From a Kantian perspective, perhaps that may be viz. the relation between reason and sensibility but I find myself questioning why - when I become conscious or understand an experience - emotions dissipate. I assume that to be the result of our cognitive functions - the dual between conscious and subconscious experience, though the latter is still a form of consciousness we are just unable to articulate - and thus when we experience something we may not understand at conscious level, it inevitably drops to the subconscious state. We then begin to experience intuitive feelings and the emotions that follow when we encounter an experience that provokes our subconscious to communicate with us, but we are not aware of why - that is, we do not understand it at conscious level - and when we do, the emotions dissipate. It is why intuition - or our subconscious state - can also trick us, or as I said earlier 'psychological decoys' where a person can have irrational feelings of fear or cowardice only because they fail to understand at conscious level why they feel that way. When one transcends to a state of moral consciousness, they no longer rely on subconscious emotions or feelings of right or wrong, because they know what is right or wrong.But emotion is primary, in my view, in that it is the primary guiding force, whereas reason has secondary functions. I get this powerful intuitive feeling about what is right or wrong, and I think of that as my conscience, and try to follow it in order to be ethical. This conscience is foundational, whereas reason is like a tool which can be used in an attempt - which might or might not be successful - to control conflicting emotions, and to arrange priorities. Being conscientious is no guarantee of acting morally, but I cannot go against my conscience in good faith without thinking and feeling that I have done wrong. — Sapientia
It depends on how you interpret loyalty; as said earlier, I am loyal to my country but my loyalty is through both my adherence to social, economic and legal requirements along with my constructive criticism of its flaws, whereas for some criticism is viewed as an act of disloyalty. On the contrary, if a person blindly follows and defends tooth and nail acts that can be constituted as immoral, their disloyalty is greater since they endanger the very object of their defence; and what happens when the blind lead the blind? What type of friends would you have if they performed a love for you but failed to care enough about the dangers of your flaws? I would hardly call them a friend. Loyalty is an act of love, it is not turning your back and disappearing but it is also not blindly defending tooth and nail. It is simply caring enough to want what would bring about the greatest good.It is important to overcome prejudice, bad ideas and psychological decoys - even if that means being disloyal, since loyalty is worthless and ought to be eschewed if it is loyalty to that which is immoral. And loyalty should always be a secondary consideration. That which is moral warrants loyalty more than anything else which is not necessarily moral, whether that be family, tradition, religion, nation, some abstract concept, or any personal quality deemed to be a virtue. — Sapientia
Let's see - maybe her future husband? Maybe, if the "two lads" have partners, maybe one of them? Maybe their conscience? Maybe their families? The web is so interlinked that sexual affairs ripple outwards and affect much more than just the people involved in consenting to it. Furthermore, there always are the spiritual effects which remain seared in memory, so it's no trifling affair at all.if Betty kisses two lads on a night out, who cares? — Emptyheady
How quaint. If getting shafted by 15 blokes on an adventurous night is not immoral, how come you do not consider her marriage material? How can she be deficient if there's nothing morally wrong with what she's done? Clearly you think there is something seriously wrong with what she's done, or otherwise you wouldn't judge her character to be such that she's not "marriage material" - you take away with your left hand what your right hand gives. I dislike men who treat women like straw dogs.If she wants to get shafted by 15 blokes on an adventurous night, laissez faire, though I would not consider her marriage material. — Emptyheady
It may be his business, but this has nothing to do with the morality of his choice. His choice is highly immoral because he objectifies the woman in question, and chooses her not for what she's supposed to be chosen - doing the job right - but rather for her physical characteristics, based on his own selfishness. On top of this, he's also being unfair to the other person who is more capable. Now the immorality of his choice doesn't necessarily imply he shouldn't be legally allowed to make that choice. But it is important to distinguish the two. When you say laissez faire I suppose you're only talking about how the law should be, not about the morality of the choice at all.John hiring the more attractive one rather than what the author deemed as the more competent one. If it is his business -- that is how I interpreted the context of the question -- it is up to him what he prefers. — Emptyheady
Furthermore, you must distinguish between how the law should be - whether the law should permit getting shafted by 15 blokes on an adventurous night - how social norms should be - whether society through its mechanisms of peer pressure and eduction should permit such an occurence - and how morality is - whether or not such an occurence is immoral. For example, I believe that the law should be laissez faire, but I think social norms shouldn't be laissez faire, nor should society be uninterested in whether or not it happens - education should always be at work in preventing it. Morally the question though is settled - it is immoral. — Agustino
It depends on how you interpret loyalty; as said earlier, I am loyal to my country but my loyalty is through both my adherence to social, economic and legal requirements along with my constructive criticism of its flaws, whereas for some criticism is viewed as an act of disloyalty. — TimeLine
On the contrary, if a person blindly follows and defends tooth and nail acts that can be constituted as immoral, their disloyalty is greater since they endanger the very object of their defence; and what happens when the blind lead the blind? What type of friends would you have if they performed a love for you but failed to care enough about the dangers of your flaws? I would hardly call them a friend. — TimeLine
Loyalty is an act of love, it is not turning your back and disappearing but it is also not blindly defending tooth and nail. It is simply caring enough to want what would bring about the greatest good. — TimeLine
You can't be part loyal. Loyalty is a choice, an expression of your moral position and so what you are saying is no different to what I said; by choosing aspects of your country is merely criticising other aspects that you do not agree with.I think there are situations in which constructive criticism would not be enough: situations in which the right thing to do would be to retract or break off your loyalty. I'm only loyal to aspects of my country, not the whole thing, warts and all. — Sapientia
I disagree. I don't think that love is the most characteristic feature of loyalty. It wouldn't even apply in some cases: for example, in cases in which an emotion is there instead of love, and which has some - but not all - features in common with love, and which isn't quite so strong a feeling. Honour and duty strike me as more characteristic or prominent than love, and I think that care would be more broadly applicable than love, with regards to loyalty.
I also don't think that you can rightly exclude "blindly defending tooth and nail" as a possible feature or consequence of loyalty. I think that an examination of loyalty which is as impartial as it can be would lead to an inclusion of the good as well as the bad. But I think that some people are biased in that they seem to desire for loyalty to be kept untarnished - or at least not as tarnished as it can be, in light of some cases - so they superficially make it so that loyalty will always match their ideal of it. In other words, wishful thinking. — Sapientia
I believe that the law should be laissez faire — Agustino
Damn, that political compass test is ridiculously biased. — darthbarracuda
The test was a moral test though, so we're not done at all...Good, then we are done here. — Emptyheady
It's a loaded question, so I'm not going to answer it with a "yes" or a "no". — Sapientia
You can't be part loyal. Loyalty is a choice, an expression of your moral position and so what you are saying is no different to what I said; by choosing aspects of your country is merely criticising other aspects that you do not agree with. — TimeLine
Love is a term I use to denote moral consciousness and loyalty can - along with honour and duty [or responsibility] - be expressions of our morality. — TimeLine
I am quite firm on my belief that love is a choice and not some subjective, sweeping feeling [hence the consciousness] that, without reason, can be self-deceitful and even sometimes dangerous to our own well-being. — TimeLine
Hence my previous remark on the superiority of reason over intuition. — TimeLine
Concepts, such as pride, is an example of this danger; without reason, pride can lead us further away from intellectual and emotional progress, but within reason, can empower us to appreciate our individuality. Loyalty works the same way, that without reason can be dangerous. — TimeLine
It does not mean that because of our failure to apply our moral position consciously and correctly that somehow loyalty itself is flawed; the flaw is the expression and that is a individual choice. — TimeLine
It's only loaded in that if you answer straightforwardly and honestly, it weakens the ideas you want to support. So you're answering politically instead. — Terrapin Station
So you're claiming the question implies a fallacious argument? — Terrapin Station
A loaded question or complex question fallacy is a question that contains a controversial or unjustified assumption.
Such questions may be used as a rhetorical tool: the question attempts to limit direct replies to be those that serve the questioner's agenda.
I'm claiming that it's a loaded question: — Sapientia
Well what definition of "sophistry" are you using? — Terrapin Station
anyone who doesn't act as if they were always fully in control of the way in which they react is an idiot, and is entirely responsible for reacting in ways that I deem to be idiotic. — Sapientia
That's not something I'd agree with. I was sincerely asking you the question I asked. Maybe you believe that it couldn't be the case that someone would yell "Fire" where people do not panic and trample other folks, etc. I don't know. That's why I asked you. I believe that sometimes people do things like yell "Fire" where people do not panic and trample other folks etc. If there was an "assumption" in my question, that was it--that I believe that people don't always freak out when someone yells "Fire," but apparently you believe that that's not possible. — Terrapin Station
So, my answer to your question would be that some people in that situation might not react in that way, — Sapientia
Right. So it can't be simply that saying "Fire" is causal to some specific behavior. There has to be more to it than that. There have to be some other factors that make the difference to whether some specific behavior obtains or not in the wake of someone yelling "Fire." — Terrapin Station
My objection was against your not counting that - namely, someone yelling "Fire!" - as a causal factor - and a significant one at that - for whatever harm might ensue. Instead, you just listed other factors - factors which wouldn't even make sense without that primary trigger to the events which consequently followed. — Sapientia
The problem is that if yelling "Fire" doesn't cause the behavior in every situation, how do we show that it's causal at all? Why wouldn't the other factors, whatever they are, be the causal factors instead? — Terrapin Station
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