A variant of the chariot of the passions - Phaedrus? — Banno
and now you are starting to do ethics... — Banno
. And so we might go an extra step in locating goodness in ens reale (things) and not ens rationis (creations of mind). Yet, IMO this is unnecessary for concluding that, if relatively inert things like water motivated complex behavior, the goodness sought by the complex behavior lies primarily in what gets sought, not the seeker. Much good seeking involves actual consumption, the introduction of the good thing into the body/whole of the entity seeking it, and this doesn't make sense if all goodness is already in the organism doing the seeking — Count Timothy von Icarus
Is there a way to separate out truth from goodness as fulfillment of normative expectations and purposes?
Are such norms to be located inside the organism, in the things outside the organism, or in the ways of functioning that take place BETWEEN organism and its world?
If being good is not your goal, then naturally you will ignore what you “ought” to be doing in order to be good.
But aims themselves can be more or less choiceworthy, more or less good. And we might suppose that in order to determine which aims are most choiceworthy we should seek to discover what is choiceworthy for its own sake and not for some other good or end. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What is choiceworthy will depend on what one's goals are. — Count Timothy von Icarus
↪Joshs
Is there a way to separate out truth from goodness as fulfillment of normative expectations and purposes?
Depends on what you mean by "separate." Medicine is a normative practice. However, consider a child with cancer. It's bad for them to have cancer. It's good to cure it. Suppose the doctors give the child a treatment that is thought to be a good treatment for this sort of cancer. It isn't. It actually causes the cancer to become more aggressive.
We wouldn't want to say that the treatment is a good one when the normative standard is to give the treatment and only becomes a bad one later. Indeed, it would come to be deemed a "bad treatment" in the normative framework because of the truth about its effects. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But moreover, people can have beliefs or make statements about themselves. Where is between here? Between the person and themselves? — Count Timothy von Icarus
And answeredIf evolution does not tell us what to do, what does? — Questioner
What is your claim here? That there is no variation in out behaviour? Or perhaps that we do not make choices? If either of these were true, then the question of "what ought we do?" is meaningless, because we just do as evolution dictates.But there is nothing else to us, except our evolution. — Questioner
If something is Good, it's because you have personally understood/decided it is good. You couldn't support that with any extrinsic facts.
The 'right' action is to do with achieving something. That something must be arbitrary, at base. So, i don't get hte question. — AmadeusD
What is your claim here? That there is no variation in out behaviour? Or perhaps that we do not make choices? If either of these were true, then the question of "what ought we do?" is meaningless, because we just do as evolution dictates. — Banno
But you are now choosing whether and how to reply to this post. You remain confronted by choice.
What will you do?
You will choose. — Banno
I made a precise logical point about the difference between "true" and "good". I pointed out that "p" is true IFF p, but that there is no similar equation for "good". So there is a break in the symmetry you proposed. You don;t appear to have spoken agains this, so I will take it as read....the good is to practical reason as truth is to theoretical reason — Count Timothy von Icarus
That's a relief, becasue you were apparently proposing that evolution take on the role of handing down our commandments. Replacing god with evolution doesn't solve the problem of what to do.My claim (belief) is that there is not a supernatural cause for our behavior. — Questioner
You do not need to appeal to evolution to maintain this. That you are writing using a language shows that you are embedded in a culture, along with all that implies....the need to belong to the group... — Questioner
My claim is that we are the result of our evolution - but it produced wide spectrums of behavior, emotions, aptitudes, perspectives, intellect, abilities, ways of thinking, etc. etc. — Questioner
Consider the fact that human action ranges to the extremes. People can perform extraordinary acts of altruism, including kindness toward other species — or they can utterly fail to be altruistic, even toward their own children. So whatever tendencies we may have inherited leave ample room for variation; our choices will determine which end of the spectrum we approach. This is where ethical discourse comes in — not in explaining how we’re “built,” but in deliberating on our own future acts. Should I cheat on this test? Should I give this stranger a ride? Knowing how my selfish and altruistic feelings evolved doesn’t help me decide at all. Most, though not all, moral codes advise me to cultivate altruism. But since the human race has evolved to be capable of a wide range of both selfish and altruistic behavior, there is no reason to say that altruism is superior to selfishness in any biological sense.
In fact, the very idea of an “ought” is foreign to evolutionary theory. It makes no sense for a biologist to say that some particular animal should be more cooperative, much less to claim that an entire species ought to aim for some degree of altruism. If we decide that we should neither “dissolve society” through extreme selfishness, as (biologist E. O.) Wilson puts it, nor become “angelic robots” like ants, we are making an ethical judgment, not a biological one. Likewise, from a biological perspective it has no significance to claim that Ishould be more generous than I usually am, or that a tyrant ought to be deposed and tried. In short, a purely evolutionary ethics makes ethical discourse meaningless. — Richard Polt, Anything but Human
In fact, the very idea of an “ought” is foreign to evolutionary theory — Richard Polt, Anything but Human
The elephant is our instinctual, emotional self, and our rationality is the rider. — Questioner
↪Joshs Where would I look for examples of this kind of approach? And in respect of human culture, how would 'normative patterns of functioning' be related to or grounded in evolutionary biology per se? — Wayfarer
evolutionary biology provides a kind of default basis for normativity, along the lines of what is 'advantageous for survival' — Wayfarer
I'm sure not what the post I was responding to has in mind. What that Richard Polt OP is criticizing, is the widespread tendency to simply assume that evolutionary biology provides a kind of default basis for normativity, along the lines of what is 'advantageous for survival' ('oldy-moldy darwinism'). It's more evolution as secular alternative to religion. — Wayfarer
Evolutionary biology has long emphasized how environments exert selection pressures that transform organismic lineages. Biologists now recognize organism-environment relations as a two-way process. Niche construction is the process through which organisms act on their environments and change the selection pressures on their own and other lineages. It includes behavioral niche construction— forms of behavior that generate selection pressures to produce descendants of that behavior in subsequent generations. Human languages are probably the pre-eminent example of behavioral niche construction.
You do not need to appeal to evolution to maintain this. That you are writing using a language shows that you are embedded in a culture, along with all that implies. — Banno
So we still have the question, "what to do?"
But freed from the irrelevance of both god and evolution — Banno
is it not possible that humans are under-determined by evolution? This would mean that, while certainly not denying the facts of evolution, it is legitimate to question the sense in which the human condition might be understood solely through the lens of biological theory. — Wayfarer
The main drivers of adaptive behaviour are the ability to compete — Wayfarer
there is no reason to say that altruism is superior to selfishness in any biological sense. — Richard Polt, Anything but Human
the very idea of an “ought” is foreign to evolutionary theory. — Richard Polt, Anything but Human
Natural selection has no goals. — Questioner
Why should you or I or anyone else value “sustaining society” more than our own comfort or advantage? — J
That, to me, is a genuine ethical question that can’t even be posed until, as @Banno points out, we stop thinking that some naturalistic fact about human beings or evolution is going to contain the answer. — J
In my experience, this (bolded part) is not how ethics is usually taught. Instead, teaching ethics goes something like this:
"You don't know what is good and right and so you need to be told so.
X is good and right.
You should do X."
If anything, the direct answer to "Why ought one do that which is good?" is "Because one is bad" and perhaps with the addition "so that by doing good, one may become good as well." — baker
Because we are vulnerable beings who can feel pain and can be injured or killed by certain actions, which I do believe would have to be considered facts of evolutionary nature. It has its relevance. Do you see where I'm coming from with that? — Outlander
"why should one value sustaining society more than one's self", as in possibly neglecting one's own well being for that of a neighbor's, — Outlander
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