So many things really where it would be much better to seek out someone who actually knows what they're talking about and follow what they say word for word. — Judaka
Far too easily people look at obedience as some kind of social power issue and not a result of simple necessity. — ssu
What if the legislating authority and the obeying subject are the same? It would appear that obedience in such case could hardly be irrational. — Mww
It can further be reasonable to invest this authority with force that is not subject to immediate questioning. — Echarmion
To be rational is to be in conformity with a grounding principle of rationality — Joshs
In my view they clearly are identical. — Terrapin Station
I'm saying that the idea, the concept of nonphysical things is literally incoherent. So if we're going to posit them and take the notion seriously, we need to be able to characterize what nonphysical things would even be, in terms of any positive properties, so that we could make some sense out of them, in general ontological terms. — Terrapin Station
You don't want an ethical system that is concerned with people and what they like or dislike, enjoy or not enjoy, desire or don't desire? You just want to base it on facts, — Terrapin Station
Everything you imagine is a state of your brain. — Terrapin Station
Earth to Andrew4Handel. You'd have to set out demarcation criteria as I outlined above if you want me to have an explanation discussion. — Terrapin Station
Physics hasn't been determinist in over 100 years. — Terrapin Station
Saying that the nonphysical is the "reality of our mental life" is just completely empty. You'd need to try to make any sense whatsoever of what nonphysical things are supposed to be ontologically, what their properties are in general, etc. — Terrapin Station
You could give an explanation of why someone held a certain opinion by explain how it was determined by her brain states
— Andrew4Handel
Again, I wouldn't get into an "explanation" discussion without the demarcation criteria discussion (re what counts as explanations) as I outlined above. — Terrapin Station
Again, the very idea of nonphysical anythings is incoherent. You could try to make it coherent, but that would require a lot of work. — Terrapin Station
I'm a physicalist/identity theorist. — Terrapin Station
Complete absence of evidence for anything supernatural. Also, some of the things posited are incoherent. — Terrapin Station
Some people believe in a non natural realm so won't have ruled this out.
— Andrew4Handel
Yeah, but those people are wrong. — Terrapin Station
Teleology is nonsense by the way. — Terrapin Station
. . .and given that there is no "supernatural realm" (unfortunately, because I like the idea of things like ghosts), then there is no objective property of "goodness." — Terrapin Station
Then you're not arguing against what I actually said in response to that topic when you raised it the first time around, and you're therefore missing the point yet again. — S
Any supposed difference seems ultimately to amount to nothing other than a difference in feeling. — S
Obviously it is people, like you and I, who judge what's better or worse. And you've already suggested that you consider your current outlook to be better than your past outlook. — S
To me the main problem is in enforcing morality. Having moral rules that are (rationally?) compelling and legitimate.
— Andrew4Handel
That's a separate issue to the meta-ethical issue that we've been discussing — S
Then you have the burden of explaining a whole bunch of counterexamples which seem to make little-to-no sense under your understanding, like why slavery was considered acceptable for hundreds of years. Your account lacks explanatory power in comparison to my account. — S
My own experience of my failure of moral intuition counts against a theory of valid moral intuition/feeling.
— Andrew4Handel
No it doesn't, not to anywhere near the level required to reject the theory. That would be like saying that we should reject the scientific method because of superseded theories like phlogiston theory. You can see that that's a poor argument, right? — S
Did I say that feelings aren't provoked by events? — S
So, just because you can't change your own past, you now see no "point" in moral intuition? — S
I think when someone says "Murder is wrong" they mean it is wrong to inflict serious harm on someone and rob them of life.
— Andrew4Handel
That only makes sense in the hidden context where they already feel that serious harm is wrong. Whatever you say, you can always go back a step until you can't go back any further, and that's where it ends in the emotional foundation. — S
The role of emotion in morality has been one among different postulates.
— Andrew4Handel
So? These comments are irrelevant or at least incomplete — S
namely that it's justified to reject a position just because it is fallible — S
No, you can deduce what is good for you. — Christoffer
You just go with what you feel and think is right at the time — S
How would you provide justice for every person murdered? There's often no good evidence regarding just who perpetrated a murder. — Terrapin Station
But there's no other way. It's either that or nothing, and nothing isn't a real option. You can't just switch off your moral feelings.
The experience you've described in this discussion is of feeling and thinking about the stuff of ethics differently over time. That's not so unusual, and it's no reasonable basis for rejecting a position such as mine. — S