Brains are insufficient for morals. Worms have brains. Worms have no morals.
Emotion is insufficient for morals. Dogs have emotions. Dogs have no morals.
That which is insufficient for morals cannot possibly the source of morals. — creativesoul
Astute observation my friend~ It has a PB feeling to it~ :flower: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The addict as addict, then, is a personification of immorality.
— tim wood
That's daft and doesn't really make sense. If the level of insight into their own condition is impaired by their addiction, then how does that make them culpable for the alleged immorality they are going about doing with their lives? — Wallows
And what does this have to do with the source of morals, besides nothing? — Merkwurdichliebe
I approached the topic from the angle of neurobiology. It can explain a heck of a lot about emotion
— S
Such as? — praxis
Why don't they present evidence from neurobiology like I done did? — Merkwurdichliebe
Amygdala
The amygdalas are two almond-shaped masses of neurons on either side of the thalamus at the lower end of the hippocampus. When it is stimulated electrically, animals respond with aggression. And if the amygdala is removed, animals get very tame and no longer respond to things that would have caused rage before. But there is more to it than just anger: When removed, animals also become indifferent to stimuli that would have otherwise have caused fear and even sexual responses.
You aren't a neurobiologist. — Merkwurdichliebe
It means both? — tim wood
In sum, he went so far as to agree that the immorality of taking illegal drugs "depends." He didn't say on what. — tim wood
Which means yes, except for exceptions. — tim wood
You wrote, "your god nonsense is not on the same level."
God is not a god or any god, these are different and incompatible terms. In Richard Dawkins' God is Too Complex to Exist, Dick is not talking about a god or any god. Is Thor too complex to exist? Of course not.
I'm really surprised in just the last couple of weeks I've been a part of this community the argument is over whether or not "gods" exist. — Daniel Cox
Why don't they present evidence from neurobiology like I done did? — Merkwurdichliebe
You have a problem answering simple questions? I personally believe you know perfectly well there is an immoral component to taking illegal drugs, but acknowledging that would present you a problem you do not care to deal with. It's called denial, and that you'd go to the trouble in this forum is itself interesting. Why do we not suspend this, so you can work on that. — tim wood
Well, trying to reduce the whole issue to a matter of taste or preference really isn't going to fly in tim wood's mind. As to why this hasn't been pointed out already baffles me. — Wallows
I agree that many, many questions about drug use legal or illegal are not simple. I am also mostly incompetent to comment on most of those questions. Those I leave to you. But the question of the OP is not such a question. And we're not going anywhere until you can see that - that it, at least, is a simple question. — tim wood
Well, my second living deals with synthesizing and distributing novel research chemicals from China to the world, so I'm not sure why this would give me any authority on the matter of assessing the merits of taking XYZ drug as does your non-facetious claim that you have memorized a great deal of info on the effects drugs have. — Wallows
Only a mum! But if you harmed her, would that be a bad thing, even arising, depending on the why you harmed her, to the immoral? — tim wood
Every single time I have heard that said, it was in a circumstance where the speaker had gone to the trouble of making his business the business of other people. One example will suffice, and will illustrate all: the man beating the woman. Know what he said? You'll never guess. I'll simplify it and clean it up. "Mind your own business." Is that your none of your business? — tim wood
And you keep attributing to me an extremity of view I am not representing here. The question of the OP goes to in a sense the existence of the immorality in question. Is it? Or isn't it? You appear completely deaf to this question. Try the question I just asked Wallow just above - I'm betting you're clever enough to find it. Of course experience tells me you won't touch it with a ten foot pole. — tim wood
Lol, then be facetious. Ain't none of my business what you take to get you through the day or night.
Anyway, if one assumes such a nonchalant attitude towards drugs, then all I can say is so be it. — Wallows
Haha, I can't tell that. It's just a forum and I can't surmise what or who you may be. — Wallows
Yeah; but, some (not all) drugs are dangerous and irresponsible to use. So, I can see some merit to his argument about harm reduction. Funny enough, you might like this place called "Bluelight", a forum for drug users, which is all about harm reduction. So, even the most staunch drug users are aware of the fact that drugs can be a bad thing or at least can be harmful to the user if not others related or close to a drug user... — Wallows
I don't think painting with a wide brush is apt here — Wallows
Ok, then let me change my judgment, I believe it is a ethical right to murder and rape. — Merkwurdichliebe
Prove it. — Merkwurdichliebe
Electrons and neutrons are very scientific.
But, tables and chairs are certainly more practical. — Merkwurdichliebe
Then how is it that I can have no emotion concerning murder, and rape, but nevertheless still judge it to be morally wrong. — Merkwurdichliebe
A non-neurobiological explanation for the source of morals would include historical or societal explanations that go far beyond the scope of neurobiology. — Merkwurdichliebe
But if we only discuss it as an effect of neurobiology, we will never adequately understand the source of morals. — Merkwurdichliebe
Nah, you just can’t waste time with dummies and ideologues who can’t listen. — DingoJones
And this manner of discourse, in your estimation, constitutes philosophy? — EnPassant
I have already told you. Many physicists and philosophers argue, coherently, that space is intrinsically mathematical; mathematics enables space to exist. But where did mathematics come from if not from a mind? This is the so called Platonic view of mathematics. — EnPassant
But that does not mean you can place and extraordinary claim on the same level as delusion. — EnPassant
There are plenty things that cannot be shared but you can reasonably assert they are delusion purely on the basis that they cannot be argued for. You can refuse to believe an assertion but saying it is delusion or on the same level as delusion - well, that's a bit too much like Dawkins petulance for me. — EnPassant
As for 'reasonable' arguments. Many people speak glibly about what is 'rational' or 'reasonable' as if it was clearly understood what these words mean. Except on the most primitive level (science etc) we cannot agree on what these words mean. Indeed, much of philosophy is about trying to determine what is reasonable. A philosopher can present a seemingly reasonable argument and another, equally astute, philosopher can present a convincing counter argument. So how can reason be against itself? If we could understand what is reasonable we would know a great deal. — EnPassant
That is the short version. The argument is that mind precedes space and that must be God's mind. — EnPassant
Well, you should have taken me up on that x^2 point because I was leading up to evidence for God. — EnPassant
Simply saying it is a matter of reason is not saying much. What is reason? Is reason only something that can be shared through language? Who has a monopoly on what is reasonable? The very question about God can be answered simply if we can say for sure what is reasonable. Are you saying that something that cannot be shared is not reasonable? Like I said, if I had a thought about X this morning it is, for me reasonable to believe I was thinking about X. But I cannot share that reasonable conclusion because I cannot prove I had a thought about X. Does that mean my conclusion is no different from delusion? — EnPassant
Only from some people's point of view. Another theist would not put it on that footing. — EnPassant
I put an idea to the thread earlier. What do you think of the difference between reality and images of reality (or knowledge). Suppose you have x^2 over a given range. That produces a range of values, even an infinite range. Now, you can draw a graph x^2 on a piece of paper. What is the difference between the graph and the idea of x^2? The difference is that the idea is abstract knowledge, the graph is a physical image of the idea. But they look like entirely different things; one is ink and paper, the other is in the mind.
Why is it that 2D space can receive and display an idea? If it is possible for 2D space to manifest, accurately, a mathematical concept there must be some natural 'common reality' between space and math. If there were not natural similarity space could not display the graph.
What then is this common reality between mind and space? — EnPassant
"Your clan"? Who's that? — Merkwurdichliebe
And you want reasonable ground as evidence, of course you are asking for proof. — Merkwurdichliebe
Yes, true. And he probably has reasonable ground for his belief, just no positive proof. Have you two settled the question of whether or not you can know something and not be able to prove it? — Merkwurdichliebe
However, there is a way for EnPassant to distinguish between his faith and his belief, and that makes all the difference. — Merkwurdichliebe