What you need to do is find out what the neuroscience sources you endorse are saying about the sources you reject as false and bogus. — Joshs
You treat sources your reject as though no self-respecting cognitive psychologist would treat them seriously — Joshs
but that reflects a misunderstanding of how such theorists are viewed within the cognitive neuroscience community. — Joshs
On the contrary, I think it's possible to think beyond anger and blame entirely, but we can only do this by giving up the aims that anger and blame serve, ie. wealth and power.
— baker
Do you mean only the wealthy and powerful have anger and blame, or that the anger and blame the rest of us experience is somehow manipulated by the wealthy and powerful? What do you think motivates power?Is there a drive for power? Does greed motivate wealth? — Joshs
There is no such thing as "narrowly focused" on the most complex and sophisticated computational entity in the known universe. Such a "narrow" categorization is not just a reductionist fallacy, but an avoidance of established science in favor of feelings. If your conclusions on such emotions are non predominantly predicated on the assessments provided by cognitive neursoscience, and as much data as you can accrue in the field, then you have no opinion. You're simply just positing thoughts. Furthermore, this statement is completely incoherent. There is no "pre-cognitive" anything in human experience, it's made-up bullshit and a further reduction. "Creative/consolidating relation" describes what appears to be nothing that makes any rational sense. And objects of attention are observed, not created. In other words, only that which exists can be apprehended by the brain in the form of sensory data and analyzed across its astronomically advanced system of networks. This is all complete gibberish. — Garrett Travers
But moving past this, is it really philosophically correct to not assign blame for the wrong done? — L'éléphant
A no-blame morality is untenable and unsustainable because it is a one-sided premise whose burden is on the person harmed. — L'éléphant
The desert proponents once argued that punishment is a way for us to acknowledge the humanity of a person. Denying him a punishment is denying his accountability for his actions. And denying his accountability is denying his moral agency. So personhood has this component of culpability. You take away this culpability, then we treat him like we treat innocent animals.
If we believe ourselves righteous in anger towards someone, it’s a sure sign that we don’t understand where they’re coming from. That should give us pause. — Possibility
Do we really think that attributing blame and directing anger towards someone will repair any damage or prevent future occurrences?
I think the Israeli-Palestine conflict is a clear example of the inefficiency and ineffectiveness of blame and anger. What would a win-win situation look like here? Everyone is so focused on the significance of history in such a limited space, they’re ignoring aspects of the present reality. They acknowledge present pain and loss, but what’s not being recognised is the present state of humility. This is why the conflict continues, because both sides focus on past or consolidated pride to avoid a sense of humility in any present or future interaction. — Possibility
There are few things less noble than resenting or undermining people for who they are. — Tom Storm
I should note that focusing on increasing our care and consideration implies that we believe we were acting carelessly and inconsiderately, which I consider to be forms of anger-blame. — Joshs
What I am suggesting is that we can get rid of the concept of blame, but only when. we stop thinking of motive and intent as potentially arbitrary , capricious , vulnerable to bodily-emotive and social conditioning and shaping.
I dont know any philosopher or psychologist who follows me here — Joshs
What if ‘evil-doers’ believe they are just, and their failure isn’t one of moral intent but of insight? — Joshs
So evil and lack of conscience can be understood as a kind of arbitrariness , irrationality or capriciousness at the heart of intention and motivation, right? People are tempted, they stray from the ‘right’ path, but we don’t know why, or we assume there is no reason.
That’s my claim, that this arbitrariness is an assumption we make about ‘evil-doers’. But what if this simply reflects a failure of insight on our part? What if ‘evil-doers’ believe they are just, and their failure isn’t one of moral intent but of insight? — Joshs
I’m more interested in the philosophy and psychology of motivation. I understand your stance. What I would like to know is how you articulate the nature of wrong-doing and evil in terms of the capriciousness of straying from the path of righteousness. Tell me more about what makes such straying possible. Is it a kind of randomness? Is it an irrationality? — Joshs
Why? People generally don't consider it very important to understand others. In fact, they generally prefer to see themselves as the arbiters of the others' reality, they prefer to see themselves as the judges over what is true for another person, esp. concerning the other person's inner life. They make this very clear in their insistence of using you-language. — baker
You do know what I mean. Are you saying that rape is justified sometimes? lol.Is it really philosophically correct to take for granted that the party who feels wronged is automatically the arbiter of morality? — baker
What this discussion is lacking is an acknowledgment of the role of the power differential in moral judgments.
The one who can punish is in the position of power.
If punishment is justified, as a matter of principle, then might makes right. Do you want to go in that direction? — baker
So we also need to watch our use of they-language. When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement. Using ‘they’ seeks to distance our self-awareness from the statements we make. It implies a passive self-righteousness. — Possibility
When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement.
Is it really philosophically correct to take for granted that the party who feels wronged is automatically the arbiter of morality?
— baker
You do know what I mean. Are you saying that rape is justified sometimes?
No one could say, yes I raped her as a self-defense. — L'éléphant
How about we think before we take the neutral position or the it-depends position.
What this discussion is lacking is an acknowledgment of the role of the power differential in moral judgments.
The one who can punish is in the position of power.
If punishment is justified, as a matter of principle, then might makes right. Do you want to go in that direction?
— baker
First of all, I don't understand your post. Power differential in moral judgments -- what's that?
Say we have a court functioning with integrity. Is it really that hard to discern fault here?
If a rich person hits you with their car and runs off, they can expect to get away with it.
If you were to hit a rich person with your car and run off, you should get ready for grave consequences. — baker
You mean a modern court in a democratic country where having a good lawyer can get one off the hook for pretty much anything, and where a person with few financial means has to endure injustice? — baker
The same kind of action is perceived differently, depending on whether it was done by a person of wealth and power, or if it was done by a person of low socio-economic status.
Or if it was done by your boss or by you. Or by a teacher or his student. — baker
Do we really think that attributing blame and directing anger towards someone will repair any damage or prevent future occurrences?
Of course. Blame and anger are effective means for gaining and keeping power over others. It's why people do it. — baker
But such humility would require them to give up their identity. And --
There are few things less noble than resenting or undermining people for who they are.
— Tom Storm — baker
So we also need to watch our use of they-language. When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement. Using ‘they’ seeks to distance our self-awareness from the statements we make. It implies a passive self-righteousness.
— Possibility
How self-righteous, and actively so! — baker
You assume entirely too much and allow too little room. — baker
When we include ourselves in what we say about ‘people’, we recognise our own capacity to make the same errors of judgement.
— Possibility
But perhaps we think that those might actually not be "errors of judgment" to begin with, but in fact virtues. If anything, the state of the world suggests that anger and blame are virtues, something to strive for. And that we (minority-we) are ninnies to think them vices. — baker
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