• Possibility
    2.8k
    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

    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.
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k
    The only reason to outright reject a theory is that it is not coherent, or that it disagrees with established facts. It is an established fact that many people behave in a way that is NOT overtly self-serving. It is also an established fact that these non-self-serving acts often have a high-value in and to our society and form part of our culture. And our culture is the basis of all our knowledge and wisdom. So I would say that both teleology and deontology are safe and sound on solid ground.
  • Pattern-chaser
    1.8k
    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

    I think what you're ambling toward is the recognition that "good" is relative. What's good for me might not be good for you. Killing the bacteria that cause TB is good if you're a human, but not so much if you're a TB bacterium. So "good" and "evil" are relative, and we plough into nonsense when we try to characterise anything as good or bad, because that judgement is different for everyone, and for every creature.

    Isn't that the difficulty you're complaining about?
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    “I think what you're ambling toward is the recognition that "good" is relative.” Well outside the human universe of discourse it is all relative, even meaning and reasons are human concepts which are relative to us but absent in the universe without us.

    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.

    I wonder how this guy responds to martyrdom? “Oh so self serving!”
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    "I understand there is risk. It’s risky to engage in anything. It’s risky to value freedom of speech. If your aim is to avoid racism, then your intolerance for racists may achieve this in your limited perspective, but it achieves little in reducing hatred and intolerance, in eradicating racism. It only helps you to feel more in control of your ‘safe’ little world. Combating intolerance with intolerance is small thinking."

    Apologies for not replying to this sooner. I think you are absolutely right, I was being narrow minded. Was taking a few days to think about it fully. However knowing how to effectively combat the issue is something I am still unsure of. On an individual level. When asking the deeply personal question "Where will I contribute the most?" 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.

    "In my view it isn’t power or influence that topples institutions or changes the status quo: it’s awareness, connection and collaboration - capable of transcending borders and infiltrating the hierarchies that work to protect those in power."

    I agree wholeheartedly with this. Awareness, Connection and Collaboration. As for internal change agents: I feel the one ring allegory is pertinent. 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. Since you mentioned collaboration I feel the point can be made that no one is an Island and where one person may not have the strength to stick to their convictions alone many can support and hold each other up. I observe that the most monumental beneficial changes in society come from the alignment of goals of social, political and economic interests. I think that it can be said that within capitalism our social and political interests supervene our economic interests. So in order to motivate change in a collectively beneficial way, we will have to re-evaluate our economic model and change that. Business ethics or how businesses go about ethics needs to change in so many ways.

    Then again, Political principles also need some major adjustments. I am unsure of how these things can be changed. 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?
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    that's part of the problem, Pattern-Chaser, and a big problem: good as a qualifier is hopelessly relative. Even among humans.

    The other part of it is that many ethicists, as I have seen it in my readings, don't bother with separating ethical deeds from good deeds. What I mean is this: say, something has been established as good. For the time being, and relatively so, but there is a consensus that something is good. Ethicists will jump on this, and declare that doing that good thing is ehtical. The only reason they state it's ethical is because it's good. They don't separate the good in general from the good in ethical. It washes down the already weakly established concept of ethics, and it becomes nothing more than good.

    Why ethics then? Just do good. But that's not ethics. At least not in my definition. My definition is unique, and obviously not accepted (yet?) into the consensus.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    Pantagruel, I read your last post here, where you try to separate ethics as a non-self-serving good thing. OVERTLY not self-serving. But there are at least two proofs that show that all non-self-serving behaviour is desperately and viciously self-serving. One such proof is the fact that everyone does what they will; there is no action agains the will, so to obey one's own will is ab ovo self-serving, no matter what that will will dictate for the individual to do.

    The other proof applies to selfless acts of the religious.

    To religious thinkers, particularly to those whose behaviour is a ticket to heaven, the non-self-serving behaviour is part of the ticket to ride, so obviously there is no selfless act rising out of religious good-doing.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    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 indeed said "no uniform treatment" because they told me sometime in school that one has to make the reader work-- one has to make the reader also think of what one wrote, and not spoon-feed every notion of an idea to him or to her.

    But obviously my educators were wrong. They hadn't thought that fifty years after their efforts people will not think but quibble about little details precisely because they don't think.

    A lack of uniformity INDEED LIKE YOU SAID does not render either somethings useless. But there was more than what I said, and what I had hoped would be worked out easily by my readers. There was an apparent and undeniable CONTRADICTION between the two somethings.

    "Love of your country is good." So far so good.

    But what if your country is different from my country, and both countries need the same resource for survival?

    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.

    ----------------------

    It is about the third of fourth such argument I have made on this forum that people challenged me on; and they only challenge me because they can't see farther than their noses.

    I hate this. I thought that on a philosophy forum people would be thinkers, who carry on the thought, and not sheepishly look at the normative meaning of every word, and draw childish conclusions on how I am wrong, but would THINK and carry on what was missing or apparently misleading in my writings.

    I draw the consequence: I MUST CHANGE MY STYLE AND CONTENT, HONE IT TO EXTREME PRECISION, AND NOT ALLOW ANY LOOSE ENDS TO BE WRITTEN.

    It will be more tedious for me, and it will be less enjoyable, but the community here obviously demands that. I must therefore comply, no question. When in Rome, do as the Romans do.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    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 think there are very few who don’t struggle with patience in direct debate with intolerance. But in the same way as you accept diversity in other areas, it’s not a matter of empathising, but of recognising that what leads them to intolerance is what leads us to be intolerant of their intolerance...and so we are struggling with the same issues. We are not so different.

    I think having the courage to step into a world in which we have no sense of control, in which we must rely on our relationships with others to achieve anything, is one of the hardest things we do as human beings. Power, influence and control are illusions - everything that happens requires awareness, connection and collaboration, and literally nothing else. But every political system is built on these illusions, as are all of our social and economic systems.

    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 think people seek political office, economic or social standing because they have ideas of how to ‘fix’ their world. But the more our awareness broadens, the more we realise that it’s not that simple - anything we do is going to impact negatively on someone or something, somewhere in the world. What most of these systems and institutions manage to do is help to narrow the view so that the more we achieve, the less we are aware of the negative impact. Rights are separated from responsibilities, and you’re soon shielded from the full impact of ‘your’ decisions by those who either believe in what you’re working to achieve, or who benefit from it - and it gets harder to tell which is which.

    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

    Yeah, I’m not sure I can help with analytic prescriptive ideas. Awareness, connection and collaboration is a bottom-up approach. It starts with a brutally honest look at how we interact with the universe, and challenges any and all suggestions of power, influence and control - even over our own bodies. We cannot be tempted to attribute them either to ourselves or to others - they don’t exist, period. This is supported by current science, but it can be difficult to accept, because it exposes us entirely - both in terms of our dependence and fragility, but also our capacity as humans and its accompanying responsibilities.

    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

    How do you justify ‘objectively valuable’ while restricting discussion to a ‘human universe of discourse’? Does this mean that ethics is not relevant to our interactions with anything that operates outside of this ‘human universe of discourse’? How does this impact on environmental ethics and the value of certain ecosystems?

    While I’m not impressed with the attitude of @god must be atheist in this discussion, I can perhaps see what he’s trying to get across in relation to ethics. In my view ethics IS relative. There is no ‘objective’ value, no uniform treatment of what is considered eternally valuable in the world. This doesn’t render ethics useless as such, but it does require us to look at structuring ethics in a similar way to how physics is working to structure time: as an additional dimension to reality that is relative to one’s experiential position in the universe.

    In my view the application of ‘good’ or ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ or ‘bad’ should be recognised as terms relative to a particular cultural, historical, national and/or ideological viewpoint. While it may appear as if there are some things/events that are viewed as ‘good’ from all possible human viewpoints right now does not make it objectively or universally good. Time is relative to one’s position in space, but ethics is relative to one’s journey through spacetime, so it’s a whole lot more complicated.

    Sorry for the long post.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    With regard to intolerance: there are convictions that one is not going to give up on. This is called "spine" by the stubborn, and "intolerant" by the environment of the stubborn. More examples of the noble ethics turning topsy-turvy.

    In fact, in "Yes, Mr. Minister" or "Yes, Mir. Prime Minister", a character described the power of point of view in this sense:

    "Ah! it's an irregular adjective. "HE is strange, YOU are idiosyncratic, and I AM an individual."

    In my first language there is a proverb: "The hand of every saint points at himself." Go to a Catholic church, look at the statues of saints.

    And a saying taken from the three volume set, "Murphy's Law": "Where you stand depends on where you sit."

    I am not an exception to this. In fact, I'm guilty of this more than most contributors on these boards. What I try to achieve, however, is that people realize they are like this, too, like the saints, like the tribal members: the most important agent in shaping one's opinion is one's own interest.

    And by interest I don't mean only tangible gains, such as money, or possessions. One of the biggest interest to philosophers is to be right and to have their opinion prevail. This is not new; not unique to philosophers; but this is all that is at stake for philosophers. A mana ger in a company, or a sports team's owner, or an army general, may have other factors to consider; the environment that influences their success. But here on the philosophy forums the only measure of success is winning arguments.

    So being right gains many times the importance to us on this forum, than being right in our everyday lives. Here, being right is to be being right. So to speak. (Please figure it out.)

    Little wonder people act intolerant. Finding disagreement eggs one on to push his point harder. But we don't ever convince anyone else of anything. We may influence the undecided, but those who had committed to a philosophy will never waver even in the face of extreme criticism.

    This is what gives the effect of intolerance. One will feel unjustly rejected, because he can't see that his theory is a threat to the theory of others; and other's wont try to shut down his theory just because they don't like his, (frankly, most of the time they are don't care about what others say, because each individual is only only in love with his own postings and opinion), but they will try to shoot him down, because they feel it would exert a threat to their own philosophy.
  • Pattern-chaser
    1.8k
    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.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    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

    There is one situation. It is both good and not good at the same time, but not at the same respect.

    Does this constitute a contradiction? I am now not sure. The situation does not establish impossibility by the law of excluded middle, but it is a contradiction, because good cannot be not good. Good is relative, but not to the detriment of its own quality.

    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 itself and not itself at the same time IS a contradiction.

    How would you define contradiction, Pattern-chaser? "Paul is tall. Paul is not tall." Wouldn't you say that's a contradiction? If something is and is not, albeit from different perspectives, would you not say the that the perspectives render that something relatively contradictory? I would.
  • Pattern-chaser
    1.8k
    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

    Yes, the two statements contradict one another. Is it relevant to note here that contradiction is relative (each statement contradicts the other)?

    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. There is no simultaneous (good) and NOT(good), there is simultaneous good-for-me and NOT(good-for-you). Good-for-me is an entirely different thing than good-for-you. If we had good-for-me and NOT(good-for-me) simultaneously applying in the same context, then we would have a contradiction. I wish I could word this better. Do you see what I'm getting at?
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    You're neglecting context, I think. If X is good for me, but NOT(good) for you, there is no contradiction.Pattern-chaser

    There is contradiction when you consider relevance. If you discount relevance, there is no contradiction.

    The relevance exists because the two countries (as depicted in the example) do want the one and same resource, which both need but can't both have.
  • Pattern-chaser
    1.8k
    OK, try this.

    You refer to (good) and NOT(good). But "good" is a relative term, so your references are incomplete, and in this case, the incompleteness makes them incorrect. In your example, you should be referring to the simultaneous existence of (good-for-country-A) and NOT(good-for-country-B). Now we can see that there is no contradiction. OK?
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    "How do you justify ‘objectively valuable’ while restricting discussion to a ‘human universe of discourse’? Does this mean that ethics is not relevant to our interactions with anything that operates outside of this ‘human universe of discourse’? How does this impact on environmental ethics and the value of certain ecosystems?"

    A Great question! No, for the universe itself is inside the human universe of discourse and our planet is the part of the universe within our immediate interests. Let me explain how Adaptive Pragmatism comes at the grounding problem in ethics. "There is no ‘objective’ value, no uniform treatment of what is considered eternally valuable in the world. This doesn’t render ethics useless as such, but it does require us to look at structuring ethics in a similar way to how physics is working to structure time: as an additional dimension to reality that is relative to one’s experiential position in the universe." Firstly, it accepts this statement you have made to be the one that is really objectively true.

    When I say "within a certain universe of discourse" I am employing one of the tools we use to talk about fiction. "Harry Potter is a wizard" and "Harry Potter is a cat" in reality are both equally untrue. However within it's universe of discourse wherein we temporarily acknowledge JKs imagined reality as a subsisting one we can discuss, the former statement is true, "Harry Potter is a wizard".

    Back to your statement about Relativism; Before us, there was no ethics, good, evil, grey, value and meaning. We created those concepts. Now, in order for us to structure ethics we first need to think about it's modality. What is its function, how functional is it currently, how functional it can be and how functional it cannot be? If we say "it's function is to collectively keep humanity safe for as long as possible" then we have to reject any utility in relativism. (I know, crazy right? To reject Relativism because it is true. It isn't pragmatic though.) Now, in pragmatic ethics it's not really individuals who are to be considered moral or immoral it is the society they create that is being judged. 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. Does Science say not to fuck up the ecosystem if you want to live? Then don't do that or try to unfuck it. Does science say inflicting abusive traumas on people may make them crazy, unpredictable and dangerous potentially to you or people you care about? Then don't do that. Does Science say we need to properly manage our environmental, economic and moral ecosystems in order to thrive and survive? Then manage that shit! Can pragmatic ethics be defined by theory alone? No, but plenty of moral agents out there are acting out experiments in morality unknowingly and knowingly and they can be observed in order to learn more.

    Then we have the "What it could be?" question. Imagine if you will that dogs and cats are starting to evolve similar cognitive abilities to us and starting to engage in meaningful language, maybe they even develop functioning thumbs. It is my personal belief that I cannot know everything there is to know and some things I am predisposed to never know because of who I am, so a bigger and more diverse collective can know more and our science benefits from having more knowledge. So because it is Adaptive pragmatism in this imagined scenario the focus would shift from the human perspective toward an earthling perspective (That is sentient being from earth) and how it would adapt at meeting an alien race would be dependent upon their temperament and reaction toward us.

    So to summarise my answer to your question; Objectively valuable is whatever has the best means for carrying out the objective of moralities function.

    This doesn't mean we throw out anything that isn't currently useful to us either, as philosophy is useful to us even when it moves outside of the human universe of discourse and starts to look at pure truth again, not human truth. We are human though so we have to acknowledge there is a complex difference between Pure Truth and Human Truth.

    The methodology behind AP is what initially led me to believe that my intolerance of the ableists who discriminate against myself or others, as an emotional tool which would make them understand the folly of their ways. It also enabled me to listen to you when you supplied a better perspective which enabled me to see more value in temperance again.

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/3564/why-support-only-one-school-of-philosophy

    In regards to your discussion here and what you have described: You May find this helpful as AP is similar to what you describe. An all encompassing view of philosophy with the perspective that it is a toolbox.
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k

    Ultimately this is a question of a fundamental belief. Either you think people can only act in a self-serving manner, or you believe that people have the capacity for true altruism. It's like when Dan Dennett argued there were no good reasons to believe in god...because he couldn't come up with any.

    There a plenty of examples of people exhibiting self-sacrificial behaviour and, as I suggested, this class of behaviour even forms an important part of our culture. Prima facie, therefore, it is entirely reasonable to suppose that people ARE capable of altruistic behaviour, and I do believe it to be so. My privileged access to my own inner mental states further confirms this for me.

    If you personally are incapable of believing this, well, that's you.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    Ultimately this is a question of a fundamental belief.Pantagruel

    The way you proposed this point, everything is a question of fundamental belief. Other than a priori truths.

    I think we have to step beyond just belief. If we get stuck at the belief stage, our human race is nothing but a bunch of superstitious monkeys running around. Reason gives us a way to handle belief as knowledge -- I would rather go with that.
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k

    Well it is a disagreement about what evidence means, which I would say is the same thing. Clearly, there is lots of evidence for altruism. It seems that you don't accept it.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    Clearly, there is lots of evidence for altruism. It seems that you don't accept it.Pantagruel

    I accept altruism, But I maintain that altruism is never selfless. This seems to be a contradiction in terms, as altruism means doing good deed selflessly. But when you do good deeds selflessly, you satisfy some of your own needs. You do selfless acts because it gives you satisfaction. Because it appeases your guilt. Because it gives you a feeling of committed fair trade. There is never a pleasureless act of altruism.

    And like I said, to religious people in some relgions altruism is a must-do to reward greater benefits later, according to their dogma.

    So maybe your wording is right. I don't accept that there is truly and purely altruistic behaviour out there.

    And my point is that you just simply don't notice, because perhaps you don't want to, or don't know how, the selfish motivation in "altruism" when you say
    Clearly, there is lots of evidence for altruism.Pantagruel
    This is not a perception problem; it is a problem of not thinking the process entirely through.

    Yes, you're right. I do deny that there is pure, unadulterated altruism out there happening. By that I mean that there is no altruism happening in which the giver does not enjoy benefits of his or her own altruism. This I maintain.

    If you can give me just one example of altruist behaviour that does not benefit the giver in any way, please do.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    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

    True. There are lots of reasons to believe in god. But they are not good reasons. Not even one of them.
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    “True. There are lots of reasons to believe in god. But they are not good reasons. Not even one of them.” What would be the necessary criteria a reason would have to fulfil for it to be a good reason for the belief in one of the many interpretations of god?

    “Yes, you're right. I do deny that there is pure, unadulterated altruism out there happening. By that I mean that there is no altruism happening in which the giver does not enjoy benefits of his or her own altruism. This I maintain.” How does one benefit from Martyrdom?
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    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

    I think I get what you’re saying. We can talk about ethics as relative, but if we’re planning to make use of the study of ethics, we need to discuss ethics in relation to a particular value position. So we tend to define the function of ethics in relation to our current definition of ‘the greatest good’ - which is still subjective, but in the broadest way we can cope with and still sleep at night.

    Ok. What if we define the function of ethics as to increase awareness, connection and collaboration? How does this shed light on what we as individuals should be doing with ourselves?
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k

    Ok, so lets look at it like this. Normative ethics is what people ought to do, which implies and entails that people have a choice in that action. Now I don't dispute that teleology is a valid strategy. I just think that it misses some of the picture, which is where deontology has the advantage, and that altruistic behaviour is sometimes dictated as a duty by this kind of ethic.

    You, on the other hand, want to remove the capacity to make an altruistic choice altogether, saying that people are incapable of making an altruistic choice. In essence, you set a hard limit on human freedom. Now freedom doesn't hold in degrees. Either you are free, or you are not. So if I am free, I am free to make an altruistic choice.
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k

    But isn't belief itself the ultimate imbuer of value? If a person chooses to believe in something, presumably they commit to the enaction of that belief. So if you are willing to act 'as if' your belief is true, then you have demonstrated an ontological commitment. What is more fundamental than that?

    Now if someone is epistemically irresponsible, and allows him or herself to believe whatever without good reasons, then presumably they have some level of awareness of the flimsiness of that belief.
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    "I think I get what you’re saying. We can talk about ethics as relative, but if we’re planning to make use of the study of ethics, we need to discuss ethics in relation to a particular value position. So we tend to define the function of ethics in relation to our current definition of ‘the greatest good’ - which is still subjective, but in the broadest way we can cope with and still sleep at night."

    Yes, exactly. That's a really concise way of putting it. You can observe that whether you like it or not, by the very nature of our own subjective interpretations of reality a form of relativism will always be the dominating form ethics takes. However, the composition of that relativism has a transient nature as it supervenes on individuals and the societies they form. So, through awareness, connection and collaboration it can be stabilized if it is treated as an ecosystem itself. What were WWI and II about if not weeding out maladaptive ideologies out of our ethical ecosystem? What do weeds inevitably tend to do? Grow back.

    "Ok. What if we define the function of ethics as to increase awareness, connection and collaboration? How does this shed light on what we as individuals should be doing with ourselves?"

    Your questions have raised an especially intriguing point! So there is a difference between yours and my choice in function. My "Collectively keep Humanity Safe for as Long as possible" and your "Awareness, Connection and Collaboration." Have a raised the question: Which is more valuable? The Ideas or the people who create those ideas? When I was first reading this, my immediate thoughts were that both functions are symbiotic. If the function is to increase awareness, connection and collaboration then that would keep humanity safe for as long as possible. If the function is to keep humanity safe for as long as possible, then we NEED to be aware, connect and collaborate. However, I know from experience that when perceiving the function to be my option, you can make yourself an island and not see that you need to share awareness, connect and collaborate.

    But then, if nothing is true and everything is permitted then I'd say that means there is no rule anywhere stating "Ethics may only have one function" nay? If it is a case of primary focus on 1 function over others then I'd say yours is the better option. I genuinely love the principles of ACC in AP. We need to message each other at some point when I'm near publishing (won't be for awhile, big project) so we can determine the most appropriate way to cite yourself.

    Now that I think on it though, an intriguing idea springs to mind. I'll message you the details for your thoughts.
  • god must be atheist
    5.1k
    Dear Pantagruel, our stances are getting wider and wider apart, instead of approaching each other.

    I suggest that our opinions are so very irreconcilable with each other, that it is futile to go on with this conversation.

    You maintain that altruism is possible, there is freedom of will, and god is good. I maintain that there is no true unadulterated altruism; I deny the freedom of will or of any other choice bearers on the premise that evething causes something, and every effect has a cause, which natually leads to determinism, which rigorously excludes the possibility of anything free; I believe there is no god(s).

    I hope you can agree that our debate will lead to no convergent conclusion. So I suggest we abandon it now. Thanks.
  • Pantagruel
    3.4k

    Sure. And if I may be allowed my final say. The definition of altruism is
    "the belief in or practice of disinterested and selfless concern for the well-being of others."
    So essentially what you are doing is changing the definition altruism.
  • deletedmemberMD
    588
    Why should anyone take you seriously when you selectively pick and choose who you answer. Are my questions to you not valid? What about Martyrdom?!

    You don’t like me fine, but sometimes we have to debate the people we don’t like and everyone can see that you don’t answer certain questions which means you aren’t prepared to acknowledge flaws in your own logic. You don’t understand ethics. Seems pretty obvious.
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