optimism I believe is overall a healthier frame of mind and probably does equip us to make better choices. — Pantagruel
But which of the two is more pragmatic? — Mark Dennis
Do those behaviours break the rules of acceptable conduct at your workplace? Are you allowed to act like that? — creativesoul
That's the answer. I stand beside it. — creativesoul
You've shown that principles might have non-ethical applications, not that this invalidates their ethical ones. No more than a tire used on a car invalidates the use of a tire on a bicycle. — Artemis
You've shown that principles might have non-ethical applications, not that this invalidates their ethical ones. No more than a tire used on a car invalidates the use of a tire on a bicycle. — Artemis
And I already stated a common ethical principle: avoid causing unnecessary suffering. — Artemis
Why does it have to be exclusive to ethics? I don't understand that criterion. — Artemis
I will have to get back to you later about the video. — Artemis
It's just a matter of how much you want to change and whether you can accept help or not. — Terrapin Station
I believe in freewill to some degree but I am not confident about my ability to change in any fundamental way. — Andrew4Handel
Some countries or societies approach mental health as a public responsibility and try and help the person in the community with diverse community input. — Andrew4Handel
but this was like free pleasure. — Andrew4Handel
It goes hand in hand with the phrase power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Everyone is susceptible, nobody is immune. — Metaphyzik
That's why Wayfarer referred to the need for a "summum bonum". So your claim that non-religious systems are more easily justified is false because the 'justification' you are referring to is not justification at all, but an illusion of justification. — Metaphysician Undercover
You're right. It is not a code of ethics. It is a CHARACTERISTIC OR PROPERTY OF ETHICS. But it is also a characteristic or property of many things."As if you had anticipated my question, you say "don't cause unnecessary suffering" is the ultimate code of ethics."
— god must be atheist
Interesting choice of paraphrasing. I did not say "ultimate." I suggested that it is one example of an underlying principle that I believe to exist in most cultures across the world. Now, I haven't exhaustively studied all world religions/ethics, but I have yet to come across one that actually contradicts the wrongness of unnecessary suffering. Though people might disagree on what things are necessary or are suffering, generally all ethics seeks to reduce the sum total of suffering.
Or can you give me a good counter example? — Artemis
As for your second paragraph; I don’t believe this is true as there are plenty of animals on the endangered species list with little to no discernible benefits to our species save for our appreciation of its existence. Why are we valuing them I wonder? Why do things need to have a benefit for us in order for us to just appreciate the fact that they exist? — Mark Dennis
The answer to the problem of different cultural ethical norms is simply that different cultures are (or were at some point in history) wrong about different things.
And anywhere in the world you find the same underlying principles to ethics: don't cause unnecessary suffering, for example. — Artemis
A few simple, common sense, defensible, and easily teachable ones...
What would happen if everyone acted like that?
Be helpful.
Do what's good for goodness sake. — creativesoul
Albert Einstein, Karl Guttenberg, Keppler, Galileo, the inventor of the Steam Engine, the sheep, the wheel, intromarital sex, the Information Superhighway, were all stubborn derrieres?I strongly believe that "the most intolerant wins".
You change the world, bit by bit, by being stubborn, intransigent, intolerant, and recalcitrant. — alcontali
The Masters is actually in Ethics but it’s still a branch of philosophy so totally counts — Mark Dennis
When you're doing philosophy, you can focus on various subjects, various types of phenomena, etc. For example, there's philosophy of (or about) science, philosophy of (or about) art, philosophy of (or about) morality, etc. Some of those focuses have unique names, like aesthetics (philosophy of art) and ethics (philosophy of morality). Philosophy of science doesn't have a unique name, by the way. It's simply known as philosophy of science.
Well, epistemology is simply philosophy of knowledge. The focus is on questions like "What is knowledge," "What are the criteria for saying that we know something," etc. — Terrapin Station
The first thing we need to clarify when we're answering this is just what is an explanation? Just what are the criteria for an explanation? Just what do explanations do?
And likewise, given what you're actually saying in the post (as opposed to the title), just what is understanding? Just what are the criteria for understanding? — Terrapin Station
I dont think they want guns at all. They want windmills. — frank
None of that matters all that much, we come from the same catholic cultural root. — ChatteringMonkey
Social democrats and communists have allways been sworn enemies, because the social democrats betrayed the revolution. — ChatteringMonkey
Besides, ideologically Europe, and a large part of the world for that matter, is much closer to the US than to China or Russia — ChatteringMonkey
Furthermore, very few people who come out of that system have the slightest clue about epistemology. — alcontali
Can God be known? Of course. — Old Brian
Which countries would those be? — Echarmion
As part of my degree I had to take a paper called 'English Moralists', and I had a deep dislike of both groups, though, in fairness, the persons studied tended to be neither. — iolo
I was saying that you are more than you think, or are conditioned to think. That there is a kind of enquiry through contemplation of self, as well as philosophical enquiry, or scientific enquiry.
Is that ok? — Punshhh