cause-and-effect (CE) is a way of modeling the world and has nothing to do with the world itself although being a useful model. — tim wood
That throws out your notion of a force. — tim wood
Your post is a rather neat example of why I find definitions suspect, presenting nothing of how the word is actually used, but instead inventing esoteric verbalism.Let's see if we can start to figure out what freedom is, out of deference to you who do not like definitions. — tim wood
Yep....constructing some pseudo-logical monstrosity to justify it post hoc. — Isaac
The post from Tim quoted here is further evidence for you, Garth.I'm of the opinion that Kant's entire philosophy is built on defining certain things as precisely what they are not, — Garth
So one is left to conclude that when Tim talks about freedom, he is not talking about the same thing as the rest of us. We can safely ignore what he has to say about, because he is not talking about freedom. — Banno
Your post is a rather neat example of why I find definitions suspect, presenting nothing of how the word is actually used, but instead inventing esoteric verbalism.
You define freedom as the capacity to act according to one's duty. That's quite at odds with the definition given in those dictionaries that seek to set out how words are actually used, as opposed to how Tim wants them to be used. — Banno
Following Kant — tim wood
Sorry to disturb your nap, but again, the first line of the OP:So one is left to conclude that when Tim talks about freedom, he is not talking about the same thing as the rest of us. We can safely ignore what he has to say about, because he is not talking about freedom. — Banno
Following Kant — tim wood
If you think that's what I said, you need new glasses or some other corrective. Because I did not say that, and the point was something else.The OP amounts to "Tim thinks we should do our duty". — Banno
Following Kant (and subject to correction on the details), the argument here is that freedom is exactly freedom to do one's duty, and nothing else. — tim wood
Sorry, you already crossed the boundary on "fine." Yours amounts to shoot first, ask after. And your claim, the form of it, is always interesting because it stakes a definite claim. Now we know something is the case: either you're wrong or Kant's wrong. And for Kant to be wrong, it must be on his terms. And you have torpedoed neither-nor, so it's either-or, you or Kant. And since Kant is an open book, you must have your case already made. Go for it. Educate Or in terms of your comments in this thread, man up! You have the floor.If this is mere exegesis, then fine.
If you think you are saying something about freedom and duty, then we have an interesting disagreement.
That is, Kant was wrong. — Banno
And who said he was or it was? But you said he was wrong, and having taken that territory, it's his "freedom" you're stuck with - and I doubt you can hold even one square-inch of it.Kant is not using the term "freedom" in the way it is usually used, hence his argument does not apply to what is usually called freedom. — Banno
Now we know something is the case: either you're wrong or Kant's wrong. And for Kant to be wrong, it must be on his terms. — tim wood
Where it is legal, many motorcycle riders do not wear helmets. (As a long-experienced rider I am well aware of the charms of helmetless travel, and recognize that there are limited situations when it is relatively safe - traffic not one of those situations - my bona fides and biases up front.)
But what is wrong with it? Simply the heightened risk of being killed or catastrophically injured in an otherwise minor accident of the sort motorcycles are subject to, at a cost the victim cannot himself bear. That is, he, usually a he, hurts everyone, and some greatly. There can be no such freedom to either cause or unreasonably risk such harm.
And I think the logic of the thing compels agreement. — tim wood
I can't make out the point of your post. As to "normative force," try the excerpt above in the post to Banno.That is a statement about courses of action, not definitions. What we 'call' such a course of action is not relevant to the normative force you want to impart to it. — Isaac
I want to return to the OP. It suggests that systems of rights do not determine what is right or wrong. Rights therefore only function for legal purposes as principles for resolving disputes and interpretation of laws. Therefore if you tell someone "Don't do that, it's wrong!" they cannot defend their actions by replying "I have the right to do it!" — Garth
I can't make out the point of your post. As to "normative force," — tim wood
I think the logic of the thing compels agreement. — tim wood
I do not know what normative force (NF) is, but maybe we don't need to go that way. I will assume there is such a thing, and that it is somehow, someway, more compelling than mere collective agreement. So, would you allow that arithmetic has NF? the idea being that if NF, then relativism is ruled out. — tim wood
And let's block here any form of nihilism. He or she can deny up is up or down is down, represent that up is down, or say that 2+2=5. But the nihilist annihilates truth, and in this truth is presupposed. Our job then, as best we can, to identify it, and to satisfy ourselves that what we think is true, actually is; and then to see if in virtue of being true it possesses NF. — tim wood
No doubt feeling can add verisimilitude, but is itself an imitation of NF. What is left? I find reason. Do you find anything different? And reason must be before experience, because experience cannot create reason — tim wood
"We hold these truths to be self-evident." We had better, or we hold no truths to be evident at all. — tim wood
We can sample it, but for immersion you have to go there. — tim wood
The helmetless rider in traffic harms no one, until he is subject to the routine accident that every experienced rider assumes, knows, will happen sooner or later. But for the helmetless rider, the accident that may have just scraped some denim and maybe some skin, that he should bounce up and walk away from, is instead death, whether a living death or a dead death. At the least is a devastated family. And nearby is a rehabilitation hospital that takes on brain-injury cases, and that care is so long and expensive only the state and federal government can afford it, i.e., me for sure and maybe you!
The helmetless spirit inhabits every level where there is ignorance or stupidity. And in a crowding world, mere personal moral failure becomes offense in fact. — tim wood
Not quite, and being not quite, not at all. "Murder" would never be moral. As to killing, it's conceivable that she should be killed, but not that I should do it. The reason being that marriage is a peculiar, unique contract - if married you'll understand, if not, probably not. But this does not preclude the possibility of the necessity of my doing it - but in that case not a should.I can guarantee you that if a moral algorithm ever produced the result that you should murder your wife you simply wouldn't do it, you'd presume you'd made a mistake somewhere. Why? Because you already know it's wrong. — Isaac
I acknowledge, but if this is NF, then I have to exclude it. The reason being that in liking or wanting, to that extent we're not free, but rather subject-to. A matter of having a liberty. Agreed, the word "freedom" is commonly used here, and well-understood, but it cannot stand because it's a contrary to the freedom Kant has in mind.There are other values than rationally derived truth which might give normative force to a statement. for example "If you don't do X no-one will like you" has normative force because (generally) we want to be liked. — Isaac
Depends on "want." I want my coffee in the morning. I am "at liberty" to get it, and "free" to choose my means. But am I free wrt to the having of it? Not really. Fortunately for me no question of duty that I know of arises directly out of my having my coffee. But if I move 3,000 lbs. of steel, burning non-renewable fossil fuels, taking the time for a 12 miles round-trip, contributing my increment to the dangers of the road, which in the presence of snow and ice are not trivial, for cup of expensive bitter-flavored hot water, am I being a reasonable man? What say you?Freedom means one is at liberty to do whatever we want — TheMadFool
Depends on "want." I want my coffee in the morning. I am "at liberty" to get it, and "free" to choose my means. But am I free wrt to the having of it? Not really. Fortunately for me no question of duty that I know of arises directly out of my having my coffee. But if I move 3,000 lbs. of steel, burning non-renewable fossil fuels, taking the time for a 12 miles round-trip, contributing my increment to the dangers of the road, which in the presence of snow and ice are not trivial, for cup of expensive bitter-flavored hot water, am I being a reasonable man? What say you? — tim wood
with respect to anything you can conceive of that you can do, according to you. But it's interesting that you refuse to consider Kant, insisting that your understanding of "freedom" is all there is. And especially weird from Banno who has made clear he doesn't like. definitions and thinks they derail discussion.but we're completely free with respect to.... — TheMadFool
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