No, not objective. But real! — Wayfarer
If that necessity is not a fact about the world then what is it a fact about? — Isaac
Something you're obviously having a great deal of trouble seeing. That is what this Aeon essay is about. As said, it's the substance of Descartes' famous argument, 'cogito ergo sum'. — Wayfarer
Our moral intuitions aren't developed to take into account far off risks or other people in the abstract. We pursue impartiality and abstraction by expressing everything in terms of money, which becomes a self perpetuating beast mostly out of our control (the Market) so that we don't have to feel anything about a decision, further divorcing it from morality. — Benkei
when human culture evolution really started is a bit in contention I'd say. — ChatteringMonkey
In the video Boethius linked to, Dr Suzuki compares economic growth with bacteria in a test tube that grow exponentially every minute. — ChatteringMonkey
the point at which we started spreading across the globe, a lot of megafauna did become extinct, and we did reshape whole ecosystems as we progressed into agriculture, domesticated species etc etc... — ChatteringMonkey
Surely there is a subject of experience. The brain doesn't experience anything, unless it is embodied. The reality of the subject of experience is what is at issue. — Wayfarer
the being, the subject of experience, doesn't have a referent *because* it's not objectively describable — Wayfarer
It's what must first exist in order for there to be any facts about the world. — Wayfarer
Notice that when you say 'it seems to you that ...', this statement assumes there must be a subject to whom something 'seems' to be the case. There can't be a seeming, without someone to whom it seems. — Wayfarer
That's the fatal flaw in all Dennett's blatherings about 'unconscious competence'. — Wayfarer
the first-person perspective is dismissed as being 'just a story', even though that perspective is required for there to be a story in the first place. Again, a glaring contradiction. — Wayfarer
it is an obvious mistake is to classify your first-person existence as 'a fact about the world'. It is not 'a fact about the world' at all. It's what must first exist in order for there to be any facts about the world. — Wayfarer
I wanna say part of the problem is inherent in human beings... it's evolutions fault that we will destroy us. — ChatteringMonkey
If forced to choose one institution, which would you choose as the most powerful in the world today? — Xtrix
are you claiming "what is it like to go sky-diving?" is something that needs to be eliminated? Or is nonsensical? — RogueAI
it is misconceived to suppose that one can circumscribe, let alone define, conscious experience in terms of there being something which it is like for a subject to have it. It does not matter whether ‘conscious experience’ is understood as ‘experience had while conscious’ or as ‘experience of which one is conscious’. The very expression ‘There is something it is like for a person to have it’ is malconstructed. The question from which it is derived ‘What is (or was) it like for you (or for A) to V?’ is a perfectly licit request for specification of one’s affective attitude at the time to the experience undergone, a specification of ‘how it is (or was) for one’. If there is an answer, then there is something which it is (or was) for you (or A) to V —namely ... (and here comes a specification of the attitudinal attribute). — Hacker
Seems contradictory. If anything can be framed by how much suffering it causes, then it seems to follow that every metric can be converted. All that's required is to measure the suffering caused by it's valence. — Isaac
The OP is available for confounding this demonstration. — Cheshire
So where does that even leave us? — ToothyMaw
if the dilemma is merely that which course of action causes less suffering then it isn't really a moral dilemma; it is a disagreement about facts about which course of action will cause less suffering. — ToothyMaw
Do you mean they disagree about the amount of suffering caused or whether or not minimizing suffering is a good objective? — ToothyMaw
If you define suffering as exclusively being an undesirable state of mind then it seems to me that not every metric can be converted to suffering, although almost anything could be seen to cause suffering. — ToothyMaw
That is how many moral dilemmas could be solved: choose the option that causes less suffering — ToothyMaw
What exactly do you attempt to eliminate in your "eliminative materialism"? — Olivier5
Why, the human mind gets eliminated, but not the productions of the human mind? — Olivier5
Isn't the entire canon of cognitive science part of what gets eliminated — Olivier5
That reads like mumbo-jumbo. I miss the part where anything mental gets "eliminated". Who are "we", if not some selves? — Olivier5
my intuition-based model of myself and my non-eliminated mind works really well. Why should I adopt another? — Olivier5
your eliminative materialist model is generated by neurons in your brain, like some sort of 'woo'? — Olivier5
running around like materialist chicken — Olivier5
Wherein I take my first exception to your comments: — Mww
I submit for your esteemed consideration, that that which could be cognized a priori, in constructing your “ready other parts of the mind in anticipation”.....is none other than an image we insert into the process, that serves as a rule to which the anticipated, must conform.
The stereotypical physicalist will adamantly decry the notion of images, maintaining instead the factual reality of enabled neural pathways, which translates to memory recall. Which is fine, might actually be the case, but I still “see” my memories, and science can do nothing whatsoever to convince me I don’t. — Mww
Lots of good stuff in your post, so thanks for all that. — Mww
He might have no particular problem with the default definition of truth, as the adequacy between a representation (or model) and what it attempts to represent (or model). But if he says something like that:
[My] model is just a relation between the data from sensory receptors and the behaviour appropriate to it to reduce the uncertainty involved in any interaction — Isaac
... I might start to enquire. — Olivier5
It does, if it pretends to be possibly true. — Olivier5
For one, there's no reason to assume any particular truth because truth remains undefined in your model. — Olivier5
whatever attracts me to particular models might draw me more toward ones which offer better fit than whatever attracts you to models. — Olivier5
It has the exact same chances of being true than any other neuronal noise, like Wayfarer's or mine... — Olivier5
The best shot you can arrive at is (in summary): "my neurons made some model of neuronal operation (eg Matter did it), which they kinda liked, and others will make other models (eg God did it) which their neurons will kinda like". — Olivier5
You explained that your neurons created an eliminative materialist model that looked good to your neurons, but that other neurons, e.g. mine, might create other models, which would not look good to your neurons. — Olivier5
So your model is some kind of noise generated by your neurons, which sounded good to your neurons. — Olivier5
Why, your eliminative materialist model generated by neurons in your brain. — Olivier5
If someone thought something harmful was actually good for them — schopenhauer1
Okay, so it all depends on what looks good to you. — Olivier5
I disagree; just because suffering is subjective doesn't mean we can't observe people's suffering; they can often times explain, quite explicitly, how they are suffering and how intensely; it really isn't nearly that nebulous. — ToothyMaw
But suffering can, in some ways, be quantified, because we all (usually) do not suffer in ways entirely unique; we can get a general idea of what it is like to lose a loved one even if we haven't. Like I said - people can report on what causes them suffering, and how intensely they are suffering, even if there are no strict units. — ToothyMaw
So how is following what 'seems best to me' not precisely relativism? — Isaac
It's not relativism if the person is a narcissist, or, specifically, an epistemic narcissist or egotist — baker
1. I present a moral theory.
2. You demonstrate that it can produce a permittable immoral act.
3. We agree the theory is flawed; but based on a shared theory that is unstated but seemingly understood. — Cheshire
Maybe, morality is too broad or nuanced to be decided by axioms; we might be making a type of grammar by pretending patterns are rules. — Cheshire
I have a preference to not suffer, and so does everyone else, so it should be avoided whenever possible — ToothyMaw
I can't think of any circumstances under which I would permit suffering if it could be avoided — ToothyMaw
What's the difference between a person who looks around and concludes God must have made it happen, and a guy who looks around and concludes matter must have made it happen? Both develop a model, right? — Olivier5
I'm not part of a team nor do I agree with Wayfarer on everything. — Manuel
I've got to give you credit for being so tenacious and articulate in the way you think about this topic. — Manuel
I suppose I could arbitrarily specify that suffering is inherently bad, and then adopt a negative utilitarian position. That would lead to an absolute morality I think, even if not objective. — ToothyMaw
Pedagogue or ideologue are not "roles" for philosophers (sophists, clergy) to play? Your examples mostly belong to pedagogy. — 180 Proof
Pedagogy and ideology – as I've pointed out as the business of philosophers, et al – are, in fact, significant elements of "enculturation" — 180 Proof
I just assume that minimizing suffering is pretty much indisputably right, because that is how I and many people other feel — ToothyMaw
the few theists I've proposed it to just claimed the dilemma was "ridiculous" and rejected it. — ToothyMaw
Pedagogy and ideology – asa I've pointed out as the business of philosophers, et al – are, in fact, significant elements of "enculturation". — 180 Proof
when we test all our moral theories it's by demonstrating they produce a judgement that is inconsistent with some intuitive moral theory that takes precedent. — Cheshire
Correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think I've shown any inconsistencies in my position. We just have different ethical foundations. — Down The Rabbit Hole
If they believe in absolute morality then they won't simply posit that ethics is relative - which is often equivalent to permitting just about anything within the scope of different cultures having different ethical beliefs. — ToothyMaw
It seems to me that unless the application of the absolute morality posited caused more net suffering - assuming a negative utilitarian stance - advising a company to do what is absolutely right would cause less suffering. — ToothyMaw
you have worked in a field for which as a whole, diagnosing people is an important activity, both theoretically and practically. You belong to that field. What applies to that field, directly or indirectly applies to you. — baker
you were the one bringing up the issue of wanting to reduce the stigma of psychiatric diagnosis, and asked for suggestions on how to do this. — baker
my not so favorable opinion about psychologists is based primarily on knowing the laws of the land that give psychologists the power they have — baker
take the standard interpretation of the Milgram Experiment, namely, that people will go to great lengths because they obey authority. To me, this is an interpretation entirely foreign to life. — baker
interpretation of psychological experiments and psychological phenomena. — baker
ethicists/bio-ethicists contribute disproportionately to the policies of organizations/corporations/government, and it matters whether or not they believe in an absolute morality. — ToothyMaw
So your eliminative materialist model is generated by neurons in your brain, like some sort of 'woo'? — Olivier5
Wouldn’t that depend on what one deems authoritative? If science cannot tell me I’m “deeply wrong**” about some mental state, because it is “far too under-informed”, merely from some “ordinary common sense understanding**” of my mind, why can I not then say I am authorized, if my understanding of my mind is substantially more than ordinary? — Mww
what are some but not all of the specific mental states the existence of which are said to be denied by modern E.M. advocates? — Mww
how does that refutation make the mental state of thinking demons, non-existent? It seems the only reconciliation is to say thinking demons is not a mental state, which appears altogether quite contradictory, insofar as to refute a thing presupposes the thought of it. — Mww
it seems pretty hard to deny that all mental states have a definitive role to play in human activities generally. — Mww
