But you're still thinking about it like a reasonable human being and not an ideologue. — fdrake
Our behaviour is relevant to ethics and what causes us to behave (that is, take an action) is desire. — Bert Newton
Ah yes, 3 minutes into the video and Cuck Philosophy brings up Hume's Law. In defence of Harris I do believe he has a compelling argument against this. When pressed, Harris replies that, "human beings value wellbeing" and goes on to say that therefore we can have a science of wellbeing (the moral sphere) — Bert Newton
Harris adds that this is no different to our approach to any other science. Why study medicine? You have a headache therefore you ought to take pain relief medicine. But why? Why ought a human being take pain relief medicine? — Bert Newton
No, there is no law in the universe compelling us to do those things (if you wish) and even if we removed them all and went back to living in caves still, the most fundamental value we would have left then is wellbeing. Making Harris' argument even stronger. If you look deeper you will find that wellbeing is inherently implied in the is-ought of these examples but few seem to be able to grasp the axiomatic ought. — Bert Newton
I would ask you, if you take an issue with Harris' claims and Hume's Law: WHY ought you take medicine when you are sick? — Bert Newton
"Natural" and "unnatural" are just words, but words need to refer to consistent and non-contradictory things and relationships for them to mean anything or to be useful. We could use any terms that you like, as long as the terms are applied consistently. That is my point - that your application of the term "unnatural" is inconsistent with observations made of other animals. What is the relationship between humans and the world - natural or unnatural? — Harry Hindu
Chimps building rockets to space would be unnatural in that their biology doesn't allow for those types of behaviors. So "unnatural" would actually mean "impossible" or "imaginary". — Harry Hindu
If the processes that created humans and all other animals is natural, and the things that animals do is natural, and humans are animals, then what use is the word, "unnatural"? — Harry Hindu
If we discovered aliens that also have large brains and opposable thumbs and they also had instances of mass-suicide and practiced philosophy, would you then agree that those things are natural - as in natural behaviors given our biology? — Harry Hindu
No. That was my argument - that humans have unique behaviors, but then I also showed that other animals do to, and that was a link that I tried to show in that humans really aren't different than other animals in that each species has unique behaviors that define it as a species. — Harry Hindu
Again, you would be singling out humans for no good reason other than you believe that humans are somehow different from other species in having unique behaviors that define it as a species. — Harry Hindu
So saying that humans and other animals possess unique behaviors that define them as a species isn't saying anything about the world? — Harry Hindu
That is my point - that your application of the term "unnatural" is inconsistent with observations made of other animals. — Harry Hindu
Then what is natural cant be anything and everything any other animal does. — Harry Hindu
What scientific theory states that philosophy and mass-suicide are unnatural?
Other animals don't have unique behaviors that define them as a species? Are all of these behaviors unnatural?
https://www.science101.com/bizarre-animal-behaviors-prove-nature-metal/ — Harry Hindu
How is the statement that modern civilization is unnatural falsifiable? It seems to me that we are simply categorizing the world. It's just that your categorization isn't consistent because it is subjective, and it is subjective because you think humans are special because you're human. — Harry Hindu
Oh, be prepared, he has since changed his mind on that and is now in more agreement with Harris, as you will see. — Bert Newton
Are you arguing for objective morality or a subjective one? — MadWorld1
What causes desire is the conviction of pleasure-at-the-end, what causes that is irrelevant as then you are going down a causal chain that has no meaning to the conscious experience: dopamine, nervous system, genes, egg and sperm, grandparents, chimpanzees, unicellular organism, the big bang. — Bert Newton
It seems to me that one must prove not only the validity of the axiomatic ought but also its nature. — MadWorld1
yes, the reason why we do anything is determinism but in ethics we are dealing with conscious states, good and bad, right and wrong behavior, and for that we only need to look so far as pleasure being the prime mover. — Bert Newton
One of the central anarcho-primitivist claims (embodied in the very name!) is that anthropological and paleontological evidence suggests that hunter-gatherer societies generally lacked imposed hierarchical structure and that individuals (even children) were free to act as they wished. Selfish or self-important behavior and attitudes were dealt with by the tribe shunning individuals who manifested such traits. — Janus
I'm very new to this, no expert. If you have read The Moral Landscape then you have a firm foundation, however I think Alex O'connor and Steven Woodford take it to a new level. Watch this presentation by Alex The Good Delusion if you're really interested in this, and will no doubt explain it better than I have. — Bert Newton
This is where you are misunderstanding.
Behavior, or "doing something", or "acting on a desire", is motivated by the belief that such action will give you the most pleasure (as opposed to other actions). Here's the point you need to grasp: — Bert Newton
I would argue that we don't actually want to survive, we want to experience pleasure, survival just allows it. What about suicide? The selfish gene has failed there, but pleasure has dictated once again. Also, the selfish gene isn't actually selfish according to Dawkins, it can be very altruistic, it does whatever it can to survive. Dawkins actually regrets calling it that and prefers to call it "the immortal gene". — Bert Newton
Funny you would say such a thing, I received a PM today from Outlander demanding that I “hush” because he fears that you are suicidal. — praxis
Is that a hoax or should I be the one reassuring you? — praxis
Because the why is involuntary, it forces the ought. There is no "what we ought to do", we are forced to act on pleasure, then the question arises, is this the best way to seek pleasure? — Bert Newton
Yes, but the tool the selfish genes adopt to do so is the pleasure reward. I think they're linked, if the purpose is to survive then it's wrong to kill (according to the gene). Pleasure means survival, harm means death. The only problem with the selfish gene though is that it carries this wacky and seemingly unnecessary thing called consciousness. We are not just "survival machines" as Dawkins puts it but conscious ones at that. — Bert Newton
A wave of cortisol is the feeling of anxiety. A wave of dopamine tells us that the belief we hold about our action is the right course. Brain states affect behaviour, right or wrong behaviour. Aren't we now in the field of ethics? — Bert Newton
True. We could be talking about different things. You seem to be implying that mass-suicide by gassing is unnatural, as if because humans do something that other animals don't do that makes it unnatural. — Harry Hindu
Again, you would be singling out humans for no good reason other than you believe that humans are somehow different from other species in having unique behaviors that define it as a species. — Harry Hindu
But that's part of the suffering too... — schopenhauer1
stories need defending — praxis
The social needs are an invention of culture or at least lose their weight with time. — Heiko
The thing you may then ask in this forum are if it is a bad thing that you do not care and basically care a sh*t about everything as long as you get your steak on sundays as that really is something existential. — Heiko
To lose firm ground for once! To float! To err! To be mad! - that was part of the paradise and debauchery of former ages, whereas our bliss is like that of the shipwrecked man who has climbed ashore and is standing with both feet on the firm old earth - marvelling because it does not bob up and down.
If your mental gymnastics were more entertaining I might engage with more of them, but I haven’t completely disengaged. — praxis
I don’t know what to make of your irrational aversion to narratives. Did your mother only read unpleasant stories to you as a child? — praxis
And if you don’t want to dispute my assertion about the Trump administration favoring the rich and powerful over the working class that is your choice. — praxis
I’m afraid that the question "what is really natural?" is beyond the scope of my intellectual capabilities, so I won’t even try it. That’s why I asked for books that could convince me to think differently. At the moment I’m just seeing the world through the values I figure to be right, what to me feels instinctively true, and through that lens the modern way of life isn’t natural; multiculturalism isn’t natural, (excessive) individualism isn’t natural, genderless society isn’t natural, our sedentary lifestyles aren’t natural and so on. — MadWorld1
Well, that's what we are pondering. So far, people like Sam Harris have made a compelling argument for objective moral grounds. — Bert Newton
Harris uses the analogy of putting your hand in fire. Consider Humes Law with this example:
Your hand IS in the fire therefore you OUGHT to pull it out
One can see how ridiculous this is, the ought is inherent in nature, an axiomatic ought. Likewise, human beings don't have a choice when it comes to acting on the desire that they believe will give the most happiness, it's a neurological function of the brain; dopamine, serotonin, physiological functions. — Bert Newton
This is false.
— ssu
So why would Madworld be inclined to vote for a candidate based on the criteria that they support late-stage abortion restrictions?
We need a better class of trolls around here. — praxis
No reason for self loathing really. — Benkei
No sense of humour. Check. Obviously a girl then. — Benkei
So you're one of those happily oppressed types that want men to take the lead and can't handle the moral conundrums freedom hands to you so you prefer comfortable repression. Good for you. — Benkei
For some reason this isn't a hot topic in any Nordic country (I could be wrong, but I haven't heard about abortion clinics set on fire or the thing...) — ssu
The r/whoosh continues. :yawn: — praxis
My stating that I was parroting a narrative is indeed an admission of narrative recitation and proves your point, such as it is. Your reading comprehension is excellent. — praxis
So you hope for a Trump-like win in your country in ten years? Tax cuts for the rich, a judicial system further skewed to favor the rich and powerful, deregulation and the associated degradation of environment, a severely polarized political body, etc? Good luck with that. — praxis
If anything I’m parroting a Trumpian narrative. He prides himself on cutting taxes, deregulation, installing conservative Supreme Court judges, and the like. — praxis
You still haven’t disputed any of my allegedly controversial assertions, by the way. — praxis
No, you admitted ignorance of American politics. — praxis
Just did a quick search and it looks like they’ve managed to reduce legal immigration by about 11%. Good enough? I assume you’re cool with bungling illegal immigration, appropriating billions of tax payers dollars (no pesos :sad: ) via executive order (because a minority support the effort), and the longest government shutdown in American history. — praxis
Nuclear families in Scandinavia are disintegrating? Do you guys send your old folks to care facilities also? — praxis
Why do you think Trump would be more successful at this than Biden? But the more urgent question is why doesn’t Scandinavia have any restrictions on late-stage abortion? — praxis
No no, this is one of those manly men whose manliness is threatened by gays and trans people. — Benkei
No need to apologize. Be as hostile as you like. We’re both adults. — praxis
If anything I’m parroting a Trumpian narrative. He prides himself on cutting taxes, deregulation, installing conservative Supreme Court judges, and the like. — praxis
No, I would like to know why you would support a “leader” like Trump in your country rather than a leader like Biden. — praxis
It is a fact that this works against the interests of the working class in many significant respects. — praxis
Oh goody, I'm just dying to figure out why you'd vote for a racist. Oh wait, no, don't care. — Benkei
They’re not controversial. You haven’t contested them yourself, in fact, which lead me to believe that you accept them. — praxis
I do believe this is a hostile query, good Sir, shame on you. — praxis
You’re contradicting yourself and in that way I can see a Trumpian affinity, but in reasoning, you say that you’re not a fan of that which you would choose to move towards. — praxis
Genes propagate when the carriers survive, merely. Our species is a significant line differentiation, but it’s only one layer out of many possible distinctions. We’re naturally more concerned with human flourishing than that of chimps, and then closer to home, we’re more concerned with national flourishing, then perhaps regional, religious, or political party flourishing, and then family. Does anyone regard all of humanity as they do their own family? Maybe some do ideologically but when push comes to shove genes always win favor. — praxis
So you hope for a Trump-like win in your country in ten years? Tax cuts for the rich, a judicial system further skewed to favor the rich and powerful, deregulation and the associated degradation of environment, a severely polarized political body, etc? Good luck with that. — praxis
in Christianity they circumcise — Bert Newton
What if?.....We use science to find the cause of a harmful action and dismiss highly subjective claims in favour of objective facts? — Bert Newton