Your awareness of an idea is as irrelevant to its life, as it is to my own. — Shamshir
I wouldn't say that "benefit" is the same thing as "flourishing." — Terrapin Station
Because I think that the idea of good and bad moral action, the inherent logic of it, if you like, is based on the idea of benefit vs harm, i.e. flourishing vs languishing. I shouldn't have to keep repeating this. — Janus
My definition is in explicit accordance with the definition in the dictionary. — Marzipanmaddox
I'm not trying to reinvent the wheel at all. I'm trying to argue that the scientific method should be applied to process of making wheels. I'm trying to improve upon the process from which wheels are made, using a systematic approach that has been explicitly proven to function.
The wheel has been improved greatly by the scientific method. There is no reason that morality should not be subjected to the same system of improvement.
To say that this is reinventing the wheel is to say "All wheels must be made of wood or stone, this is how wheels have always been made, if a wheel is not made of wood or stone it is not a wheel at all."
If this were the case, then all wheels would still be made of wood and stone, when in reality very few wheels are made of wood or stone today. Philosophy here is this wood/stone wheel. I am arguing that the utilizing the scientific method to define, refine, and improve morality would produce a much higher quality product, a better and far more functional form of morality. It's hard to have a car with wooden wheels, and the same can be said about using traditional/non-scientific morality to govern our society.
My argument is that simple. "Apply the scientific method to morality in order to study, formalize, refine, and improve our understanding and ability to utilize morality." — Marzipanmaddox
I'm not arguing in favor of altruism. — Marzipanmaddox
My definition of morality is "That which holds the groups together, thus enabling them to dominate the individual." — Marzipanmaddox
Once an individual is part of a collective, they are no longer an individual, they are a part of that collective, and they cannot exist without the collective so they are not an individual. — Marzipanmaddox
I don't think anyone has considered the basis of morality, which I argue is empathy. If we lacked empathy, there would be no morality. Morality is the intellectualization of empathy, turning it into a calculus.
It is no coincidence that a variety of cultures independently developed the "golden rule". — Relativist
The difference between being 'X' and being called 'X' is determined by whether or not we are the deciding factor in what counts as 'X'. Elemental constituency.
Some things exist in their entirety prior to the very first report/account of them.
Morality is one of these things.
— creativesoul
based on the idea of benefit vs harm, i.e. flourishing vs languishing. — Janus
I wouldn't say that "benefit" is the same thing as "flourishing."
A benefit of x is anything that S (some subject) desires that's provided by or that's an upshot of x.
Flourishing has a connotation of a sustained desired state.
Things that S considers a benefit might not actually be things that would lead to a sustained desired stste for S. S might even desire things that would be harmful in S's view if sustained. — Terrapin Station
What about ideas that do not possess electrochemical properties?
What about ideas: not felt, not imagined, not pondered, not spoken, not heard; lone, floating somewhere, somehow? — Shamshir
What a great question (s) and debate! I hate to ask this somewhat rhetorical question but after reading some of your analysis; what is the human phenomena called Love? Is it subjective, objective, or a little of both (?). And if you believe it's both, in the spirit of ethics and/or morality, how should we exclusively parse that in your mind?
I apologize again in advance for that question however I'm just trying to understand your argument in favor of objective exclusivity... . — 3017amen
You said that the sole definition of life is to flourish competitively. That's not true, and that's not to be found in any dictionary definition. That's just what you imagine the purpose of life to be. The world "definition" was the wrong word to use. — S
The point being that definition, meaning the defining trait of life, that in it's purest essence, life is just flourishing competitively, indefinitely. — Marzipanmaddox
I'm not arguing in favor of altruism. — Marzipanmaddox
Then why define morality in accordance with altruism, as you did in your opening post? That is to argue in favour of altruism. You're not making any sense. — S
My definition of morality is "That which holds the groups together, thus enabling them to dominate the individual." — Marzipanmaddox
But this the problem. I don't accept that definition. That could be used to describe a whole number of things. So you'll just be talking about something else and calling it morality. Why don't you just make your point without trying to redefine morality? That's not a feasible approach — S
Once an individual is part of a collective, they are no longer an individual, they are a part of that collective, and they cannot exist without the collective so they are not an individual. — Marzipanmaddox
But that's nonsense. Of course I'm an individual, and whether I'm part of a collective or dependent on the collective for survival is logically irrelevant. — S
But there are plenty of examples in nature of life that is far from flourishing. Animals can live for significant periods without flourishing, when they're malnourished, struggling, and just about surviving. — S
This is temporary struggle, and this is largely irrelevant. Flourishing here occurs over the period of thousands, tens of thousands, millions of years. It is the collective performance of the speices over this very long period of time that defines whether or not they have flourished or failed to do so. If the animals consistently struggle and suffer to the point of failing to compete for this entire period of time, then they are more than likely will go extinct. — Marzipanmaddox
It's fair that you don't accept the definition, but I lack a better word for this concept. Morality has always been the fabric of individuals banding together and cooperate. Morality is easily the only thing that produces this result, and this is why I equate morality to this process, and this is why I equate anything that accomplishes this to morality. — Marzipanmaddox
That is a very broad sense of individual. I see an individual as something that operates entirely independently. Something like a car part. True, independently these things do exist, but without the car they functionally have far less value and have very little justification for their existence. This is why I see the individual human as something akin to a car part, yes, an individual car part, but the car is what is providing value here, the car is what legitimizes the existence of the car part. Without the car, that individual part is not comparable to functional car part, the carburetor that functions inside of a car provides far more value to the owner and to society than the carburetor that sits in the junkyard.
As the car part cannot be divided from the car and retain the same degree of functionality and value, it cannot provide this value without the existence of a car to exist within, that is why I argue that the person, so inherently co-dependent upon the society it exists within, cannot be respected as an individual. The society is what gives the person such a high degree of value, as without this society the value of a modern person plummets significantly. Without the car, the car-part is just scrap metal, but within the car, the part is able to provide legitimizing and competitive value that justifies its existence.
In a world where the independent individual has become functionally irrelevant in the face of society, this is why I argue that no human can be an individual, because existing within this car, providing value to the society, has become a definitive trait of the modern human. — Marzipanmaddox
It just sounds to me like you're trying to do in different words what Darwin already did, and did better. Survival of the fittest.
What's that got to do with morality? Darwin wasn't a moral philosopher. He was doing science, not ethics. — S
None of that science will ever be logically relevant in ethics because of the is-ought problem. You can't derive an "ought" from an "is". — S
Why don't you just say something along the lines that you value collectives and cooperation, that you think they're a good thing, and that you think that an ideal society could be founded on that basis?
That would be fine. It would just be your opinion, and it would be up for debate. But you keep overstepping your bounds by saying things like that's morality itself. No, it's just your opinion. — S
Look, you can come up with some lengthy and elaborate explanation for why you said what you did, but none of it matters. If you end up concluding that I'm not an individual, when I clearly am, then you've obviously gone wrong somewhere, whether that's due to bad logic or due to defining words in unusual ways. — S
M, Thank you for your reply and elucidation. Just wanted to make a 'succinct' point about some dangers of dichotomizing. — 3017amen
The entire point of this argument is saying that morality can be understood, measured, formalized, and calculated scientifically. — Marzipanmaddox
Of course I'm going to use arguments rooted in known science to validate my point... — Marzipanmaddox
Why don't you just say something along the lines that you value collectives and cooperation, that you think they're a good thing, and that you think that an ideal society could be founded on that basis?
That would be fine. It would just be your opinion, and it would be up for debate. But you keep overstepping your bounds by saying things like that's morality itself. No, it's just your opinion.
— S
Because it's not a fucking opinion. It's an impartial, objective, measurable quality of cooperation within a society. It's not up for debate whether or not ten people can pull a cart with greater speed and efficiency than an individual. The only way the individual can pull the cart farther is when those 10 people all kill each other. Hence, this is why I argue that morality is the system of rules/equations that allows these 10 people to not kill each other. — Marzipanmaddox
I don't value anything personally. I loathe the human race. I'd rather not see them exist. I'm just arguing an entirely objective point for entertainment sake. — Marzipanmaddox
At this point it is a matter of semantics. Is an organ an individual? I can divide the organ out of a person's body. — Marzipanmaddox
My point is that the organ does not exist or survive without the human body that it is contained within, thus the organ does not function as an individual. It cannot be divided without losing the inherent justification and purpose of its own existence. — Marzipanmaddox
A non-functional kidney lying in the street is not a kidney. — Marzipanmaddox
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