Right. That's the salient point when it comes to invoking evolutionary biology as a rationale for ethical normativity. — Wayfarer
For example, most people would agree that selling all your worldly possessions and donating the money to charity is something that would be good
However, that doesn't mean that one is obligated to do so
You also slide from what is good per se to what is good for an organism.
Sure, and I understand (roughly) how Ethics is taught.
I did not mean to comment of "ethical normativity" - whatever that is - but rather to comment on what we have to work with. — Questioner
Yet the two aren't unrelated — Count Timothy von Icarus
If there were such a symmetry, then there would be a schema for "good" that is equivalent to Tarski's schema for "true". There isn't. Hence the supposed symmetry isn't there.
To be sure, you might be able to attain some goods by acting unethically. An unethical businessman might cheat and manipulate his way into having wealth and status, the ability to procure all sorts of goods for himself. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Did you? Perhaps your erudite post made the explanation recondite.I explained the symmetry that I think exists. — Count Timothy von Icarus
To be sure, you might be able to attain some goods by acting unethically. An unethical businessman might cheat and manipulate his way into having wealth and status, the ability to procure all sorts of goods for himself. — Count Timothy von Icarus
being good is about attitude — Banno
So what ought we to say to the unethical businessman? Should we say, "You're being inefficient and improvident. You're not getting as many goods as you'd get if you behaved ethically, and furthermore when the hard winds blow, you won't do as well as the ethical person"?
That doesn't strike me as ethical discourse at all
The problem here is that you're still allowing "It's good for you to be good" to represent a coherent statement within ethics. But either each instance of "good" means the same thing, in which case the statement provides no information, or else "good" is equivocal, with each "good" meaning something different, in which case you could get a variety of interpretations, such as "You'll receive things you desire (= good1) if you are virtuous (= good2)" or "You'll flourish (= good1) if you are virtuous (= good2)" or "Being virtuous (= good2) will be pleasurable for you (= good 1)." But what you can't derive is a statement that says either "It is not virtuous (= good 2) to achieve good1" or "Good 2 does not refer to the things named as good1". Both of those require ethical argument of a particular sort -- an argument that shows why the goods of personal life (pleasure, success, honor, love, etc.) are distinct from right action. An appeal to any of those goods as a reason for right action takes us once more out of ethics and into . . . well, psychology, or power dynamics, or something.
There's nothing to prevent that wealthy businessman from not having a rewarding and happy life. Access to significantly better food, superior health care, services and accommodation. To be able to provide these for friends, cronies and family as needed. To have sick children obtain preferential treatment. To access the best art, travel, education and advice. To live longer, healthier and safer and to have everyone they care about provided with the best things available in the culture. These are non-trivial matters and while the saying 'money can't buy you happiness' is often provided rather wanly when talking about such folk, sometimes it's the case that precisely the opposite is true.
Pleasure is not a reflex mechanism, or the release of chemicals. It is an enormously complex phenomenon inseparably linked to overarching goals and interpretive values. Being “awash in pleasurable sensations” amounts toSuppose we have given a power AGI instructions to maximize human pleasure. They go about raising children, tending to their every need, and keeping them awash in pleasurable sensations — Count Timothy von Icarus
After all, wasn't the reason for trying to work out what was good, precisely to enable us to decide what we ought do?
Sure. Is this an objection to the example? Do you think it's impossible? What about the A Brave New World example? I only mention these as limit examples. The more general point is that it seems quite possible to have many pleasurable experiences and a "pleasant life," while avoiding the development of faculties and aptitudes that we tend to think are important for human flourishing — Count Timothy von Icarus
After all, wasn't the reason for trying to work out what was good, precisely to enable us to decide what we ought do?
Pleasure and what you are thinking of in ethical terms as ‘human flourishing’ are not independent entities. And given that all goals and purposes, including minor pleasures, are integrated holistically at a superordinate level, the depth of satisfaction of a pleasant life will be directly correlated with human flourishing. Of course, the other’s criterion of flourishing may not meet your standards, in which case you’re likely to split off their life of pleasures against what you consider robust flourishing, rather than adjusting your construal of their way of life such as to gain a more effective understanding of how they actually see things. That’s more difficult than carrying around a priori concepts of flourishing in your wallet. — Joshs
The more general point is that it seems quite possible to have many pleasurable experiences and a "pleasant life," while avoiding the development of faculties and aptitudes that we tend to think are important for human flourishing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Why should one do that which is good? — Hyper
No, I don't think that good is synonymous with, "something one ought to do". For example, most people would agree that selling all your worldly possessions and donating the money to charity is something that would be good. However, that doesn't mean that one is obligated to do so. Please input into this conversation with your own takes. — Hyper
I dont think so. Pleasure and what you are thinking of in ethical terms as ‘human flourishing’ are not independent entities
Of course, the other’s criterion of flourishing may not meet your standards, in which case you’re likely to split off their life of pleasures against what you consider robust flourishing, rather than adjusting your construal of their way of life such as to gain a more effective understanding of how they actually see things. That’s more difficult than carrying around a priori concepts of flourishing in your wallet.
I guess the crux of this matter is the question - are some forms of flourishing more virtuous than others? I think this comes down to the values of the person making that judgement. If you are influenced by Aristotle or Christianity you will say yes.
...as Socrates says in the Republic, we would prefer to always have what is truly best, not what merely seems best at the moment, or what others say is best. The difficulty is that experience teaches us that what we desire most is not always what is truly best. We do things we regret. So, "what we ought to do" is obviously not always "what we want to do" (i.e. what appears to be good to us). Presumably, this is truly what we ought to want, since reason tells us that it makes no sense to prefer that we should possess or achieve what is truly worse, and not what is truly better.
For instance, if someone were to show Tom Storm's "unscrupulous businessman who lives a very pleasant life" that another life would truly be better, presumably he would want that better life and not his current one, even if he lacked the will or means to achieve it. No one says: "I want to be fundamentally deluded about how to live the best life possible, and live a worse life instead."
Yet, if we want to possess or achieve what is truly best, I am not sure how this is accomplished without knowing what is truly best. Thus, we are back to knowing what is truly better or truly worse.
But I think our culture leans too heavily on evolutionary theory for a sense of identity. It is a biological theory about the origin of species. Due to the historical circumstances of its discovery it has assumed a role for which I don't think it's suitable. — Wayfarer
You were earlier defending logical monism, weren't you? Do I recall correctly?But I don't think making progress on this knowledge is impossible. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But I think the evidence and arguments for the idea that things can be actually good or bad for people is quite strong. — Count Timothy von Icarus
For Aristotle, the virtues (excellences) are exactly those traits that allow one to achieve happiness. Eudaimonia is a virtuous life — Count Timothy von Icarus
My contention is that they must not be the same concept, in order to avoid conceptual emptiness.
When Socrates says, "No evil can happen to a good man," do you think he means, "Nothing evil [not-good] can happen to a good man because good men only experience good things"?
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