The rest have to what...? Just put up with whatever their philosopher-kings deem to be right? This here is exactly why I have such a big problem with moral universalism. When you dig into it it's always, without exception, an attempt at authoritarianism. — Isaac
As opposed to... everyone just putting up with whoever happens to have the power deems is right? — Pfhorrest
Everyone is going to put up with that whatever happens, otherwise it wouldn't be 'power' would it? — Isaac
Except where there is a denial of democracy. — Olivier5
That sounds optimistic and doesn't concur with recent political evolution in the US and a number of other countries. It seems that someone far worse than Charlemagne is making a come-back. — Olivier5
We don't have much time before the climate gets all wacko. Western civilisation as we know it is getting toast fast. — Olivier5
advocating that those people in power use a particular method isn’t any more authoritarian than literally any other possibility, where no matter what someone is going to enforce something and everyone else ultimately has to deal with it. — Pfhorrest
you have no grounds to object to anything at all; if nothing is actually good or bad, what could possibly be bad about authoritarianism? — Pfhorrest
You set up your method as an alternative to moral 'right's being determined by whomever has the most power. I'm saying that a direct consequence of them having the most power is that they get to do that. — Isaac
You've dodged the argument again by just diverting it. The point was that you said certain people were to be excluded from your "let's not give up discussing the issue" approach on the grounds of your judgement about their open-mindedness — Isaac
Who said anything about nothing being actually good or bad? — Isaac
I think loads of things are good and loads of thing are bad, What's bad about authoritarianism is that it denies people a liberty which I think is a good thing to have. — Isaac
people with bad intentions have gotten very skilled at generating widespread popular support for things that are actually against the interests of the very people they're getting the support of — Pfhorrest
My method ... says it's better if those in power pay attention to what actually brings the phenomenal experiences of suffering or enjoyment to people, without bias toward or against anyone, and then say that the things that preserve or create enjoyment while suppressing or eliminating suffering are good, or at least, better than the alternatives. — Pfhorrest
Your suggestion instead seems to be that it doesn't matter what they say at all; which is tantamount to letting them say whatever they want, tell whoever to do whatever, — Pfhorrest
The only people to be excluded from the "let's not give up" conversation are the people who say "let's stop talking about it", either because they insist that they just have the right answer and you have to trust them on it no questions asked, or because they insist that it's impossible for anyone to ever have the right answer.
You seem to be in the latter camp. You think there can't be a right answer, and want everyone else to stop trying to figure out what it is. That just means everyone else gets to ignore you, — Pfhorrest
I say some things are actually good or bad -- not just baseless opinions, but things that we can be correct or incorrect about. You, by all lights, seem to vehemently disagree with that. — Pfhorrest
if a majority of people disagreed with you that liberty is good and authoritarianism consequently bad, do you think that that would make you definitionally wrong, because all that makes them good or bad is majority of the linguistic community using the words "good" and "bad" to apply to them that way? — Pfhorrest
You either have the power to influence them in this way (in which case you are the one in power, not them) — Isaac
If I had a choice (ie had the option of not 'letting' them) then I would be the one with power, not them, wouldn't I? That's the meaning of the word 'power' in this context. The ability to control something. — Isaac
Anyone not with the program is ignored. — Isaac
Authoritarianism is a 'bad' thing. It's one of the things that humans don't like — Isaac
Michael Jackson coined the term 'bad' to mean things which he (and his culture) approved of. For that time 'bad' was used in this way. everyone within that culture understood what the term meant. — Isaac
And if you were to propose a process to transparent adjudicate moral claims and if it was ever adopted, it would soon get corrupted by the people who don't like the idea or the result. — Olivier5
So the second weakness is that your analogy ignores the inherent subjectivity of moral questions and agents. — Olivier5
we also have a theoretically just process to set the law and apply it, called democracy. — Olivier5
So if you ask me what we need to do now, I would say reclaim democracy, rebuild it without this corruption, rejuvenate it with better rules, etc. — Olivier5
We don't need your mysterious new process for adjudicating moral claims. — Olivier5
Indeed, as I was saying it's as always subjective. — Olivier5
That's Chinese to me. — Olivier5
What makes it subjective, is that it's about the perceptions and opinions of subjects, aka persons, about themselves and other subjects. That's why any moral or political opinion is subjective, including opinions about how best to set the law. It's part of the territory. And your yet to be described process can't escape that either. — Olivier5
With regards to opinions about morality, commensurablism boils down to forming initial opinions on the basis that something, loosely speaking, feels good (and not bad), and then rejecting that and finding some other opinion to replace it with if someone should come across some circumstance wherein it feels bad in some way. And, if two contrary things both feel good or bad in different ways or to different people or under different circumstances, commensurablism means taking into account all the different ways that things feel to different people in different circumstances, and coming up with something new that feels good (and not bad) to everyone in every way in every circumstance, at least those that we've considered so far. In the limit, if we could consider absolutely every way that absolutely everything felt to absolutely everyone in absolutely every circumstance, whatever still felt good across all of that would be the objective good.
In short, the objective good is the limit of what still seems good upon further and further investigation. We can't ever reach that limit, but that is the direction in which to improve our opinions about morality, toward more and more correct ones. Figuring out what what can still be said to feel good when more and more of that is accounted for may be increasingly difficult, but that is the task at hand if we care at all about the good.
When it comes to tackling questions about morality, pursuing justice, we should not take some census or survey of people's intentions or desires, and either try to figure out how all those could all be held at once without conflict, or else (because that likely will not be possible) just declare that whatever the majority, or some privileged authority, intends or desires is good. Instead, we should appeal to everyone's direct appetites, free from any interpretation into desires or intentions yet, and compare and contrast the hedonic experiences of different people in different circumstances to come to a common ground on what experiences there are that need satisfying in order for an intention to be good. Then we should devise models, or strategies, that purport to satisfy all those experiences, and test them against further experiences, rejecting those that fail to satisfy any of them, and selecting the simplest, most efficient of those that remain as what we tentatively hold to be good. This entire process should be carried out in an organized, collaborative, but intrinsically non-authoritarian political structure.
Like her, I think you should leave philosophy and study mathematics instead. — Olivier5
That is a subjective opinion. — A Seagull
That doesn't mean it can't be correct. — Pfhorrest
Empiricism is inherently "subjective" in that sense too (it's about what observations are made by what kinds of observers in what circumstances), and thus all scientific investigation of reality. That doesn't stop reality from being objective. There is a subject and an object to every investigation; it's the relationship between them that is most primary. — Pfhorrest
And my process is hardly "yet to be described". I wrote 80,000+ words on it — Pfhorrest
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