norm? Descriptive ethical relativism is fair game as it's utility lies in describing the ethics of ours and others cultures in a more wholesome manner. There is really no compelling argument to make use of relativism as a prescriptive ethical methodology because it sheds no light on what we as individuals should be doing with ourselves.
So the ethics of adaptive pragmatism are grounded in a function of ethics. I define the function is to collectively keep humanity safe for as long as possible, so I start to look toward science. — Mark Dennis
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.