It’s the chapter called “Commensurablism”. — Pfhorrest
I will have a read. — Isaac
Evolutionary psychology.. — Gitonga
the kinds of things I’m thinking of (theists and other spiritualists, flat earthers, etc) often claim knowledge despite lack of or contrary empirical evidence. — Pfhorrest
Developing an intersubjective agreement on what is or isn’t real depends on caring about other people’s observation at least enough to go and see if you have the same observation in the same circumstances, and then on account of that confirmation agreeing that reality actually is such a way that it continues to appear that way to them, even if you’re not making that observation yourself right at this moment.
Likewise, my hedonic account of morality hinges on people confirming first hand as necessary that yes indeed it does hurt when someone does that, and then on account of that confirmation agreeing that it morally is wrong for people to do that, even if it’s not you experiencing the pain right at this moment. — Pfhorrest
you could just care about your own hedonic experiences to the extent that you say so long as you’re not a actively experiencing the pain then it’s not bad, but that would be akin to taking a solipsistic view of reality that anything that you’re not currently observing isn’t real. — Pfhorrest
It’s the chapter called “Commensurablism”. — Pfhorrest
You dismiss all the beliefs people have in things they can’t see, and disbeliefs people have about things they could see if they looked at the evidence, to say that empiricism is ubiquitous, when it’s really not. — Pfhorrest
Likewise, most people consider people who say they like to be hurt to be as crazy as people who see hallucinations. — Pfhorrest
’m not saying “Look how everyone accepts these things! They must be right!” You’re doing that, and I’m denying the validity of that inference. — Pfhorrest
And one would quickly die if they didn’t care about pain at all. — Pfhorrest
am absolutely not saying that hedonism can be empirically proven. Hedonic experiences are a KIND of phenomenal experience, the prescriptive analogue to the descriptive kind of experience we call empirical. I am saying that appeal to common (shared) experiences of that kind is how to settle normative questions — Pfhorrest
Most people agree on some level that pain is bad, just like most people generally believe their eyes. — Pfhorrest
So nobody has to persuade you? — ssu
You just go with the flock or what? — ssu
You want real change? That happens when there's a general consensus on what ought to be, what is wrong or right, when all those annoying people who otherwise don't agree with you do agree on a certain issue. — ssu
democracy will ensure that there will be voices both on the left and the right always. — ssu
Because if you can't recognise general forms, then you can't make general statements, which your statement 'we don't recognise general forms' is an example of. You have to know what a 'general statement' is, even to deny that you can make them; but if you know what it is, then you have to admit that such statements exist. — Wayfarer
You can't say 'we don't recognise general forms'. it is one of those comments that blows itself up, like 'all generalisations are false'. — Wayfarer
the question ought to be asked, where do we acquire the ability to recognise general forms in the first place — Wayfarer
Perhaps the most academic, high brow topics could be marked in some way, and more strictly controlled. Perhaps we could make a separate section of text discussions, with a link to an article or book as the op. — unenlightened
One of the best ways to raise quality is by not responding to rubbish. This is very hard these days, but worth trying. — unenlightened
It seems to me that in the past year or so, there's been a more aggressive push from the mods to move intermediate level as well as theistic threads, as well as unorthodox and sometimes mystical (yet complex) threads to the Lounge — Noble Dust
Why is it impossible to judge someone as an individual? ...There's literally video of Logan Paul, a multi-millionaire youtube personality, going through a mall in Phoenix with other rioters — BitconnectCarlos
Tell me how you justify empiricism without appeal to empiricism. — Pfhorrest
it needs to be judged on an individual, case-by-case basis. — BitconnectCarlos
I'm happy to acknowledge mitigating circumstances. — BitconnectCarlos
Violence conducted by cops or whites towards blacks matters, but violence conducted by minorities towards business-owners or whatnot - is just a distraction — BitconnectCarlos
Are you compassionate towards Jeffrey Dahmer? Bundy? There are people who had compassion towards them - young women, mostly. They understood these men. — BitconnectCarlos
No, my point is that it rationally grounds western civilization. You need to work on your reading comprehension, no offense. — BitconnectCarlos
Because it's what grounds western civilization - it grounds our legal system and the entire notion of the individual in society. — BitconnectCarlos
How are we suppose to judge someone if we don't believe in self-responsibility? — BitconnectCarlos
I meant that group as individuals. — BitconnectCarlos
Responsibility primarily rests at the individual level. — BitconnectCarlos
that group remains accountable for its actions. — BitconnectCarlos
you confirm a hedonic experience by standing in the same circumstance as someone who reported having it and seeing if you feel the same way in that circumstance. If so, then that's "ethical data" that needs to be accounted for. — Pfhorrest
If something doesn’t feel bad, how can it be called pain? Pain, or suffering more generally, is a bad-feeling experience. — Pfhorrest
people who think that things can be bad even though they hurt nobody reject hedonism, and I think they’re wrong. — Pfhorrest
I think it can be shown that they are wrong. That’s how disagreement works. — Pfhorrest
The universe must have had a beginning.
I just don't buy that it could be anything other than God who started it.
Therefore God exists. — Kenosha Kid
So are you saying that in a world without God then we can't have moral obligation? — Michael
So when we talk about morality/being obligated to do/not do something, we're just talking about hypothetical imperatives with a goal to better the group? — Michael
By "why ought we not do evil?" I wasn't asking for a motivation to not do evil but asking how we get from "X is evil" to "therefore we ought not do X". — Michael
How would we approach it then? We look at what John says about morality and we look at what Mary says about morality, recognise that they're incompatible, and then what? — Michael
Is there some meaning shared by both the divine command theorist and the "God-is-evil" proponent? Maybe the "one ought do this and not do this" notion that I brought up earlier? — Michael
would seem to suggest that meta-ethics is a wasted endeavour. There is no one correct answer to what it means to be moral as we don't all mean the same thing when we talk about what is or isn't moral. — Michael
Happiness is a reward mechanism for when we do something to aid our survival — Gitonga
I don't think either work as a sufficient rebuttal. I could always invert this and say that Mary and the radical socialists must be wrong given what John and Gitonga say. — Michael
Can I really dismiss divine command theory by noting that there are people who claim that God is evil? — Michael
