Can you explain the difference?I don't find what one should do is synonymous with what one is morally required to do... — Hyper
...and now you are starting to do ethics...If evolution does not tell us what to do, what does? — Questioner
Becasue it is the right thing to do...I can see no benefit in this. If our greatest source of pleasure is to spend time with those we love, why would we want to cut that out of our lives? — Questioner
Well, humans have a habit of not doing what is supposedly 'determined".This comes down to to what you believe is the biggest determinant of human behavior — Questioner
And it might well be that our moral duty is to fight against this supposed hard-wiring. We might deconstruct society, or remove ourselves from it for the Good. Whatever you mean by "hard-wired", the choice remains.We are neurologically hard-wired to form bonds. — Questioner
I'm happy to deny that people have an essence. It's an outmoded notion.To deny the need for human bonding is to deny our very essence. — Questioner
If you decide for yourself what you should so, then you decide for yourself what you ought do. SO we agree ought need not be external. Good.Okay, the opposite to "external judgement" is deciding for myself what I should do, and I'm always going to think that what I do is the thing that I should do. — Questioner
And that might be a good thing...Well, that would require changing who we are as humans. — Questioner
That's not right, as the mere existence of antinatalism and Voluntary Human Extinction as proposed moral doctrine shows.We know no other way. — Questioner
I'd argue that the good is to practical reason as truth is to theoretical reason (and as beauty is to aesthetic reason). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yes to the first, no the the last. It is open to us to ask if we ought remain social.We do not necessarily have to remain connected. We must first connect though. That is the way things are. Asking if it ought be that way is out of place. — creativesoul
Why? As in, what is it about "ought" that "implies external judgement"? See Creative's comment and my reply.I am having trouble with this word "ought." That implies external judgement — Questioner
And yet the question "is it good to do those things which contribute to the group, and keep your place in it secure" is meaningful.I have already defined what "good behavior" is. It's all those behaviors which contribute to the group, and keep your place in it secure. — Questioner
But being an outlier does not make them wrong, and terms such as "mental illness" are themseves normative.There are always outliers. — Questioner
Good question. Why not?Why? — Questioner
Why ought we survive? Consider antinatalism and Voluntary Human Extinction, both touted as ethical positions.A species' survival ultimately depends on individual survival, and of course reproduction — Questioner
I don't see how. Why should we do as evolution says?...we can also consider that they provide insights into how we should behave. — Seeker25
You are not obligated to answer my criticisms of your beliefs. .I am not going to address any of your lies — Brendan Golledge
Well, no. There are examples of folk who have turned their back on society and walked away. Check out the biography of Mark May. Perhaps we ought fight the "hard wiring"...We are hard-wired to connect. — Questioner
The retort "you are virtue signalling" is quite insipid. It is much the same as the child's outraged cry of "You can't tell me what to do!"Metaethics and virtue signaling go hand in hand. — baker
I'll ask the question again. Ought we try to become "the highest level of being human"; or ought we do what is good?IMO, the highest level of being human is to be your most true, authentic self. This means getting the most in touch with your natural instincts, with your "wild knowing." The question becomes, does this coincide with doing right or doing wrong? — Questioner
Well, yes, that's kinda the point.¬p ⊬ □¬(p ∧ JBp) — Michael
Yep. With the consequences set out in the SEP article:That's been done. — Michael
The debates surrounding the proper characterization of semantic anti-realism go far beyond the scope of this entry. As for the knowability proof itself, there continues to be no consensus on whether and where it goes wrong.
Some do. Good for them. The question of whether they are right remains open.The antirealist claims that there are unknown truths but that all unknown truths of the appropriate kind1 are knowable. With respect to ontology, there are unverified truths but there are no verification-transcendent truth conditions. — Michael
That, Michael, remains an open question. You misrepresent my position. Again, I am suggesting that different logics might have application in different contexts; that we can adopt a realist approach in some circumstances and an antirealist approach in other circumstances; that it is not all-or-nothing.it neither claims nor entails that all truths are known — Michael
Yep. You have difficulty with logic.I dont agree that life and desire work in that "logical" way — Gregory
Every second is a past but the present remains — Gregory
I lost my husband 3 years ago to MS. The last couple years of his life were very difficult. At one point, as he was having a lot of trouble making a transfer, I said to him, "Tired of this life?"
He replied, "No, this life is good. It's this body I am tired of." — Questioner
You get what you desire? So that if you get poor outcomes, it's becasue that is what you desire?As the spirit desires so it has — Gregory
Can one truly have a choice in remaining ignorant as the very state is a state of not knowing what they ate avoiding? — Benj96
Your experience is as valid as anyone's.... i am only speaking from my own experience. — Questioner
It is worth considering what can be said about what we ought do as well as what I ought do. How should we set things up, collectively? See for instance Rawls veil of ignorance.I guess it depends on the person... — Questioner
And again, is the goal to achieve "the highest level of being human", or just to do what is right?There is also the philosophical tradition that to reach the highest level of being human was to live a virtuous life. — Questioner
That's the right response to the OP."Should we do good?" Of course, we should do good. — Questioner
That might be so, but it is important not to conclude that what is the right thing to do is what makes you feel good.I always feel good when I do the right thing. — Questioner
Then you are choosing not to make ethical considerations. You assume that how things are is how they ought be, a recipe for stagnation.This question seems moot, since we do. — Questioner
Why ought one contribute to our survival?One ought to do good because it contributes to their survival. — Questioner
Sure. Ought we?As mentioned, we operate on a system of rewards an punishments. — Questioner
The point is that "one ought do good" is no more informative than "one ought do what one ought do" or "doing good is good".It's not giving a reason for doing good. — Questioner
This ignores human nature. It's akin to saying, "Do this because I said so." — Questioner
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. — Hyper
Are you saying this is invalid? I don't think so.This is not how modal possibility works. — Michael
~p→~◇Kp ↔︎ ◇Kp → p. — Banno
◇Kp means ◇(p ∧ JBp), where JBp means that p is justifiably believed. ◇(p ∧ JBp) does not entail p and so ◇Kp does not entail p. — Michael
No. Context.So you're an anti-realist about counterfactuals? — Michael
This somewhat begs the question, since of course the antirealist wants the commonplace, that there are things we don't know, to be true. The issue here is how to formulate antirealism so that it is constant with there being things we don't know.The antirealist allows for p ∧ ¬Kp, regardless of what Fitch might think. — Michael
You can also find statistics that say the exact opposite. — Brendan Golledge
There there is no evidence to support this, and considerable evidence to the contrary.I think patriarchy is a good thing, because there's usually no one who will love his family more than the father. — Brendan Golledge
Domestic violence is a gendered crime, with women being much more likely than men to be the victims of violence and to experience a range of associated harms such as homelessness, assault-related injury and death — Female perpetrated domestic violence: Prevalence of self-defensive and retaliatory violence
So, you are not here to have your convictions questioned. Fine.Also, you did not even accurately represent my argument, so I'm not going to argue with you anymore. — Brendan Golledge
You again did not address this.Notice that ↪Brendan Golledge did not address the more pressing critique, that yet again, we have someone claiming that what is the case is what ought be the case — Banno
This is Schopenhauer. Knowing that it's true, not wondering, but knowing, is part of an altered state. — frank
I'm pretty confident it isn't.I don't know if that's an answerable queston. — Wayfarer
As do I. offered a rational strategy, but was dismissed rather summarily. Feels seem to be what folk want, rather than thinks. That's fine, since the thinks will only lead to aporia, which feels unsettling.I think that's rather simplistic. — Wayfarer