Is there a meaningful distinction that we can draw and maintain between something or other being believed to be, hence sincerely called "good" and being good? I think there is. — creativesoul
Information on how the brain works includes (...) the part our bodies play in our judgment. — Athena
A failure of the Enlightenment was a lack of information about our animal nature. — Athena
our growing information has improved our ability to understand nature. And this information is very important to good moral judgment. — Athena
Neither (...) is going to make us different from how nature has made us. — Athena
there is no such thing as a priori concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
If I understand you correctly information about how our brains work is not appreciated here. Is that correct? — Athena
You all are going to discuss Natural and Existential Morality without an understanding of nature? — Athena
Are there different kinds of problems?
— Mww
Sure. — Kenosha Kid
are not detected by the senses (...) indicates some other mode of presence....
— Mww
But my point was that something is present to my consciousness, just not anything like a priori knowledge. It is not a rational thing present. It is emotions and attention biases (...) senses of panic, distress, focus, and urgency.....
And there it is. A different mode of presence, neither empirical nor rational. Let’s call such emotions and attention biases present as innate conditional qualities, in as much as humans come equipped with them, even if not immediately available for use, and the objects of them being, as you say, senses of panic, distress, focus, etc.
.....I am not presented with some voice or inter-title: "One ought to help the child." — Kenosha Kid
the person also presents to your rational mode some activity of his that elicits a feeling in you not given by the person as an object, but by what the person is doing.
— Mww
Of course! (...) we are in an environment in which moral actions must be rationalised.....
Thus is established that there is a rational mode, and that there are empirical affects on it.
......But my consciousness being presented with moral drives is not the same thing as my reason having their essence. — Kenosha Kid
This is the old-fashioned rationalism I reject. There is a very real analogue to this in our physiological responses that can bias us in a given direction, and the empirically-verified existence of these negates the need for other sources of moral knowledge. — Kenosha Kid
I was talking about how our brains work, not what people believe. — Athena
Read, but not studied.
— Mww
That is the difference between slow thinking and fast thinking. — Athena
I acknowledge that something is present (the banging at the door). When I see an apple, feel an apple, taste an apple, even though these are all indirect ideas of an apple, I happily acknowledge that something is present. — Kenosha Kid
I feel pain when I see someone suffering -- that pain is present. I feel glad when I help them -- that gladness is present. — Kenosha Kid
However I don't have this sense of a priori moral knowledge or of moral objective existence. — Kenosha Kid
on moral issues, reason must be used to determine an intended behaviour.......
— Kenosha Kid
I submit that reason must be used to determine anything.....
— Mww
These are contradictory. If one accepts that human decisions are sometimes made unconsciously, one cannot hold that reason must be involved in every human determination. — Kenosha Kid
So is there an answer to “does the psychologist admit to different kinds of reason, as the philosopher absolutely requires?”
— Mww
Different to problem-solving? No, I don't think so. — Kenosha Kid
There are certainly things that reason has that aren't problems to solve in themselves but are factors of problems — Kenosha Kid
The rational mind is an employee hired for solving certain problems that now thinks it's the boss! — Kenosha Kid
I'm still impressed you read it so quickly. — Kenosha Kid
But where did the quality of goodness come from? What makes that outcome "good"? — Kenosha Kid
System 1 is a problem-solver. There's all sorts of problems it solves that I have no consciousness of. — Kenosha Kid
on moral issues, reason must be used to determine an intended behaviour because there is ambiguity. — Kenosha Kid
Whenever you see an optical illusion, you are unaware of the things your unconscious mind has done to the image before presenting it to your consciousness for consideration. — Kenosha Kid
We operate in a state of illusion or delusion most of the time. — Athena
We do need reason to figure out how to do e.g. the good thing, in the same way we need reason to figure out which roads to take on a drive. The reasoning is not moral, it's just generic problem-solving. — Kenosha Kid
Empathy is a neurological response we are unaware of taking place in our brains. It cannot be rational. We can rationalise with it, but it appears to be a dumb, conditional, stimuli-response phenomenon. — Kenosha Kid
I meant Daniel Kahneman — Kenosha Kid
This still presumes there must be an external validation of it — Kenosha Kid
If so, we are still left with what to do about it.
— Mww
Exactly! Et voila: moral philsophy is born! — Kenosha Kid
Even DK isn't 'truth', just a fairly minimal approximation to it. — Kenosha Kid
"If your aim is to get a good job, then you should study hard". This does not express a moral imperative. A moral imperative is necessarily categorical and concerns what it is right to do. — Bunji
There are genes specifically for small social groups that would make rationalisation of moral truths redundant.
— Kenosha Kid
Redundant compared to....what? — Mww
It would be redundant in the same way that a verbal rule: "You should see with your eyes" would be redundant. We're all already doing that. Likewise defining a 'good' to be e.g. 'help those in need according to your means' would be likewise pointless since people already had a physiological, i.e. non-rational altruistic reaction to people in need. — Kenosha Kid
Kantian deontology is predicated on fundamental principles....
Actually it's predicated on one fundamental principle - the categorical imperative. — Bunji
I've been talking about judging actions by means of Kantian principles — Bunji
I think Kant's insistence that morality consists in principles is a mistake. — Bunji
I take the view that moral principles often lead to bad judgements and at best should be treated as rules of thumb. A morally sensitive agent doesn't need them. — Bunji
To judge a principle of necessity would simply be to judge whether it is in fact a principle of necessity. — Bunji
He states this clarification after the fact, but how does it apply to the very argument he provides in his Meditations for the cogito? Last I recall, it was argued by something along the lines of “I can’t doubt that I doubt” — javra
If it is not “I” but the demon’s thoughts, the proposition of “I think” would then be false. (This, ironically, hinges on the issue of who, or what, causes the thoughts, or doubts, to be.) — javra
On a different note, given this quoted affirmation from Descartes, one’s emotions would be classified as a portion of one’s thoughts. — javra
I am not so sure it is an opposition, — tim wood
The interesting part is how the rational mind rationalises the irrational answer. People swear blind they thought it through rationally, i.e, worked out the answer mathematically, and yet they clearly didn't. — Kenosha Kid
it is not the individual that changes from group size to group size, nor has the quality of the moral hardware altered one iota. — Kenosha Kid
There are genes specifically for small social groups that would make rationalisation of moral truths redundant. — Kenosha Kid
What is the frame of reference that is not violated by hypocrisy?
— Mww
The cosmological frame of reference, in which nothing we do matters, would be one in which it is as reasonable to be a hypocrite as to be social. — Kenosha Kid
The way S1 and S2 work together is that S2 consciously verifies the decisions of S1 while believing them to be S2's decisions. — Kenosha Kid
I put that in bold because it's a good rewording of my key argument. — Kenosha Kid
You seem to have gone one step further and rationalised a new mathematics — Kenosha Kid
But there are some excellent 200 year old ideas that still stand up today. — Kenosha Kid
"do not harm others to benefit yourself". Nature derived that hundreds of thousands of years ago without a brain, and gifted it to us without a clue. — Kenosha Kid
So my empathy and altruism are strictly mine, albeit copies of ancestors common to us both. — Kenosha Kid
Metaphysics rationalises natural human responses post hoc, then claims a discovery — Kenosha Kid
I'm saying that small groups, for which our social responses were evolved, bypass the need for moral questions altogether. Smaller groups were what our social responses were adapted for. (...) That is distinct from now where our social responses, inclined toward outcomes of reciprocal altruism with relatives and neighbours, no longer determine the moral course of action. — Kenosha Kid
there is no frame of reference in which this could not be hypocritical. — Kenosha Kid
True, not all human responses are rational, but even irrational responses are derived from reason.
— Mww
This is meant merely as a statement of a belief, I assume, not of fact. My understanding of the psychologist's current thinking is that reason comprises about 2% of human decision-making. — Kenosha Kid
Rationalism, as far as I can make out, is claiming the other 98% is also rational, then trying to figure out how. — Kenosha Kid
Is the metaphysics apologist demanding proof?!? — Kenosha Kid
My argument is not against moral ideas, but moral ideas with claims to a priori knowledge or an objective right-wrong moral world. — Kenosha Kid
In small groups, our morality would give right/wrong answers to moral questions that need not be asked because the answers are not rational answers but physiological and neurological responses. — Kenosha Kid
Morality is based on good-for-the-group altruism and empathy, so anything that jettisons those for reliance on pre-social drives is ipso facto immoral and subhuman. — Kenosha Kid
It is not only true that not all human responses are rational, it also seems to me to be true that the rational mind takes credit for a lot of stuff it doesn't do — Kenosha Kid
I think you may have a different definition of ulrasocial going on. I meant it in the typical neuroscientific sense of ultracooperative social groups.... — Kenosha Kid
If you are saying that natural capacities for empathy and altruism have nothing to do with morality, I would have to disagree strongly. If you are disputing that these natural capacities are identical with any metaphysical idea of morality, yes, hopefully, because I believe one is real and one is not. — Kenosha Kid
But our moral apparatus is as unaware of its origin as our ancestors were. It is not a consequentialist philosophy of human beings. It is biology as a consequence of natural selection. Is that what you mean? — Kenosha Kid
It is biology as a consequence of natural selection. — Kenosha Kid
someone does something, therefore they must have worked out that that was the best thing to do using their reason alone and, if it was the wrong thing, they made a rational error. In reality, if your ancestor had attempted this in the face of an oncoming sabre-tooth tiger, you almost certainly wouldn't have been born — Kenosha Kid
Social animals tend to operate in their cohabitation groups: hunting, gathering, child-rearing, migrating, fighting, etc. Humans are ultrasocial animals: we pack a lot of biological capacity specifically for operating in social groups compared with other animals. — Kenosha Kid
we are ultrasocial animals with heritable altruistic and empathetic capacities that compete with other, selfish heritable characteristics that, together with a heritable amenability to socialisation, allows us to make moral decisions concerning other individuals.
3.) That on its own isn't much of a foundational morality though. — Kenosha Kid
Understanding the perspective of another individual allows us to assess their threat and their vulnerability. It comes under the general negotiations of subsocial and social animals. — Kenosha Kid
What we have learned scientifically since is that no such understanding is required by us. Instead it needed to be the case in the past that a certain behaviour is a) statistically beneficial for survival and b) within our genetic space. — Kenosha Kid
It follows that there are no unreal or non-sensical scenarios
— Mww
There certainly are: a society of mostly antisocial actors being one. — Kenosha Kid
First, the categorical imperative is not strictly reciprocal. — Kenosha Kid
the moral problems Kant had to address are not obliged to be within our natural moral capacity. — Kenosha Kid
Moral philosophy, it seems to be, is not a means of addressing moral problems; it is a symptom of incompatibility of moral beings evolved on one environment trying to make sense of a different one. — Kenosha Kid
are very far from contingent rules, for they abide no possible exception.
— Mww
Not clear what you mean. — Kenosha Kid
I am quite known to myself without knowing a clue about my oxytocin level, thank you very much.
— Mww
But can you truly understand yourself and not know why it happens? — Kenosha Kid
No more than freedom begs the question of how I choose what to do with it — Kenosha Kid
I'm pleased that you even entertain the notion that a priori moral knowledge isn't so necessary. — Kenosha Kid
The practice of devising unreal and even nonsensical scenarios for pretend moral agents to play out pretend morality is precisely the thing I'm arguing against. It is not useful because it tells us nothing applicable outside that particular fantasy. — Kenosha Kid
My individual subject is 100% physical, I assure you, — Kenosha Kid
This is metaphysical land-grab yet again. It insists upon itself, then justifies itself by once again insisting upon itself, ad infinitum. — Kenosha Kid
Reason provides insight, and it is quite absurd to suggest we require knowledge of our reason,
— Mww
It is more absurd to attempt to reason without it. — Kenosha Kid
morality is complex and you don't always get a grade at the end or know if the path you chose was right. — Kenosha Kid
the only unaltered fundamental rule we have is: do not be a hypocrite. — Kenosha Kid
The question is how can insisting on a priori understanding of one thing be considered invalid and another thing valid. — Kenosha Kid
attention to proper moral issues require an unconditioned cause within us
— Mww
I disagree. The metaphysical land-grab requires an unconditioned cause within us. Morality can fare perfectly well without it. — Kenosha Kid
Knowledge is providing insight into where those actions come from. — Kenosha Kid
Conditioning, either biological or social, is very much on the table. — Kenosha Kid
I would definitely say it’s right for them to rip people off it makes them feel good — Maya
A mathematical proof of a theorem is a chain of logic. — jgill
Can you justify the distinction between a fallacious a priori position on consciousness and a valid a priori position on morality, without committing the same fallacy? — Kenosha Kid
The justification for Kant's insistence that moral issues must be treated a priori comes down to God, not an absence of experience. — Kenosha Kid
