I’m suggesting something like the trolley problem except you’re the person that has to die for a larger number to live. — Captain Homicide
(No throwing the fat guy under the trolley, unless he's controlling its downward hurtle.) — Vera Mont
Maybe ask yourself the question of whether handwashing rose to the level of a "moral act" during COVID-19. — Leontiskos
Nobody is expected to argue about anything, but everyone is expected to provide arguments for their points of view, beliefs and the statements they make. — Sir2u
Nobody knows what they would do in that situation. If it happens, you do what your instinct dictates, which you either do not survive or regret for the rest of your life. Unless you're a psychopath.The people in this situation aren’t attacking you but you are still forced to choose between killing them or sacrificing yourself. — Captain Homicide
Would it be moral to kill two or more people to save yourself even though their lives outnumber yours? — Captain Homicide
My question is how does one know when that is the case - ie they're chatting sh*t. And to the contrary, when they really do know what they're talking about. — Benj96
Yet if bad personal hygiene surpassed a certain threshold, such as when it would cause others to become physically sick, it would then be deemed "immoral." — Leontiskos
And this is an arbitrary distinction, which is why cleanliness may be next to godliness, but filthiness is not next to satanism.No sound moral philosophy makes arbitrary distinctions. — Leontiskos
They usually mean something like : "That gives rise to another question"How many people who use “begging the question” actually know what it means? — Mikie
Not everything in human physiology or psychology is divided on strictly moral grounds. Some things are just embarrassing, or show weakness, or present one in an unfavourable light. Overeating is not immoral and we who indulge in too much good food don't regard ourselves as sinners, but still don't like to be regarded as fat. Concern for one's health is not immoral, but people don't like to identify as hypochondriacs. There is nothing immoral about lax personal hygiene, but nobody likes to be called Pigpen.If you don't want to be the kind of person that does X, then by definition you deem X immoral. — Leontiskos
What about vines that choke the life out of trees in order to blossom and spread - is there an ethics we should look for there? — Fire Ologist
Yes. So we can use that as an excuse for acting like other animals. And when we choose to act as if we owned all the other animals, we claim superiority.We are animals too. — Fire Ologist
Yes. They can. Lions can't. People can also determine to what degree their ethical judgment affects their actions, each according to their inclination.People create ethics and can apply it to everything they do, such as how they kill animals to eat. — Fire Ologist
The point though, is that another visionary just takes up the idea, and actually takes charge of enacting policy. — Metaphysician Undercover
I didn't say 'do not move toward; I said they lacked the power.You make the blanket generalization of assuming that those who have visions, but do not move toward bringing their visions to policy — Metaphysician Undercover
Nope, didn't say that, either. I didn't say all visionaries are good, only that the good ones are not in charge.are "good",
Not 'move toward'; seize the power to do so, and yes, many of those are bad.and those visionaries who move toward enacting the policies are evil.
There is a world of difference between active reasoning and wishing to consider oneself reasonable. That difference manifests most obviously in their choice of information sources. If their inclination is to make reasoned decisions, they pay attention to all available evidence without prejudice, weigh the options and yes, their opinion and habits may change. In fact, many have https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2022/11/vegetarianism-rise-fall-world-chart/But I think people's inclinations can be affected by arguments if they are a reasonable person, which I think most people are (or believe themselves to be). — xorn
This, I have yet to see in the public arena.But on average, more truthful arguments receive some advantage from their truthfulness. — xorn
I don't see how this significantly differs from when the person is alive. — Metaphysician Undercover
Certainly, but I cannot call them benevolent.All those mentioned, Paul, Lenin, and Robespierre, are visionaries in their own right. — Metaphysician Undercover
Mussolini qualifies on one count, anyway. So that's all right, just so somebody has a vision of some kind and the power to impose it on others. Sorry I can't respect them all equally.That reality is, the truth of the matter which you refuse to respect, and that is that visionaries really do enact policies, and where they derive their ideas from is not relevant to this truth. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is arbitrary. Even when we encode it in law, it's still arbitrary: the line keeps moving in response to public sentiment.Even if you have different values, it's hard to value human well-being and draw the line at animals. You certainly can draw that line, but it seems arbitrary. — xorn
my italicsWith this in mind do you think there things that aren’t immoral but you still shouldn’t want to be the kind of person that does them even if you’re the only person affected? — Captain Homicide
... the world of believers. That is not how it works in the world of atheists. We don't think of our ourselves or one another asit is not me making a judgment about people; I am just describing how disclaiming belief works in the world. — Antony Nickles
The way words work in the world is pretty much any way people choose to use them. Words are helpless in the hands and mouths and minds of manipulators.lost to the particular cause, or hopeless, maybe for anything going the way they hoped someone they trusted would do, but also by those that feel they know everything and have complete control over the world. — Antony Nickles
Yes, it is absolutely relevant. Once dead, the visionary has no control or ownership of his idea. Anybody can 'interpret' it, subsection it, misapply it, misdirect it any way they want. Paul ran with an idea Jesus had and made a complete hash of it. Lenin did similarly with Marx. And poor old Rousseau did not fare any better at the hands of Robespierre. The ones who enact are not the visionaries and not usually benevolent and the 'influence' is not reflected very well in the actuality that ensues.Do they make social policy, determine legal, ethical and moral codes?
No, never."
Clearly, whether the social policy is enacted before or after the person is dead, is irrelevant to the question of whether these people are the ones who "make" the policies. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why are you telling me this? I'm the one who has been attempting to explain that human ethical values evolved along with us, from the social systems of our ancestors, all the way back to insects; that they originate from the need to keep an orderly state of affairs going.Nature isn't "the peaceable kingdom", but it isn't entirely "red in tooth and claw" either. — BC
Too late! About 70 years too late.Please don't leap to any semblance you may see in human male behavior. — BC
They communicate, and there is a structure to their language, just as there is to ours. The language of dogs consists of sounds, body stance, gestures of head, paws and tail, facial expressions, ear and hair erection. They are quite capable of reprimanding one another for rule breaking, status offenses and breaches of etiquette - and of responding appropriately to such a reprimand.Dogs and cats don't "talk" in this.....or do they? — Astrophel
Yes, but you see, this begs the question: what is this social cohesion all about, essentially? — Astrophel
So, let Philosophy inquire to its tiny heart's content, it won't find anything deeper than survival as a basis of basic values. Once you're dead, you stop asking questions.So, philosophy wants to inquire as to the nature of value. — Astrophel
By the 'one' who can't conceive, I have to assume you mean yourself. The value of things is tertiary. The value of civic responsibility is secondary; the value of social cohesion is primary. The value of keeping peace in the community - whether through the protection of property or of institutions or of traffic laws or of civil deneanour - is far more important than how anybody feels about their stuff.for one cannot even conceive of a moral prohibition without conceiving value. — Astrophel
That's as may be. I'm not the one who ate all those textbooks. But it's enough for a derail that's nowhere close to answering the OP.All you say is not wrong at all. It is simply not philosophy. — Astrophel
The internet.what is the underlying basis that makes this discussion even possible? — Astrophel
Those are simply examples, the wine and the chairs. This was clear, I thought. — Astrophel
It doesn't need an 'ethical dimension' - whatever an ethical dimension is - because the will to survive is the root cause of the need for social systems, moral codes, ethical and legal frameworks.It [survival] is a term with no ethical dimension to it. — Astrophel
Possibly. But the basic valuing is not of the material possession, but of the survival of individuals, which are dependent on the survival of the social unit. The secondary value is adding to the welfare of the community, and thus promoting the welfare of each member. Under secondary-value ethics, we could include assisting the elderly, protecting the very young, cutting down noxious weeds, setting a good example for children, and ordinary everyday courtesy.No valuing, no ethics. — Astrophel
This makes it sound like it depends on me how language works; as if it depends on you how what you said, says what it does. — Antony Nickles
I don't see where the rationality of language requires you to read an entirely different word from the one that was written. When I write 'your interpretation' and you read 'just your opinion', that is not forced upon you by the structure or function of language; that is a choice.So to suggest that the implications of what you say are just my opinion, is to overlook the rationality of language, again. — Antony Nickles
That's one hell of a big inference about a whole hell of a lot people you know nothing about.Thus why “I do not believe in God” is said by those lost to the particular cause, or hopeless, maybe for anything going the way they hoped someone they trusted would do, but also by those that feel they know everything and have complete control over the world. — Antony Nickles
Not arbitrarily, but to fill in an oversight. I had neglected to point out earlier that people make national policy and religious doctrine while they are alive.I think you are wrong, and these people did effect changes within their lifetimes. However that little disagreement is irrelevant because the condition of "in their lifetime" has been arbitrarily added by you anyway — Metaphysician Undercover
Could you give some examples of benevolent visionaries who made national policy or church doctrine? — Vera Mont
In ancient times we could begin with Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas. And since these three were greatly influenced by Plato, we could designate him as having a secondary role. In more modern times we might consider philosophers like Hobbes, Locke, and even Marx. — Metaphysician Undercover
In ancient times we could begin with Aristotle, Augustine, and Aquinas. And since these three were greatly influenced by Plato, we could designate him as having a secondary role. In more modern times we might consider philosophers like Hobbes, Locke, and even Marx. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you are not arguing the case put before you. — Astrophel
But the term as "the rock bottom foundation of awareness" has no value in a discussion about ethics if there is nothing IN the term that is inherently ethical. — Astrophel
For some people, it's no use at all. But for the majority of living things, it's the primal drive. It doesn't need a specific utility: it is the rock-bottom foundation of awareness and effort; the first cause by which all things needful, useful and beneficial are measured.But then, what good is survival? — Astrophel
Pink herring, conflating a careless figure of speech with the primal instinct. The lawn chair was never alive. You might go out into the storm to save your neighbour or your dog, because life matters - fence-posts don't.Survival as such applies to anything, as in, I hope the lawn chair survives the storm — Astrophel
That's backward. What makes anything ethical is its contribution to survival.The ideas expressed above try to show what it is that makes our survival (and those of animals) ethical at all. — Astrophel
I don't think it needs to be exposed any more times than I've already done.For that the essence of ethics has to be exposed. — Astrophel
Therefore, an inquiry into the nature of ethics must look here, in the concreteness of our existence for the essence of ethics. — Astrophel
Never say "never". — Metaphysician Undercover
It's true; I have not made an exhaustive study of it. Could you give some examples of benevolent visionaries who made national policy or church doctrine?You appear to be not well educated in the history of humanity. — Metaphysician Undercover
"Good" is clearly defined by a larger context than the social context. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not their lack of ethical principles; their social mores, which are not articulated as an abstract concept. Everything grows out of all that went before.You seem to be saying that the world of animals and their lack of ethical principles provides the substratum for the analysis of our world's ethics. — Astrophel
I can't possibly show you the entire spectrum of social behaviours in other species. Here is a starting point.This has to be shown, not assumed. — Astrophel
That was in answer to :And "every legal code ever devised" really says nothing about the generational ground of ethics. — Astrophel
Not to:take the moral obligation not to bludgeon, burn, rip and tear, or otherwise offend and afflict another's living body,....etc. Is this morally exhaustively conceived in the social institutions that would express the prohibition? — Astrophel
It's the only way you're going to get an ethical standard beyond that set by human societies.A supreme being would be question begging, for one has to first show what it is about ethical matters that would even warrant such a thing. — Astrophel
Is this morally exhaustively conceived in the social institutions that would express the prohibition? — Astrophel
without moral sanction or legal repercussion. In most human cultures, no such prohibition applies to other species, which are considered legitimate prey. Many cultures have permitted or do still permit some unfavoured members of their own society to be treated that way.to bludgeon, burn, rip and tear, or otherwise offend and afflict another's living body, — Astrophel
If you profess faith in a supreme being, you are required to believe there is.Or is there more to it than this set of rules, laws, sentiments toward, and so forth, that the put forward this prohibition? — Astrophel