• Vivek
    12
    The is-ought problem by David Hume asks: given descriptive facts about the world—that something is a certain way—how exactly can we know what we ought to do with it? How can we know how to act?

    G.E. Moore asks a similar question. What exactly do we mean when we say something is good? What does it mean when we say something is right or wrong?

    The answer has eluded us because it has always been right in front of us. As someone searching for their spectacles in darkness whilst wearing them.  

    If we ask the question: In relation to what, do we as living beings define right and wrong? 

    The answer lies within the question itself. It is in relation to ourselves. It is in relation to us being alive. It is in relation to our very fundamental essence as living things. To live! To survive! To thrive! 

    It is in relation to this fundamental property itself, that arises the phenomenon of right and wrong. It is in relation to this property unique to any living thing, that the world around it, can be judged to possibly be good or bad for it. Even if something is not directly relevant to one’s survival, if it affects the organism in a meaningful manner, there will in some way be a relation to a survival mechanism. 
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    Even if something is not directly relevant to one’s survival, if it affects the organism in a meaningful manner, there will in some way be a relation to a survival mechanism.Vivek

    What kind of survival are we talking about? A rock survives as itself only to the extent that it remains more or less self identical over time. But a living organism will perish if it remains exactly the same. What the organism attempts to preserve is a normative pattern of functioning in the face of continually changing conditions. And as for humans, our normative patterns of functioning, our goals and purposes, are continually changing over the course of cultural history. Within any given era and community, for each individual there will be particular goals and purposes, and the criterion of good and bad is aligned according to such goals. But as the cultural communities evolve, what constitutes good and bad changes along with purposes. If there is anything consistent which ‘survives’ all these transformations of the human perhaps it is the simple fact of pattern itself. Only something that changes itself in a patterned way can know good and bad. The moment a rock is formed it is already on its way to no long being a rock, because it doesn’t perpetuate itself in a consistently patterned way.
  • AmadeusD
    2.6k
    The answer lies within the question itself. It is in relation to ourselves. It is in relation to us being alive. It is in relation to our very fundamental essence as living things. To live! To survive! To thrive!Vivek

    This is shitty Randian claims to non-existent properties. The only possible way this gets off the ground is admitted it is entirely subjective. And then that defeats the premise. So, good luck!
  • Vivek
    12

    You're right that on it's own it is subjective. This is the text that follows in the chapter :wink:
    "This on its own, however, does not help us determine what is right or wrong specifically. We can easily descend into murderous chaos in the notion that our actions are for survival or self-preservation. To go deeper, we must first, go beyond."
  • AmadeusD
    2.6k
    Brilliant! So the is-ought problem is not solved. :)
  • Vivek
    12
    It is, because is-ought isn't about specific prescriptions but the nature of prescription itself.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    There's an obvious difference between doing what is good and doing what you want.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    How do you identify what is good? Is good situational or intrinsic? Or is good, like truth, a range of potentialities?
  • Banno
    25.1k
    Have a read of Moore's Principia Ethica. Then Philippa Foot. Then Martha Nussbaum.

    , good to see that you have done some reading. Tell us, what in your opinion is the Open Question Argument, and how does it relate to the topic?
  • Vivek
    12
    The argument is about the nature of right and wrong, saying it isn't reducible to a property on its own. Which is correct, it isn't the property, but rather the relation and effect of the property to the entity being alive.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    Have a read of Moore's Principia Ethica. Then Philippa Foot. Then Martha Nussbaum.Banno

    Fair enough. Probably won't have time. I did read Nussbaum's Capability Approach. It all seems very middle class (human rights/human dignity). Does she not essentially argue that human flourishing should be the universal goal of all ethical systems? Which doesn't mean it is wrong. But not being a philosopher, I can't tell if this stuff is useful or not. I need others with some deeper reading/interest to talk about it.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    SO you are claiming that what is good stands in some sort of relation to something that is alive? What is the nature of that relation? "To live! To survive! To thrive!"?

    Is that right?
  • Banno
    25.1k
    Probably won't have time.Tom Storm
    A shame.
  • AmadeusD
    2.6k
    It is, because is-ought isn't about specific prescriptions but the nature of prescription itself.Vivek

    THis wouldn't get you closer to solving it, and it isn't the case. It's a preference of yours for reading hte term 'the good'. This violates its applicability to anyone else, but the person who assents to this reading of 'the good' as a relationship property. This is the entire issue in a nutshell, seemingly ignored, as it is in the Objectivist Ethics by commanding assent to a particular desire ("To Live! To Surive! To Thrive!"). Its not relevant that rejecting that desire might be irrational (whatever else could be so rational as to continue being?). But incredulity doesn't help. More on that below..

    As soon as that assent is denied, the relation fails.

    Have a read of Moore's Principia Ethica. Then Philippa Foot. Then Martha Nussbaum.Banno

    Good suggestions, but I don't think referring to other people is a good way to answer a direct question about your conceptions, is it? If the idea is that your view is directly derivative, providing three sources across two, arguably three generations, might not be as helpful as you think. Then again - it's TPF lol.

    I need others with some deeper reading/interest to talk about it.Tom Storm

    It is useful for understanding human behaviour, but it essentially is a position (in all versions I've seen, from Moore to Harris) that relies on mere incredulity in the face of denial. This, to me, is left wanting and doesn't inform me at all.
  • Banno
    25.1k


    So what is good is to survive, to live, to thrive?

    Can you think of something that enables you to survive, and yet that is not good? Something that enables you to thrive, and yet is not good?
  • Vivek
    12
    I'm not going to get into applied ethics for now, but if you're interested there's a link to a book I wrote in my profile that deals with meta, applied ethics and more :smile: .
  • Banno
    25.1k
    Hmm. Finished, then? Nothing here inspires me to read your book. Cheers.
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    Have a read of Moore's Principia Ethica. Then Philippa Foot. Then Martha Nussbaum.
    — Banno

    Fair enough. Probably won't have time. I did read Nussbaum's Capability Approach. It all seems very middle class (human rights/human dignity). Does she not essentially argue that human flourishing should be the universal goal of all ethical systems? Which doesn't mean it is wrong. But not being a philosopher, I can't tell if this stuff is useful or not. I need others with some deeper reading/interest to talk about it.
    Tom Storm

    I’ll save you the trouble of reading the other two. It’s the usual reliance on some universalistic grounding of ethical normativity mixed with a sprinkling of cultural situatedness.
    Let’s just say I find their universalism to be riddled with parochialism.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    Thanks for that, Josh. Most helpful.
  • Joshs
    5.7k
    ↪Joshs Thanks for that, Josh. Most helpfulBanno

    Let’s see if it helps Tom.
  • AmadeusD
    2.6k
    I support, in other words, your interpretation. I also hope this helps Tom avoid similarly circular arguments.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    For some value of "helps".
  • Wayfarer
    22.6k
    This is from a book I've recently published. A link to it is available in my profile if anyone is interested.Vivek

    A self-published Amazon title with a one-sentence description and no customer feedback. Reported to moderators as self-promotion in accordance with site guidelines against "Advertisers, spammers, self-promoters".
  • Vivek
    12
    So what if it's self-published and new? And I've discussed the main point of the thread, I'm just not going to go on a tangent to other topics.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    Well, how else will Vivek get sales?

    What are the site rules about spruiking, @Jamal?
  • Banno
    25.1k
    I'm just not going to go on a tangent to other topics.Vivek

    But
    G.E. Moore asks a similar question. What exactly do we mean when we say something is good? What does it mean when we say something is right or wrong?Vivek

    I asked you to apply this to your "survive, to live, to thrive"... looks bang on topic to me.
  • Vivek
    12
    Like I've said, Moore's argument is about meta ethics, you're asking about applied ethics, which requires further elaboration and would take the topic in another direction.
  • Banno
    25.1k
    I'm asking you to apply Moore's open question to your definition of "good". It's a meta ethical request. I suspect that you realise the problem, and that's why you won't oblige me.

    Seems to me - without reading your book - that the bit you are missing is how ethics intrinsically involves not what you want, but how you relate to other folk.

    But it's up to you whether you choose to reply or no.
  • AmadeusD
    2.6k
    I love watching cats fight over the remote to a TV they can't turn on.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    I’ll save you the trouble of reading the other two. It’s the usual reliance on some universalistic grounding of ethical normativity mixed with a sprinkling of cultural situatedness.
    Let’s just say I find their universalism to be riddled with parochialism.
    Joshs

    Seems to me that people are forever banging on about 'the good', as if it were out there to be discovered, or simply a matter of common sense, but actually, it seems slippery, a contingent thing, a piece of construction work. I am happy to be guided by the idea that one should try not to cause suffering and work to prevent it. But this is always tied to a point of view, or a set of values. There is no transcendent source material.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.