I will leave it up to you when you want to stop the conversation. — Bob Ross
I guess I am more of a Hegelian than you are... — Bob Ross
Accidents are never intentional; but evolution doesn't operate on accidents. — Bob Ross
However, in another sense, when something is the effect of intention, we say it is intentional regardless of whether the effect is accidental.
For example, I swing the hammer at a nail, and accidentally hit my thumb. The act of swinging the hammer was intentional, regardless of whether I hit the nail or my thumb. So whether the nail is hit or my thumb nail is hit, is irrelevant to the fact that the act which results in one or the other is an intentional act. So even though it is my thumb which is hit, the act which has that effect is intentional.
My main point is just that accidents, by definition, cannot be intentional. That's categorically incoherent to posit. — Bob Ross
That's not a definition of the concept of good — Bob Ross
Every art and every investigation, and similarly every action and pursuit, is considered to aim at some good. Hence the good has been rightly defined as 'that at which all things aim'. — Nicomachean Ethics, I.1, tr. J. A. K. Thomson, Penguin 1976
The keynote of the Ethics is struck in the first sentence: ‘Every art and every enquiry, every action and choice, seems to aim at some good; whence the good has rightly been defined as that at which all things aim.’ All action aims at something other than itself, and from its tendency to produce this it derives its value. — W. D. Ross' Aristotle, Routledge 1995
Secondly, even if he would have elaborated on what is supremely good... — Bob Ross
Aristotle makes zero attempt to define what the concept of good refers to — Bob Ross
Not necessarily. If the side effect is not easily foreseen, then we typically don't consider it intentional; or we might say that it was intentional insofar as the person was aware that there was a chance of it happening and accepting those odds. However, in the case that it is foreseeable or was foreseen (with high probability)(all else being equal), then I completely agree it was intentional: it as indirectly intended, which entails it was not accidental.
You can't say some accidents are intentional: that's like saying some orange squares are not orange. — Bob Ross
The hammer hitting your thumb was not intentional whatsoever prima facie in your example. The act of swinging the hammer, intending to bring about the end of hitting the nail into something, was intentional. — Bob Ross
Now, let's say you foresaw that the hammer might hit your thumb and new this with 20% probability and still decided to carry it out: we would say that you intentionally swung the hammer knowing it may result in an accident, but we would NOT say that you intentionally caused that accident. Now, let's say you foresaw with a 99% probability that you were going to cause the accident instead of what you really intend, then we might say you intended it because of the probabilistic certainty that you had of bringing it about. It depends though, because we might say you are just stupid and didn't realize that it doesn't make sense to carry it out with that high of a probability; or we might say you are unwise (unprudent) for doing it anyways out of (presumably) passion or desire to hit the nail. — Bob Ross
My main point is just that accidents, by definition, cannot be intentional. That's categorically incoherent to posit. — Bob Ross
n a similar way we can see ourselves: "I am I and my circumstances" (Ortega y Gasset), "Existence precedes essence" (Sartre). The end of our existence is never prefigured and is always about to happen, and it is to the extent that we develop in our circumstances that we become what we are. Nietzsche entitled one of his books as follows: "Ecce Homo: How one becomes what one is". We can say of ourselves that to a large extent we become what we are. We become. Which means that the end is not at the beginning (as teleological thinking presupposes) — JuanZu
But is something accidental if it not only could have but should have been forseen?
Unintended consequences are not necessarily accidental, only unforseen.
Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action as well as choice, is held to aim at some good. Hence people have nobly declared that the good is that at which all things aim
Which is, compared to your citations, a poor translation (apparently). Irregardless, if I take it that his second sentence is a definition (and not an assertion that about what nobility think), then: — Bob Ross
'The good' refers to what is supremely and ultimately good — Bob Ross
If I assume he means to define "good", as opposed to "the good", as "that which all things aim at", then this seems like an incredibly inadequate definition... — Bob Ross
Now as "being" is the first thing that falls under the apprehension simply, so "good" is the first thing that falls under the apprehension of the practical reason, which is directed to action: since every agent acts for an end under the aspect of good. Consequently the first principle of practical reason is one founded on the notion of good, viz. that "good is that which all things seek after." — Aquinas, ST I-II.94.2
What do you think an “intention” is? If a consequence of something intended is accidental, then it was unintentional: that’s what it means for it to be accidental. — Bob Ross
But is something accidental if it not only could have but should have been forseen? — Pantagruel
Yes. No one would say I intentionally killed someone by drunk driving if they knew for certain that I genuinely did not foresee the serious possibility of killing or injuring someone by drunk driving. For example, a severely cognitively challenged person who gets their hands on some alcohol and ends up drunk driving probably isn’t capable of foreseeable (sic) the obvious possibility that they may injure or kill someone. — Bob Ross
In practicality, most people cannot get away with claiming they did not foresee it (because we do not believe them) or, if they can, we hold them responsible for their negligence (as opposed to their intentions). — Bob Ross
I agree that we do not commonly call them "intentional", but in the sense that they are the direct effect of the intentional act, just like the desired end is the direct effect of the intentional end, there is fundamentally no essential difference between them
You claim that the effect of the act can be separated from its cause, to say that the cause was intentional but the effect was not intentional.
The fact that a person misjudges the effects of one's actions does not make the effects any less intentional.
A judgement as to the probability of success of one's intentional acts, is not useful toward determining whether the effect of that act is intentional or not.
Suppose I flip a coin, and the probability is 50/50. No matter what the outcome is, that outcome was intended, because I flipped the coin for the purpose of having an outcome, and the particular outcome which occurs is irrelevant to that intent
To illustrate this, one can take the example of genetic transcription in biology: If we have a DNA sequence, this in itself does not possess genetic expression; it is only in its relation to the RNA and the process of transcription that something like an expression takes place. The idea here is that what we believe to be the prefigured result does not actually exist but only takes place in the relationship of the DNA to an other that interprets and translates it in its own way. The information of who we are is not in the genes, but, strangely enough, in the unprecedented process of transcription, interpretation, translation, etc., itself.
"Existence precedes essence" (Sartre)
The point is that Aristotle is setting out the meaning (or at least his working meaning) of 'good' in that phrase
Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action as well as choice, is held to aim at some good. Hence people have nobly declared that the good is that at which all things aim
But this is where Aristotle disagrees with Plato. Aristotle thinks there is no Platonic Form of the Good.
I mostly want to save this debate for another day. What I will say is that 'good' is notoriously difficult to define
Consequently the first principle of practical reason is one founded on the notion of good, viz. that "good is that which all things seek after."
The difficulty with defining 'good' is that it ignores our subjective/objective distinction and it can act as a grammatical modifier of pretty much anything.
Just because something is caused by something done intentionally, it does not follow that that effect was intentional. You are forgetting or omitting that intentionality is about what is being aimed at---not what happens.
If I am aiming with a bow an arrow at a bullseye target, and I miss fire and hit a deer of which I had no clue was somewhere behind the target; then I did not thereby intentionally hit the deer even though it follows from the causal chain which derives back to an intentional action. According to you, it would be intentional. — Bob Ross
Intentional causality is often done with an imperfect knowledge and therefore, even when it "works" often has additional unexpected effects. This is exactly what companies who choose to disregard "externalized costs" do. — Pantagruel
This doesn’t negate in the slightest that we are biologically predetermined in various ways: which is just to say that our bodies have functions. Those functions dictate our design in a weak sense of Telos. — Bob Ross
unforeseeable — Leontiskos
There is no "standard" of foreseeability. — Pantagruel
Some people act carefully. Others act recklessly. — Pantagruel
Many people think that they know what they are doing and do not. We do not live in a world where we go around executing "transactional" events that are over and done with. — Pantagruel
It isn't realistic. — Pantagruel
It is an invalid abstraction to view intentional action in this "A causes B and over" sense. — Pantagruel
This is exactly the kind of false "insular causality" reasoning that leads to the debacle of externalized costs destroying the biosphere. — Pantagruel
Some people act carefully. Others act recklessly.
— Pantagruel
How would you know, given your curious claim that, "There is no 'standard' of foreseeability"? — Leontiskos
Of course not. If I take your position seriously, then it would be; because your view attaches the intentionality of an act to all causality related effects. — Bob Ross
Before we dive into this, I need you to define what you mean by “intention”; because you are using it in very unwieldy ways here. — Bob Ross
The point is that what one knows is relevant to what one is aiming at. — Bob Ross
Was is intentional is not solely about the causation that occurs from a given act: it is more fundamentally about what the person is aiming at. — Bob Ross
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