Thereby trying to evade my critique by providing the rejoinder that it was a mischaracterization of your view (because you do not believe happiness is good). I, then, responded with: — Bob Ross
But that’s what ‘redness’ means: it’s the property of being red. — Bob Ross
Sure, a property is attributed to things by subjects; and so it is an estimation, to your point, of the quality which the thing has….. — Bob Ross
I am not following the relevance. When analyzing redness, we would analyze redness — Bob Ross
I would rather see us giving them the tools to ‘ethicize’ then tell them our own ethical theories. — Bob Ross
…..the question asked is “how do I determine what is good?”? — Bob Ross
I don’t disagree that eudaimonic happiness is the chief good for any living being — Bob Ross
I apologize Mww, I forgot to respond to this one. — Bob Ross
To be fair, I sympathize with starting a novice with analyzing existing ethical theories to begin; but that is putting the cart before the horse. It is a real problem that many people have, as exemplified by the fact that everyone so far (that I have noticed) in this thread has immediately bypassed metaethics to suggest their own whole-sale theories. The order of analysis in ethics is metaethics, normative ethics, then applied ethics.
Likewise, just because one cannot define something, it does not follow that one cannot describe that something to the point of understanding it sufficiently. Just because the concept of good is purely intuition, it does not follow that everyone automatically has a good grasp of what it is.
This is analogous to if there was an OP asking where to begin studying what is red, and your response is to say “analyze red trucks”. One should not begin with an analysis of what can be predicated to be red (like a red truck)—viz., happiness—but rather what does it mean for something, in principle, to be red at all? That’s where begin. — Bob Ross
Your response was to say:
You are still missing the point. I never said happiness is Good. I said, actions which brings happiness is Good. — Corvus
Thereby trying to evade my critique by providing the rejoinder that it was a mischaracterization of your view (because you do not believe happiness is good). I, then, responded with: — Bob Ross
Sure, one does not need a single, canonical univocal definition of "health" to do medicine or "life" to do biology. But surely biology starts from observing and thinking about living organisms and works backwards to "life," just as the doctor starts with instances of health and illness and works backwards to "health."
Most people have no trouble identifying all sorts of abhorrent acts as wrong, be they individual acts like running down a toddler for picking one of your crops, or policies like like health insurers "deny, delay, defend" strategy.
We might think the general principle can be known better in itself than the particulars
Red is a property of a thing and redness is a property of red?
Property relates to the identity the thing has, whereas quality is an estimation of the property itself
when analyzing redness we are analyzing red, not redness
…
By extension, then, when analyzing goodness we are analyzing good, not goodnes
.good in and of itself, not good for this or that, but just plain ol’ good. Period. Full stop. Bare-bones, pure conception representing a fundamental condition upon which a proper moral philosophy follows.
We’re already in possession of the tools for “ethicizing”. They are codes of conduct, administrative rules, edicts and assorted jurisprudence generally, in the pursuit of what is right. None of which has anything to do with what is good.
It is good to “ethicize” in accordance with assorted jurisprudence, which reflects one’s treatment of his fellow man, which one can accomplish for no other reason than that’s what everyone else is doing.
we may come closer to what makes us tick as subjects rather than what makes us tick as herds
What happened to tools for “ethicizing”?
Are ants being ethical for not crowding each other out of the way when entering the hole to the lair?
Only certain forms of living beings are conditioned by happiness on the one hand
The chief good is worthiness for being happy
which reduces to a principle
there is no other good, as such, in and of itself….hence undefinable….as a good will.
…..worthiness of happiness and being happy are interlinked to the point where one cannot come without the other. — Bob Ross
So I’m driving along, in this cool-as-hell ‘67 Cobra, hair flyin’, head-bangin’ to some classic Foghat turned up to 11….happy as a pig in an overturned hotel restaurant dumpster.
The car isn’t mine, I stole it.
You are confusing hedonic with eudaimonic happiness. — Bob Ross
….and sufficiently so, that it serves as the form of a rule rather than an example of an exception to it.….interlinked to the point where one cannot come without the other. — Bob Ross
I shall consider it proved that worthiness of happiness and happiness itself, are very far from….
The happiness being referred to in enjoying the stolen car is superficial, cheap dopamine. There is no true happiness in that…. — Bob Ross
But that still leaves me without the worthiness of that kind of happiness, that particular pleasure. I’m happy but I cheated to be that way, so I don’t deserve it. Seemed like a cool thing to do at the time but I regret it now, kinda thing.
I want to know what kinda thing it is, to be happy and deserve it. It’s not enough to know what it is not, I want to know what it is. What happiness would I not regret, and by extension, what thing can I do that may not make me happy at all, but I don’t regret having done it?
Now the worthiness comes to the fore, in such case where I do a thing, feel anything but happy about, take no pleasure in the act, but remain happy….read as satisfied, content, undeterred, consistent with my virtues….with myself for the having the fortitude to act for the sake of good in itself.
I’m happy but I cheated to be that way….
— Mww
Aristotle doesn’t call this kind of cheating happiness happiness at all — Bob Ross
Aristotle is right to point out that it is not about taking no pleasure in the act; it is about taking pleasure in acts that are good; and displeasure in acts that are bad. — Bob Ross
but rather, the method by which any act of will leaves my moral integrity intact.
Exactly. Aristotle doesn’t call this kind of cheating happiness happiness at all; because the only way one becomes truly fulfilled in life, with the happiness which is deep, is by earning it. Like I noted before, by “worthiness of happiness”, you are necessarily using the term “happiness” to refer to this cheap dopamine kind of happiness and not what Aristotle means by happiness. — Bob Ross
So I’m driving along, in this cool-as-hell ‘67 Cobra, hair flyin’, head-bangin’ to some classic Foghat turned up to 11….happy as a pig in an overturned hotel restaurant dumpster. — Mww
To judge from the lives that men lead, most men, and men of the most vulgar type, seem (not without some reason) to identify the good, or happiness, with pleasure; which is the reason why they love the life of enjoyment. For there are, we may say, three prominent types of life-that just mentioned, the political, and thirdly the contemplative life. Now the mass of mankind are evidently quite slavish in their tastes, preferring a life suitable to beasts, but they get some reason for their view from the fact that many of those in high places share the tastes of Sardanapallus. — Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics I.v, tr. W. D. Ross
Whenever I hear this argument, I find it underwhelming. Parsing happiness into "the right kind" and "the wrong kind" seems both futile and subjective. — Tom Storm
You are welcome to your philosophical inclinations, as anyone is, but obviously they are very far from mine. Not that that’s a problem for either of us, only that there’s little chance of meeting in the middle.
For example, why do we prohibit cocaine as a society? Because it is a base pleasure that deprives individuals and groups of deeper fulfillment. — Leontiskos
Actually the idea that some pleasures are intense but empty strikes me as a unanimous idea in both ethics and psychology. — Leontiskos
My point is that it's the action we judge, not the pleasure derived from it. — Tom Storm
Your idea that the prohibition of cocaine has nothing to do with the pleasure cocaine provides is what is implausible. — Leontiskos
My point is that it's the action we judge, not the pleasure or satisfaction derived from it. I would hold that the pleasure experienced by a person who collects stolen artworks is likely identical to the pleasure experienced by one who buys art through Sotheby's. The issue at stake is should they derive pleasure from a crime? — Tom Storm
…..virtues are tide to our nature…. — Bob Ross
How can we demonstrate that so-called low happiness (the version Aristotle might disapprove of in our interpretation of him) is qualitatively different?
Parsing happiness into "the right kind" and "the wrong kind" seems both futile and subjective.
Aristotle himself supported slavery and likely believed it contributed to the "right kind" of happiness/flourishing
This highlights the issue with attempting to parse happiness in such terms.
Probably better to just accept that humans act, and whether those actions are good or bad always depends on a contingent context—shaped by culture, language, and experience
The best we can do is reach an intersubjective agreement on morality and continuously scrutinize our actions to understand where our morality might lead us in an ongoing conversation.
This is quite similar to the discussion (…) elsewhere…. — Leontiskos
Aristotle would call this pleasure. — Leontiskos
….you are depriving yourself of what is truly best… — Count Timothy von Icarus
Imagine a world where everyone is their best….. — Count Timothy von Icarus
….good itself is a word for property of the actions. — Corvus
We have agreement there.I might expand to say that a word represents a property of actions, good is a word that represents a property of actions, quality is a property of actions, therefore good is a word that represents the quality of actions. — Mww
It seems to supplement my point with more accuracy.Does that expansion diminish your point? Hopefully not too much anyway, cuz I agree with your major point. — Mww
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