How does this work with billionaires sitting on their fortunes like Smaug and trying to tax them so you can provide for the common good? You're clearly causing at least some of them great harm, to hear them talk of it anyhow, and they are only going to benefit from the harmful tax in a rather indirect way. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or military conscription? Harming older people through climate change legislation that will have no meaningful impact in their lifetimes? — Count Timothy von Icarus
As far as anti-natalism (I did start Ligotti's book, it's quite good), the principle of "you should never deprive someone of happiness or pleasure for no reason" would just cut the other way, no? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I've said this in other threads.. I don't think personal ethics translates to political actions. I think there is such things as ethics in politics, but that is not political actions per se, but personal matters in how one acts in political situations. This goes down to meta-ethics. I think ethics is at the individual level, and "society" itself is not a target for ethics proper, but political actions. — schopenhauer1
Eg., - what does this mean? Can you do it in a sentence?
The boundary of the self that we care about , and whose enrichment motivates our actions, isn’t physical or spatial , but functional. That is, we naturally embrace into the self all of the world that can be assimilated on enough dimensions of similarity. If we didn’t have this filter, our world would be an indecipherable chaos, as would our ‘self’.
— Joshs — Tom Storm
aybe you should start a thread (if there isn't one) on how we pursue moral quesions using the kind of approach you prefer. I can't see how it would work except as theory, given how society currently functions. What would need to change for such ideas to gain traction in a substantive way? — Tom Storm
Are you saying that Susie might not be consciously aware that she is not doing her best? — Joshs
I thought the morally responsible agent must be acting from free will? — Joshs
But my position is a priori — Joshs
The irony is that these stories are dripping with blame and reproach, attempting to guilt-trip me into buying into your irrational system. "How dare you tell poor little Susie that she wasn't doing her best! You monster!" I do think that guilt-tripping on the basis of fictional shame-porn is a problem. :roll: I would imagine you could do better, especially given the fact that your strange accusation-based strawman followed my distinction between an assessment and an accusation ("The person in question need not even be told") — Leontiskos
I drove into town yesterday. Was I doing my best when I was driving? Of course not. Was I attempting to not-do my best? Of course not. Nor was I self-consciously aware that I was not doing my best. If I can drive well enough without doing my best then I will do that, because it requires enormously less effort. — Leontiskos
When someone regrets something and says, "I shouldn't have done that," they are very often acknowledging that they were not doing their best — Leontiskos
The world you are proposing is one full of narcissists who believe they are not at fault for anything and are beyond criticism. — Leontiskos
I’m not blaming or reproaching you. — Joshs
But I will insist that claiming someone is not doing their best is an accusation, regardless of how you sugarcoat it. All forms of blame (including concepts like narcissism and laziness) are based in hostility, and as such are accusations, even if they masquerade as affectively neutral rational judgements. — Joshs
“Johnny is doing his best,” is a statement about the effort that Johnny is applying to some activity, and humans can apply different levels of effort. Step 1 is assessing the level of effort, which is a matter of fact. This step is like using the radar gun to determine the car’s speed. Contrary to your moralizing worldview, the assessment of effort is not yet a normative or moral matter. Step 2, the normative step, only arises when we want to judge how much effort Johnny should be applying to the activity. — Leontiskos
Again, when I am driving a car I am usually not trying my best. — Leontiskos
How do you define "doing your best"? I would define it as doing what the situation or task at hand requires so as to avoid negative outcomes. If you are paying adequate attention to the conditions—the road. traffic signals, other drivers and so on, such as to avoid an accident, or getting booked, then I would count that as "doing your best". — Janus
Someone who is not doing their best is by definition not putting all of their effort into something. The reason we seldom do our best is because it is very difficult to put all of our effort into something. — Leontiskos
You might say that if you failed to do your best then you might, for example, have an accident or be booked for speeding, but could that failure ever be counted as intentional? If you drive too fast, is it not on account of a failure of attention... — Janus
Although you have said we don’t always know whether we were trying our best, at least some of the time we know it, and in those cases maybe the simplest way to measure our effort is to use a verbal scoring system: On a scale of one to ten, how hard were we trying? — Joshs
I would put it this way. We are always putting our effort into some game or other... — Joshs
I’ll know how successful I was at my game of touring by how satisfying the trip was for me, not by how fast I was going. — Joshs
I would put it this way. We are always putting our effort into some game or other , but the criterion of success changes with changes in the game. — Joshs
There are a nearly infinite variety of games we can opt to play, and we switch among them all the time. When we naively assume another is continuing the play the game we believe they are playing, we may not notice this shift in games. So we only notice their failure to perform within the rules we assume they are abiding by, and we fail to notice that they are already involved with a different game. The are still doing their best, but their effort is applied in a completely different direction, with different criteria of success. — Joshs
If you could do better are you doing your best? Is someone who is doing an adequate job doing the best job? — Leontiskos
In moral philosophy neglect is a failure involving intention or volition. "Attention" comes under our intention and volition, after all, and that is why it is not unjust to ticket speeders. — Leontiskos
There is no reason to strive to do better in a task when the circumstances don't require it. — Janus
How are you going to do better than attending as best you can in the moment to a degree sufficient to avoid speeding... — Janus
In moral philosophy neglect is a failure of being able to care or a failure of understanding the situation. — Janus
No one deliberately fails to care or attend to what they understand should be attended to, but no one is perfect and may be distracted or fail to understand what is required or simply not be capable of good judgement. — Janus
And there is no reason to strive to do our best when the circumstances don't require it. If we can do better then we are not doing our best, and we both know that on your definition of "best" we can do better. Therefore your definition fails. — Leontiskos
We are punished for neglect similar to the way we are punished for direct intention, and therefore neglect involves volition. — Leontiskos
Nevertheless, I would not try such a thing before you understand the perennial understanding of justice, including what words like "negligence" actually mean. — Leontiskos
No, how can you do better than paying attention, driving within the speed limit and so on, which I outlined? Explain to me how you could do better than that, what doing better than that would consist in in that context. — Janus
You believe that it follows from the fact we are punished for neglect that volition must be involved? I don't see that, and in any case, you are changing the terms—I spoke in terms of failure of attention (a failure which is not deliberate) and failure of understanding the situation (which obviously also would not be deliberate). You could try to explain to me just what you mean by volition—is volition always deliberate according to you, for example, and then lay out your argument as to why volition would be entailed on the grounds that we are punished for neglect? — Janus
Supposing two people drive under the speed limit, it does not follow that each of them are applying equal effort to obeying the law. — Leontiskos
I Googled a paper that might be helpful to you in this regard: "The Moral Neglect of Negligence." Again, an introduction to moral philosophy would probably be even better. — Leontiskos
there is no difference between a moral or aesthetic value. — Ourora Aureis
I'm not going to be providing any papers, you didn't ask me to prove any specific claim so anything I give you will seem random and you cant convince people by throwing random papers at them — Ourora Aureis
First I have to state my belief that all values are equivalent, there is no difference between a moral or aesthetic value. From the dislike of murder to the love of orange juice, these concern the same type of preference known as a value. — Ourora Aureis
You are conflating the legal with the moral. — Janus
So you think negligence pertains to the legal order but not to the moral order? — Leontiskos
Depends on what is meant by 'negligence'. — Janus
The moral significance of negligence is regularly downplayed in the legal and philosophical literature. — Shiffrin, The Moral Neglect of Negligence
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