That implies that the involved parties think that there is some scale (independent of their own opinions, which differ already) on which the options can be ranked as better or worse, more correct or less correct. — Pfhorrest
I know what you meant. It's just that you're empirically wrong. There are evidently other ways of resolving differences.
"They're acting like they each think [...] it needs to be settled which of them is [actually correct]." — Pfhorrest
Nope. They're acting like they each want the other person to behave a certain way. That's not the same as settling who is actually correct.
When you say "it would just be a better place to live" do you mean anything more than "I would prefer to live in that world"? I expect not. — Pfhorrest
do you feel the same way about your differences with Nazis? I expect not. I expect (and hope) that you're not just willing to agree to disagree with Nazis — Pfhorrest
Where does this 'willing to agree to disagree' come from. In my example I never specified what I was or was not willing to tolerate, only that I was willing to concede that I'm only 'right' from my perspective. I don't have to be universally 'right' to fight Nazism, I can fight Nazism purely because I think it's wrong from my perspective.
you act toward Nazis like a universalist. — Pfhorrest
Again (for emphasis), why do I need to be universally right about something in order to fight for it?
That's pretty explicitly giving up on caring about what's right or wrong, just like I say that relativism amounts to. — Pfhorrest
Nope. Again you've just ignored what relativism is defined as. I care very much about what's right and what's wrong, I just don't agree that it amounts to anything more than the meaning of the words in my culture. Nothing in that means that I don't care about what is right or wrong.
the threat of punishment for acting otherwise than compelled doesn't give you any internal reason to honestly support that course of action — Pfhorrest
Of course it does. Why would my tribe feel so passionately about my behaviour that they feel the need to take such drastic action to deter it? The answer, of course, could be all sorts of things, but it's clearly false to say that the disagreement of everyone I live with isn't good reason to think I might be wrong.
it's things like this that make me think that you really just have no idea whatsoever what my views (1)actually are. ... (2)I said this: — Pfhorrest
I don't think there's any need for me to spell this out further. You see the difference between (1) and (2), yes?
For something to be "correct relative to someone" is no different from it being someone's opinion. — Pfhorrest
You've still not supported this assertion. It's trivial to demonstrate alternatives (as I did with different languages). The 'correct' word to use to refer to a man is 'man' if you're English and 'homme' if you're French. It is not just personal opinion what the correct word is, but it is relative to the person's circumstances. There's no global answer to what the right word is, that would be nonsense.
You can universalise it by saying "the right word, if you're French, is...", but that's exactly the same claim as relativism makes "the right behaviour, if you're X, is...", with X being whatever one is claiming moral correctness is relative to.
If you only talk about the extension of a term, that leaves you no grounds whatsoever to ask whether or not something belongs within the extension of the term. The intension gives you some kind of criteria by which to measure up a thing and decide if it is a member of the set denoted by that term. — Pfhorrest
So from what source do we discover the 'intension' of a word, if not it's use. You surely don't expect to be able to carry some ancient Platonic argument about essences and forms past almost all of modern philosophy since the linguistic turn?
See Wittgenstein's discussion of the meaning of 'game'. What would you say the intension of the word is in that example? The idea that words have these set criteria for membership was thrown out long ago.
Nonetheless, it's not even clear what weight you think the intension would carry. If both soldiers consider killing communists to be within the extension of 'right' then the argument still stands that in their language game it's one of the things that is 'right'. You've not answered how they understood each other if the misused the word.
To say that any X just means "whatever is called X" is to ignore the intension of "X" and only pay attention to its extension. And you seem to do that only with moral terms, not with anything else. — Pfhorrest
Where have I veered from a general 'meaning as use' approach elsewhere? I think I've actually been pretty vocal about it.
you really want only some of the same principles that apply to factual matters to not apply to moral matters — Pfhorrest
Why? Is it somehow the default position that either all or none of the principles that apply to factual matters should apply to moral ones, but not anywhere in between? That seems like an odd position to hold without any prima facie reason.
now you're introducing moral beliefs into a sub-conversation that was explicitly only about non-moral beliefs. — Pfhorrest
Then the diversion was pointless. Moral beliefs are not reducible to the sorts of theories that can be analysed for complexity by any objective measure. As such anyone can maintain that their particular set of beliefs is the simplest, no-one can contest that and we're no closer to an objective answer. Which is exactly the position I outlined before your sidelined it into a discussion about Komogorov.
The point remains unanswered. If you accept underdeterminism you have to admit that a wide range of theories will be matched by the same data points. You've shown that there's no non-subjective way of judging either parsimony, or elegance, or any other measure of preference for one theory set over another. As such underdeterminism undermines your argument.
extreme hierarchy and authority was not possible in hunter-gatherer communities because the person trying to boss everyone around and horde everything for himself could just be abandoned by the rest of the tribe — Pfhorrest
That doesn't make it impossible, it makes it unwise. exactly one of the 'weeding out' processes you claim have been part of a gradual (if staccato) evolution. Are you, for some reason, eliminating behaviour being unwise from the reasons to eliminate it?
I'm certainly not trying to give that impression. — Pfhorrest
Thought you probably weren't. I do some work with Survival International, I'm touchy about those sorts of descriptions and like to check. some otherwise perfectly intelligent people do believe that kind of shit (Stephen Pinker, for example).
On my anti-consequentialist view that kind of argument can't fly: it doesn't matter that your actions prevent more harm than they cause, they still cause some harm, and so are unjust.
(Preemptively: yes, I know it's very hard in practice to avoid causing any harm to anyone, and in those circumstances my view says to cause the least harm possible, but that's different from saying to do whatever it takes to minimize any harm that happens at all for any reason). — Pfhorrest
OK, this is new (to me). You think that moral behaviour is only that which causes no harm? So I shouldn't trip a gunman over to save a thousand people from slaughter because that would harm him? I don't understand how you could arrive at such a nonsensical view I'm afraid. surely you can't mean that?
Just taking someone's word for something without question is an impractical way of finding out what's actually a correct or incorrect thing to think. — Pfhorrest
Why? Taking the word of a trustworthy individual or group with lots of experience is a considerably more efficient game strategy than working the whole thing out for yourself from scratch.
Therefore hedonism, for the sake of practicality. If doing hedonism is still hard... well, we'll just have to do our best at it — Pfhorrest
Agreements are few and far enough between for us to not squander them by repetition. I happen to agree with you that hedonism (in the very wide sense you use it) is the proper goal of people's moral feelings, so we needn't go over and over that point. My disagreement is about how to decide what course of action brings about the best of all worlds, I don't disagree that the best of all worlds would be the one in which everyone had their appetites satisfied.
It's not a question of which they value more than the other, it's a question of whether they value them independently as ends in themselves — Pfhorrest
Then are you arguing that no-one should value any other ends than the avoidance of negative affect? That (particularly coupled with your argument about non-consequentialism) makes your moral position sound even more bizarre than I first thought. You seem to be saying that no-one should act to achieve any other end than the immediate avoidance of harm regardless of the consequences of doing so. That's just lunacy.
In doing so, if we can manage to do so, we can get people who do have practical, functional, correct views as the deepest parts of their belief networks to bring the rest of themselves more in line with that; and also, expose any people who do have truly deep-seated dysfunctional views, make them face up to that and deal with it. — Pfhorrest
If wishes were horses... Do you have any idea how long it takes to set up a psychology experiment? It can take months, years even. Do you know why I take that long over experiment design, controls, pre-registration, peer review, statistical analysis, modelling...? It's because I care about what people
actually do, what effects our interventions
actually have... If I could just make shit up about how people behave I would have published considerably more than my paltry record.
Like I said... ugh... three hours ago... I didn't think it was necessary, on a philosophy forum, to specify that I mean rational discourse as the thing I'm talking about not giving up on. — Pfhorrest
Well then the same question applies. Why would you restrict your options to rational discourse?
the rich already get to decide what is declared right or wrong today, since they control all governance. — Pfhorrest
I don't see the link. The government control the law which lists the consequences of certain behaviours. It doesn't have any say at all in what's right and wrong. Maybe via the curriculum, or support for certain media outlets, but it's indirect and easily avoided. I can't see how a panel of rich college graduates telling people what's right and wrong is going to help.
I'm not advocating that we neglect the long term, but if it's hard to get good data on the long term one way or the other, then of course we can't plan as narrowly for it, and instead have to broadly plan as well as we can afford for everything in the range of possibilities, in proportion to whatever likelihoods we can manage to figure out about them. — Pfhorrest
Right. Which, given unarguable facts about complexity means that de facto you're including short-term gains and ignoring long-term ones, because long-term gains cannot be so easily accounted for.
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Really need to sort out this crazy aspect of what you're advocating. I've no interest in conversing with a flat out sociopath. Are you seriously saying that you think we should not harm someone even if doing so saves potentially thousands of lives and that no other ends should ever even be considered? If so we can just end our conversation here, no point in replying to the rest.