Good - what should be
Existence - what is
Morality - a method of evaluating what is good
Our first necessarily objective good:Existence
— Philosophim
:lol:
Nonexistence never hurt anyone and existence hurts everyone. Although our selves may be illusory creations of consciousness, our pain is nonetheless real..
— Thomas Ligotti — 180 Proof
Nonexistence never hurt anyone and existence hurts everyone. Although our selves may be illusory creations of consciousness, our pain is nonetheless real.. — 180 Proof
If existence is inherently good then that would mean, as something fundamental to existence, perspective is also good, which means the only objective morality must be to respect the subjective over the objective, which means one must build many bridges. — DifferentiatingEgg
:roll: Like some others already have (which you incorrigibly don't get, Phil), been there, done that:Feel free to point out where the logic of the OP is flawed and we can discuss that. — Philosophim
Like some others already have (which you incorrigibly don't get, Phil), been there, done that: — 180 Proof
↪Philosophim (Sorry if my counter-argument requires more thought than you gave your argument in the OP.) Once again ... — 180 Proof
↪180 Proof What are you talking about? — bert1
e. If it is the case that there is something objective which concludes there should be no existence, that objectivity must exist.
f. But if it exists, then according to itself, it shouldn't exist.
g. If it shouldn't exist, then the answer "No" objectively shouldn't exist thus contradicting itself. — Philosophim
First, even if there is an objective morality, it is inherently nonsensical that that morality should make existential claims. Morality is by definition about right and wrong. — Pantagruel
You are committing a flagrant category mistake by attempting to extrapolate from a moral ought to a metaphysical is. What would it even mean to assert "there should be no existence"? — Pantagruel
1. All moral questions boil down to one fundamental question that must be answered first, "Should there be existence?"
Starting with human centric morality, a question might be asked, "Should I lie to another person for personal gain?" But to truly answer this objectively, I must first have the answer to the question. "Should I exist at all?" Yet this goes further. until we arrive at a fundamental question of morality that must be answered before anything else can. "Should there be existence at all?" — Philosophim
All your claims about an objective morality being existentially self-founding prove is that anything which exists must exist in a state of non-self-contradiction. — Pantagruel
e. If it is the case that there is something objective which concludes there should be no existence, that objectivity must exist.
f. But if it exists, then according to itself, it shouldn't exist.
g. If it shouldn't exist, then the answer "No" objectively shouldn't exist thus contradicting itself. — Philosophim
As others have pointed out, all you are doing is repeatedly assuming what you are claiming to "prove," which is that existence is good. — Pantagruel
In fact, there is extensive evidence to the fact that moral badness exists. — Pantagruel
If good is "what should be" then morality is an analysis of evaluating "what should be". Therefore it is not nonsensical using these definitions. — Philosophim
Hang on. If good is what should be, then morality is an evaluation of what should be. Sure. If anything, that exactly contradicts your conclusion that existence is good, since it is about a good which does not yet exist (but can be instantiated by actions). — Pantagruel
"If existence should not be, then it is not good" Alright. But who says existence should not be? What is the point of assuming that? All you are doing is begging the question of the contrary, and trying to make it look like you are somehow deriving it from a logical operation (self-contradiction). — Pantagruel
a. Assume that there is an objective morality.
If there is not an objective morality, then of course this is moot.
b. This leaves two answers to the question, "Should there be existence?". They are, "Yes", or "No".
Now we have a binary. If one is true, the other is false. — Philosophim
What I really, really dislike is the way that you are now, in subsequent posts, presenting all of these poorly substantiated and widely criticized assumptions in an axiomatic fashion — Pantagruel
some of your fundamental assumptions are highly idiosyncratic and far from intuitively clear, as the objectors have been trying to point out. — Pantagruel
Then you start presenting more idiosyncratic ideas in later posts like "quantifying existence", which really isn't a thing. — Pantagruel
It's like you are trying to retroactively confer authority on your own un-substantiated axioms by weaving them into a system that people must agree with before they can criticize it. — Pantagruel
Right, so morality is an analysis of what ought to be. So, if presented with two scenarios, I can use the premises of a morality to decide what outcome would be most optimal, or good. In this instance, its the state of there being existence, vs there being none at all — Philosophim
The only sense, the only sense in which any of this makes any sense, is in the sense of the Shakespearian question. So if you are actually contemplating whether to be or not to be, as a choice, then you can come to the conclusion that existence is a good. — Pantagruel
↪Philosophim But then for anyone who seriously asks that question, the inherent goodness of existence must precisely be in question, must it not? — Pantagruel
Is there an objective morality? If there is, it hasn't been found yet. But maybe we don't need to have found it to determine fundamental claims it would necessarily make.
The point I will make below: If there is an objective morality, the most logical fundamental aspect of that morality is that existence is good.
Definitions:
Good - what should be
Existence - what is
Morality - a method of evaluating what is good — Philosophim
I'm afraid I have to disagree. Good and evil are psychological states of affairs and are features of reality.Good - what should be — Philosophim
Morality is about releasing what is a right action, good or evil, in a situation.Morality - a method of evaluating what is good — Philosophim
Read on through the rest of this thread, particularly page 2 (re: my proposals for "existence" and "morality" in the context of (how I understand) Western philosophy).What needs to be defined therefore is what precisely do we mean by existence? ... And what is morality? — Ray Liikanen
I’ll start with the connection between objective morality, and existence being good. Wouldn’t your argument work even if you changed ‘objective morality’ with ‘objective amorality/immorality/‘? Adding to this, there might be inherent conflict between the various objective moralities pertaining to the necessity for existence. — Caerulea-Lawrence
Secondly, ‘objective’ and ‘Fundamental’. These words can mean very different things in this context. — Caerulea-Lawrence
Secondly, the connection between objective morality and existence. This simplifies what I see as a rather complicated line of connected assumptions. — Caerulea-Lawrence
The question you are asking; «Should there be existence at all?» doesn’t seem to be the one you are answering. The question seems to be «Does ‘conscious and moral’ existences contribute to the «moral» impetus of the Universe? — Caerulea-Lawrence
The possibility that this universe, and life, operate on different morals altogether. — Caerulea-Lawrence
However, arguing that since ‘conscious and moral’ entities contribute, it must be moral, is definitely a possibility, but not the most prudent one. — Caerulea-Lawrence
Firstly, I don’t find it objectionable to say that ‘within’ the confines of this Universe that there are certain possibilities that are infinitely more ‘moral’ to life than others. However, I find it very hard to argue that the Universe is moral. My hard stance on this is that the rules of the Universe are Amoral — Caerulea-Lawrence
And is our moral relationship with the Universe any different from the one children have with abusive parents? If anything, Existence the way it is structured, is inherently immoral to us. — Caerulea-Lawrence
Good - what should be
— Philosophim
I'm afraid I have to disagree. Good and evil are psychological states of affairs and are features of reality. — MoK
Morality - a method of evaluating what is good
— Philosophim
Morality is about releasing what is a right action, good or evil, in a situation. — MoK
No, that is art. 'What one ought to do' is morality.Morality is simply about what 'ought to be' — Philosophim
I am glad to discuss things with an open-minded person like you.It is fine to disagree. — Philosophim
No. Good and evil are fundamental and they are both necessary. Think of evolution for example. The weak agents are eliminated in the process of evolution so room is left for the stronger to survive since the resources are finite. Evolution is evil since weaker agents are eliminated for the sake of stronger ones.But I'm going to ask, "Is it better to have good states of reality or evil states of reality?" — Philosophim
I have to first answer what good and evil are before discussing morality. Good and evil as I mentioned are two categories of psychological states. I cannot define good and evil but I can give examplesI do agree that we can also use morality in a sense that we have already determined what is good or evil. But this is the conclusion after evaluation. I do not mind either use. — Philosophim
Apparently, we cannot. We have to accept the reality as it is. Think of mental or physical exercises for a moment. Without physical activity which is tiresome and painful, therefore evil, you cannot have a body in good shape. The same applies to mental exercise. You must read, think, memorize, and discuss things to become mentally strong. This is also tiresome and painful, so we cannot avoid evil when it comes to mental exercise.Can you escape the notion that good is what should be, while evil is what should not be? — Philosophim
Sure, we need to evaluate the situation before deciding whether we should do good or evil.Doesn't that require us to evaluate the situation? — Philosophim
This is a tricky part so I have to give examples of a few situations to make things clear. Think of a situation in which you have a nasty kid who breaks things and messes up your house. You don't reward him for what he does instead you punish him. The first act, rewarding, is good and the second act, punishing, is evil. Therefore, evil is right depending on the situation. Think of a person who is terminally ill. The act of killing any person is evil since it causes sadness to friends or relatives. But the act of killing a person who is terminally ill is right if she or he wants it. Here, I just gave a couple of examples of the situations in which evil acts are right. I am sure you can come up with situations in which a good act is the right choice.And how do we know what is a right action? — Philosophim
I read your entire OP once but I have to read it a couple of more times before I become ready to discuss it in depth. For now, let's see if we agree on the definition.What do you think about the logic of the rest of the post? — Philosophim
I can't prove that "Existence is good" based on pointing to a God or some law of nature that we've discovered. I only note that if an objective morality exists, any objective morality must logically include 'existence vs nothing' as 'good'. — Philosophim
An indirect contradiction is an inability to experience one’s belief in reality. For example, if I believe in an invisible and unsensible unicorn, there is nothing in reality with which I may apply this belief. — Philosophim
The moral foundation I've established does not require people. It would be a logical conclusion whether we exist or not. Just like the laws of physics would still exist without us. — Philosophim
True, without a moral foundation, we cannot judge. But with a moral foundation, we can. And if that moral foundation is sound, we can shape the universe around us to be better than it is as a non-conscious force. Just like we take rocks and turn them into statues, we can take the universe as it is and mold it into something greater than its mere existence. — Philosophim
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