…how does one evaluate what is a good or bad will? — Bob Ross
You mean like one of these “possible worlds” the postmodern analytical mindset deems so relevant? Dunno about all that pathological nonsense
Gmak Isn't it the case that good cannot be defined in morality? Only the human actions are good, neutral or evil. But good itself is a word for property of the actions
Among all these things, then, those only are the true objects of enjoyment which we have spoken of as eternal and unchangeable. The rest are for use, that we may be able to arrive at the full enjoyment of the former. We, however, who enjoy and use other things are things ourselves...
Neither ought any one to have joy in himself, if you look at the matter clearly, because no one ought to love even himself for his own sake, but for the sake of Him who is the true object of enjoyment. For a man is never in so good a state as when his whole life is a journey towards the unchangeable life, and his affections are entirely fixed upon that. If, however, he loves himself for his own sake, he does not look at himself in relation to God, but turns his mind in upon himself, and so is not occupied with anything that is unchangeable. And thus he does not enjoy himself at his best, because he is better when his mind is fully fixed upon, and his affections wrapped up in, the unchangeable good, than when he turns from that to enjoy even himself. Wherefore if you ought not to love even yourself for your own sake, but for His in whom your love finds its most worthy object, no other man has a right to be angry if you love him too for God's sake.
An ethics where "moral good" is some sort of distinct property unrelated to these other uses of good and which primarily applies only to human acts seems doomed to failure IMHO, because it cannot explain what this "good" has to do with anything else that is desirable and choice-worthy. — Count Timothy von Icarus
True enough. ↪Bob Ross and I understand the symbiosis on the one hand and the conceptual evolution on the other. — Mww
Is the contention that individuals always know what is best for them and what is true for them vis-á-vis ethics? — Count Timothy von Icarus
I mean it just in the common sense that we have the potential to be/do things we currently aren't/can't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And comes the notion that asking what is good, was never the right question to ask. — Mww
Knowing what’s best for me, on a much stricter sense, is an internal necessary truth, carries the implication of an internal authority alone, the escape from which is, of course, quite impossible. Being human, and given a specific theoretical exposition, yes, individuals always know what is best for himself, and he certainly knows what is true, because he alone is the cause of what he knows as best for him.
This is self-undermining: if we assume there are objective goods but that, according to you, we cannot parse them properly, then we would be incapable of having an ‘ongoing conversation’ where we ‘scrutinize our actions’ objectively or intersubjectively. All it would be then, is baseless inter-subjective agreement; which is nothing but a moral anti-realist theory which should be disregarded immediately. — Bob Ross
Eudaimonia is not identical to the english word ‘happiness’. In english, it can refer vaguely to both superficial, hedonic happiness and the deeper, eudaimonic happiness. Aristotle simply says that the best is eudaimonia, which is ‘soul-living-well’, and everyone wants this that are healthy and sane merely in virtue of being an living being. If you don’t want to live well, ceteris paribus, then something’s wrong with you. — Bob Ross
Sure, the distinction between pleasure and happiness is alive and relatively well presently, insofar as pleasure is the primary conception of the singular positive feeling, happiness being one of many subsumed under it. Right? Is that what you’re getting at? — Mww
….philosophers and teachers are worthless if we can never be mistaken about what is best for us? — Count Timothy von Icarus
And how might we explain the ubiquitous human experience of regret…. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Son: Having sex with prostitutes whenever I please gives me great pleasure.
Father: But what about happiness? Will it make you happy? — Leontiskos
Do you really think cocaine should be legal and prostitution leads to happiness? — Leontiskos
For me it is the act we are questioning and whether this should or should not provide a person with satisfaction — Tom Storm
So you're just saying things you don't believe to be true. That's called lying. — Leontiskos
With that being said, I rather think it is the reason for the act needing the closest examination. It is, after all, my act, determined by my reason, so I am the act’s causality — Mww
I'm somewhat skeptical of this idea, but I understand its attractions and history.superficial personal gratifications, mere desires. — Mww
I wonder however you arrived at this? Name calling too. That's called strange. — Tom Storm
For example, why do we prohibit cocaine as a society? — Leontiskos
:wink:Son: I think so. Certainly happier than you in your passive-aggressive and destructive marriage. :wink: — Tom Storm
Where did the cocaine come in to the conversation? I thought they were talking about prostitution...
But when a few drugs were decriminalised in Canberra a year ago, it was predicted to be the begining of the end.... It wasn't. — Banno
There’s nothing inherently wrong with the pleasure cocaine can provide. Many people I've known use it a few times a year with great satisfaction and wellbeing. Addiction to coke however is a problem. But so is an addiction to hard work. So is an addition to alcohol, which can also be used responsibly, with great happiness and pleasure. — Tom Storm
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