Ok, I need to ask you several clarification questions here. So, what exactly is a prescription of reason? Would you mind explaining that concept a bit more to me. Because it seems rather counterintuitive to me to think of reason as a command or a prescription. — TheHedoMinimalist
On the other hand, there are some spoiled brats who live with their parents at the age of 30 and they feel that it’s unfair for their parents to not buy them a new car for Christmas. — TheHedoMinimalist
In addition, I’m not sure if we are imagining 2 worlds across their entire span of their existence or if we are imagining 2 worlds across a particular period of time. — TheHedoMinimalist
We agreed this consent issue is insufficient to justify antinatalism. — boethius
Now that you've changed your position I'll restate again my criticism. — boethius
I am so far not satisfied that you fairly apply your principle of consent to all ethical issues where it would seem relevant to do so. — boethius
You say, "well, consent doesn't matter if it prevents harm", b — boethius
I’m using a lecture I heard on YouTube as the source. The lecture is called “Intuition in Philosophy 2” and it is given by a philosopher named Kane B. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, I don’t share your assumption that our intuitions are somewhat close to reliability to our eyesights . Unlike our intuitions, our eyesight doesn’t get influenced by the place and time period that we grew up in and almost nobody sees something that no one else sees. — TheHedoMinimalist
I don’t think that’s true. I had heard that studies in experimental philosophy had revealed that most people in East Asian countries think that the agent has knowledge in Gettier cases. — TheHedoMinimalist
But we still have a concept of reason - what the idea of reason distinguishes, describes
and then
we have the faculty. — Coben
Fair enough, but are you willing to grant that those deeper intuitions matter as well? — TheHedoMinimalist
it must be pointed out that moral particularism itself is counterintuitive to most people. — TheHedoMinimalist
In addition, I think the majority of people also find your non-religious divine command theory to be counterintuitive as well. — TheHedoMinimalist
Absolutely. I’ve harped on this forever.......reason cannot explain itself without being used to explain itself. No one is going to take seriously anything to patently circular. — Mww
It's in no way absurd. Plenty of people have written thousands of words to make an argument. — boethius
I guess Im not necessarily ready to forego the "prior existence" condition.
On the following basis:
It seems to me that there needs to be a certain sort of temporal symmetry when you affect someone.
The two agents need to exist simultaneously, in the same temporal reality before we can talk about any party affecting the other one. — Emind
Can something/someone nonexistent be affected by something/someone else? — Emind
Well, in that case, you must have very unusual arguments for the existence of god. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think the burden of proof is shared here because almost every philosopher thinks that some intuitions count for more than others(including yourself). We just have different theories about which intuitions count for more. — TheHedoMinimalist
But, how do we determine which explanations for the intuition are debunking? — TheHedoMinimalist
If you believe a bunch of arguments together justify antinatalism, I suggest you make a new thread with this "cumulative" argument and referencing the arguments that accumulate; either debates such as this one, which, though insufficient to justify antinatalism on its own, play some part in the cumulative argument scheme or then new debates that will to occur in the context of your cumulative structure. — boethius
Being unable to defend many arguments does not a stronger argument make. — boethius
I don’t think that the 2 actions are equally bad. I actually think that it’s worse to harm yourself than it is to harm others. This is because there is a higher probability that someone has some reason to avoid causing themselves to suffer than the probability that someone has some reason to avoid causing others to suffer. — TheHedoMinimalist
But, I think that there is a greater likelihood that it is correct than any other value theory that I had encountered. But, it’s still probably wrong to some extent and maybe even completely wrong. — TheHedoMinimalist
Philosophy is really complicated and so our theories should be really complicated as well. This is our best chance of not having a terrible theory. — TheHedoMinimalist
So, I have 2 questions:
1. How do you know that god or gods are benevolent?
2. Did god or gods create the universe which allowed for sentient life? — TheHedoMinimalist
Yes, you understand right here but why do you not think that we should privilege intuitions that imply the truth of a deeper principle? Why assume that intuitions have no levels and could only be dismissed if they are deemed to be as a result of some bias? — TheHedoMinimalist
But, Peter Singer did not express his most controversial viewpoints until he became popular for his less controversial viewpoints. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m actually not sure if they actually do agree with you more here. — TheHedoMinimalist
I have challenged your moral particularism above by expressing my pessimism in people’s ability to do philosophy well while arguing that this pessimism doesn’t suggest that we shouldn’t devise philosophical theories. — TheHedoMinimalist
The deeper reason he gives for believing this is because he thinks that God would disapprove of it. — TheHedoMinimalist
Axiological hedonism is easily refuted - there are abundant refutations of it. For instance, here's one:
1. If Axiological hedonism is true, then it is as wrong for me to cause myself harm as it is to cause someone else an equal amount of harm
2. It is not as wrong for me to cause myself harm as it is to case someone else an equal amount of harm. (For instance, if I hit myself in the face that's not as wrong as hitting someone else in the face, even if the amounts of pain the act causes - both physical and emotional - happen to be identical)
3. Therefore axiological hedonism is false. — Bartricks
I would argue that both premise 1 and 2 of your argument are false. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, your phrase here that hedonism “flies in the face of “powerful” and widely shared moral intuitions that we have “no reason to discount”” seems to demonstrate why I think your approach to moral philosophy is extremely prejudice against unpopular opinions like the one I happen to uphold. It’s almost like I have to fight an uphill battle for you to even consider my arguments. — TheHedoMinimalist
I have studied the topic of Axiology extensively by reading lots of academic journals on the topic and related topics. I have also spent about 2-3 hours a day in the last 4 years philosophizing about this topic and other philosophical topics. I’m not even claiming to be right about my views on Hedonism though. There are plenty of really good Axiologists who are more dedicated than I am who might have really good objections to my arguments. But, I find it laughable that my arguments could defeated by normal people who never even heard of my arguments or philosophized about the topics that I have philosophized about. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think there are other things that all blue things have in common:
1. All blue things are made of atoms
2. All blue things exist in the same universe(if there are no other universes with blue things.)
3. All blue things could be perceived by humans who are not color blind as being blue.
4. All blue things reflect light in a similar manner and this is why they are all blue.
5. All blue things are not mental states
6. All blue things are not mathematical equations
7. All blue things are not red things — TheHedoMinimalist
Is there such a thing as “assumption-free evidence”? — TheHedoMinimalist
So, there’s always some assumption that you can claim that a piece of evidence is making and so there simply isn’t such a thing as “assumption-free evidence”. — TheHedoMinimalist
As I have stated earlier, I believe that intuitions that occur within a deeper level of argumentation are better than intuitions that occur at more shallow levels. — TheHedoMinimalist
Ok, now I think you just both defeated your arguments for moral particularism and your arguments for antinatalism. Divine Command theory is a normative ethical theory which argues that right and wrong actions are the prescriptions of God. — TheHedoMinimalist
I suppose you would then argue that moral particularism is simply a method of figuring out what God’s prescriptions are. In that case, why couldn’t my degree of certainty argument and my incomeasurability requirement argument be a better method of figuring out God’s prescriptions? — TheHedoMinimalist
Another question I have now is if there is a benevolent God then why would procreation be immoral? — TheHedoMinimalist
It’s possible that people have moral disgust towards the torture of Tom because human beings evolved to experience moral empathy towards someone getting tortured while not evolving to experience extra strong happiness towards billions of happy people that come as a result. This is because our pre-historic ancestors had no survival advantage by being happy about a world full of billions of happy people who are not their relatives. On the other hand, they had evolved a capacity for empathy towards the pain of a stranger because it made them better at forming cooperative relationships. So, there could actually even be an evolutionary explanation for the disapproval of Tom’s torture as well. Even if there isn’t an evolutionary explanation, we could argue that the gut instinct was simply what Steven Jay Gould might call a spandrel or an accidental by product of the right genes coming together at the right time to form the dislike of using Tom to make everyone happy. As long as this dislike is not harmful to survival and reproduction, it’s possible that an accidental evolutionary trait ends up lasting. — TheHedoMinimalist
It seems that your view does not argue that morality is unpatterned. If it was truly unpatterned then I don’t think it would be possible for you to formulate a moral hypothesis. This is because the formulation of an educated guess requires some sort of pattern recognition. Are you not observing patterns in the intuitions of other people regarding moral cases? — TheHedoMinimalist
I think your approach to morality actually makes it very difficult for a Galileo of moral philosophy to come along and challenge everyone else’s gut instincts towards moral cases. This is because he will be continuously dismissed by philosophers like you for arguing for an unpopular opinion regardless of how good his own arguments are. — TheHedoMinimalist
Going back to your analogy between the library catalog and what you see as “rational intuitions” about moral cases, why assume that people’s moral intuitions are like a relatively good library catalog instead of an extremely misleading one? — TheHedoMinimalist
Of course, I actually don’t think that people even have intuitions about cases like the torture of Tom. Rather, they either have intuitions about the deeper reasons for why they think Tom’s torture is unjustified or they simply have a negative gut reaction towards it. There doesn’t seem to be any kind of a “rational mental representation” that people have towards moral cases of Applied Ethics. — TheHedoMinimalist
If my arguments for Hedonism do not work to make my theory plausible, then I might also be wrong about individual relativism. So far, I have never heard a good objection to my views on Axiology so I have no reason to suppose that my arguments do not work to properly support Hedonism. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think we shouldn’t confuse my approach regarding normative ethics with my approach regarding meta-ethics. — TheHedoMinimalist
First of all, I’m not sure what you even mean by pattern here. I would define a pattern as being something that allows us to make inferences about something else. In that sense, I do think that there is a pattern to morality but you seem to think that there is a pattern in that sense as well. — TheHedoMinimalist
I understand that you wish to avoid talking about the emotive issues but I’m actually kinda curious about what reason would you have to dismiss the intuitions of past people regarding slavery. You managed to dismiss the intuitions that people have about procreation being permissible and the intuition that people had in the past about homosexuality by appealing to something akin to an evolutionary bias explanation for why people hold that intuition. It seems that you can’t use the evolutionary bias explanation for dismissing the past intuitions that people had about slavery. At the very least, it is not entirely obvious that thinking that slavery is permissible has evolutionary advantages. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, if we are going to make an analogy between eyesight and “moral sight” then morality is not only relative to the time period and the culture in which you live but also the immediate space around you. — TheHedoMinimalist
This would imply individual moral relativism instead of cultural relativism. — TheHedoMinimalist
When someone says that it would be wrong for TheHedoMinimalist to torture Tom to make everyone happy, they are really just saying that it’s obviously wrong to them. — TheHedoMinimalist
Well, you seem to be assuming that intuitions about cases of applied ethics are the most important cases for determining morality. I had already given you my argument that certain normative aims are more plausible than others if they have better comeasurabity. If my argument for “The Comeasurability Requirement” is plausible then any moral position which is incompatible with that value theory intuition is false. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m still not understanding the distinction. It seems that negative attitudes are also mental representations. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think you are misunderstanding my argument. I’m saying that all moral theories must make evaluative judgements. This is also true of deontological and other non-consequentialist theories. For example, A non-consequentialist philosopher like yourself likely does not believe that all wrong actions are equally wrong. This means that there must be a non-arbitrary way for you to say that some actions are more wrong than others. — TheHedoMinimalist
I argued that you do not have a non-arbitrary way of saying that the wrongness of torturing Tom is more wrong than the wrongness of something like lying to your boss about being sick to avoid work. — TheHedoMinimalist
You seem to think that the extent of wrongness of an action could be reasonably hypothesized by a weird mixture of people’s combined intuitions and a possible dismissal of some intuitions if they gave our ancestors an advantage in replicating their DNA in the past. — TheHedoMinimalist
This seems to pose a contradiction to your argument though. This is because the view that something like slavery was permissible in 1800 but not permissible today is highly counterintuitive to the vast majority of people living in the 21st century. — TheHedoMinimalist
I would like to point out that a similar type of explanation could be given for the view that the torture of Tom is unjustified. In some countries like China, Colombia, and North Korea, most people would likely think that the torture of Tom is justified. — TheHedoMinimalist
Ok. I'm just curious what basis you would have to disagree with someone on a moral question then. If there are no hard rules, only rough and ready generlizations then how can you tell someone "Murder is wrong" if they just disagree. What basis do you have to have an arugment upon — khaled
I believe that normative aims with superior comeasurability are more likely to be non-trivial aims to pursue. — TheHedoMinimalist
If I did not fulfill my burden of proof requirement, then what would I need to do to fulfill that requirement? — TheHedoMinimalist
I would like to point out that the intuitions that are commonly shared differ across different periods of time. In the past, people widely shared the intuition that homosexual sex was wrong. Today, much fewer people share that intuition. If you lived in the past, would it be your burden of proof to show that homosexual sex is not wrong? — TheHedoMinimalist
What is the difference between unpopular and counterintuitive regarding cases of applied ethics? — TheHedoMinimalist
How do you go about discrediting their intuitions then? — TheHedoMinimalist
There are prescriptions of shit; only a person can issue a prescription; therefore shit is a person. — creativesoul
I would like to point out that you also believe in many things that are counterintuitive to most people that you would regard as ”reasonable” — TheHedoMinimalist
For example, antinatalism is itself counterintuitive to most people. In fact, it is sometimes used in thought experiments to argue against other viewpoints. — TheHedoMinimalist
Frank makes an argument that life contains more badness than goodness and starts that argument by making an argument for Axiological Hedonism which states that the goodness of life should be defined only as the combined pleasure of life and the badness of life should be defined as the combined suffering. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think we can both agree that the unpopularity of Antinatalism doesn’t provide any evidence against it. — TheHedoMinimalist
Rather, I’m trying to argue that the intuitions about applied ethics cannot inform us about normative ethical questions. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think we are getting closer to it since this discussion is getting more Epistemic in nature. — TheHedoMinimalist
Do you think that the unpopularity of antinatalism could be used as an argument against Frank’s view that life contains more badness than goodness? — TheHedoMinimalist
I think you need to have a deeper epistemic foundation that could demonstrate the reason why your intuitions about morality are more plausible than mine or anyone else’s — TheHedoMinimalist
I would like to start by biting the bullets on the thought experiments that you had introduced to me. I actually think that it would be justified to subject Tom to a life of endless torture if it minimizes the combined suffering of — TheHedoMinimalist
So, how should we continue this discussion if I have different intuitions than you do? — TheHedoMinimalist
We're in disagreement for all sorts of reasons...
...not all sorts of people. Moron. — creativesoul
You are equivocating the term "reason" because you are using it in more than one sense in the same argument. This can be easily proven by means of substitution. The same practice will also clearly show that Reason is not a person.
Oh look! There it is directly above! — creativesoul
