But it's easier to come to such agreement with other subjects when the topic is a plant, or a mineral or a star, than when it is yourself. — Olivier5
What about educating our feelings and apetites? Trying to change them? Acquiring new ones? Is it not an age-old prescription of legions of philosophers and moralists to try and control our own desires? — Olivier5
Aren't we supposed to care for future generations? How do you factor in their satisfaction? Our present hedonism is their future doom. Can we burn all the carbon we want, après moi le déluge? — Olivier5
What if in a particular society, the greatest level of good feeling was achieved by, say, killing all people over 70, or killing all red haired people? Would that make such killing "good"? — Olivier5
There is no practical way to measure people's feelings. — Olivier5
You missed the distinction between appetite and desire, and intention. — Pfhorrest
The objects of moral questions are not ourselves. They are phenomena in the world. — Pfhorrest
Future generations are other people, and other people’s experiences explicitly matter on my account. — Pfhorrest
That definitionally could not be the greatest amount of good feeling, because the people you’re killing count too. ... Morality has to achieve good ends by just means, neither one nor the other alone is sufficient. — Pfhorrest
There’s no way to measure other people’s sensory experiences either. — Pfhorrest
Being 'correct' is also subjective, at least in matters to do with the real world — A Seagull
That's just your subjective opinion. (But that doesn't mean it can't be incorrect). — Pfhorrest
I didn't. This section explicitly speaks of appetites: — Olivier5
Do you have an example of what you would consider a moral question? — Olivier5
How does one account for the future experiences of the yet unborn? And you stop the accpunting at which future generation? — Olivier5
It's possible to kill someone without him feeling anything. And how to weight good means vs good ends? What's the mathematical formula? — Olivier5
I suspect you're merely describing common morality here — Olivier5
I consider my position the common-sense position, merely shored up against bad philosophy — Pfhorrest
What do you say? — Olivier5
trying to formalised common morality — Olivier5
For one, because we already have the law, which fulfills that function, so you are reinventing the wheel. — Olivier5
common morality is inherently subjective, fluid and flexible, something which you go at great length to ignore, as if you were afraid of this inherent messiness of humankind — Olivier5
Yes. Not for the sake of your answer, but to help demonstrate that there is often no right or wrong answer. There's the answer given by Hillel, which you side with, and the one defended by Shammai. Different people see things differently, they values different things. Some are more diplomatic, others more frank.I’m not sure if you’re asking me about that specific scenario regarding the beauty of a bride? — Pfhorrest
Yes. Not for the sake of your answer, but to help demonstrate that there us often no right or wrong answer. There's the answer given by Hillel, which you side with, and the one defended by Shammai. Different people see things differently, they values different things. Some are more diplomatic, others more frank. — Olivier5
Let’s take a less obvious example: the policy response to the COVID pandemic has varied from one country to the next. On one side of the spectrum, some countris have imposed very strict lockdowns to curb the spread of the virus and avoid many deaths. This has created a big economic slow down. On the other end of the spectrum, other countries have not imposed any lock down, our of fear for the economy. In doing so they implicitly accept a certain number of COVID death as the price to pay to keep the economy running. That may sound heartless but it’s not, for them it’s just recognizing that people can die of poverty and hunger, too.
What would be your call, if you were president of your country? — Olivier5
There is no right or wrong answer in this case either. It all depends on whether you value frankness over social ties, or vice versa.You gave an example of a disagreement, but that in no way demonstrates that there isn't a right or wrong answer. There are frequent disagreements about facts either, but that doesn't mean there is no objective reality. — Pfhorrest
That depends on one’s value system. There is no objective answer to this question. — Olivier5
There is no right or wrong answer in this case either. It all depends on whether you value frankness over social ties, or vice versa. — Olivier5
For one thing, you haven’t provided any evidence that one side is wrong. — Olivier5
it all boils down to the pragmatic choice: of whether to proceed as though it is, and try to reach a conclusion that accounts for all of the reasons everybody brings to the table; or else proceed as though it's not, and just throw up our hands and say there's no resolution to be had, so much for reasoning, now we just fight I guess and who ever wins "was right". — Pfhorrest
These are all means of reaching conclusions about moral differences which are non-violent, seem to work for the most part — Isaac
I have, actually, but you haven't paid attention. — Olivier5
so long as people accept their outcomes as legitimately normative, i.e. as morally correct, as telling us what we ought to do, and not just as "what those people think, but why should I care about that? It's not like they're actually right or something. That's just, like, their opinions, man." — Pfhorrest
except for all the times when even people who want to take them as legitimately normative still find them outputting prima facie absurd conclusions (a white majority vote to strip all black people of their rights... hey that's democracy for you!) — Pfhorrest
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