• Against Nihilism
    That there are, nevertheless, absolute moral truths ("true" answers about, at least the foundational, moral questions), and though there may not be an objective procedure any two clear headed people could use to come to an agreement about there that there is nevertheless either other ways to the truths or truths nonetheless even if we can't get to them, is usually simply called "moral absolutistism" which is opposed to "moral relativism". Moral absolutists will accuse moral relativists of believing that moral relativism itself is a claim purporting to be absolutely true and thus a moral absolutist disposition, just in denial about it (a debate which goes back to Hellenistic skepticism as previously mentioned, though only on principle and without a cultural relativistic element of modern relativists).

    Moral relativism should not be confused with pluralism, which is simply the observation by moral absolutists that it is not incompatible with a common sense approach to culture (that cultural diversity is not intrinsically bad nor is it intrinsically incoherent for moral absolutists to respect different cultures insofar as they represent an attempt to get closer to the absolute truths that do exist).
    boethius

    Indirectly tangential from the conversation that ensued from this, I've added a bit to this essay Against NIhilism clarifying relativism vs objectivism from situationism vs absolutism:

    Both of these second types of relativism that I am against, for their being tantamount to metaphysical and moral nihilism respectively, hold that the closest thing possible to an opinion being objectively correct is its being the consensus opinion of some group collectively. According to such a view, agreeing with whatever beliefs about the world the group collectively holds is as close to correct as one can be about reality; and agreeing with whatever intentions about people's behavior the group collectively holds is as close to correct as one can be about morality. This group-relative sense of "correct" is where the term "relativism" comes from. But just making judgements that vary by circumstances or context is not relativism, and I am definitely not against that. That view is sometimes called "situationism" in the context of judgements about morality, and usually just taken for granted in the context of judgements about reality. The opposite of that view is the proper referent of the term "absolutism", even though that term is frequently misused to mean the opposite of relativism, which is better termed "objectivism". Absolutism holds that some judgements are correct not only regardless of anybody's opinions, but regardless of the details of the context or circumstances, and I am definitely not arguing for that here, only against relativism.The Codex Quarentis: Against Nihilism
  • The Quest For Truth: Science, Philosophy, and Religion
    As regards the definition of philosophy and its demarcation from other fields [...] While it is a contentious position within the field of philosophy to conclude (as I do) that it is never warranted to appeal to faith, it is nevertheless generally accepted that philosophy as an activity characteristically differs from religion as an activity by not appealing to faith to support philosophical positions themselves, even if one of those positions should turn out to be that appeals to faith are sometimes acceptable.

    But although philosophy relies only upon reason or evidence to reach its conclusions, not faith, it can also be demarcated from the physical sciences in that philosophy as an activity does not appeal to empirical observation either, even though a philosopher may conclude (as I do) that empirical observation is the correct way to reach conclusions about reality. It is precisely when one transitions from using empirical observation to support some conclusion, to reasoning about why or whether something like empirical observation (or faith, or so on) is the correct thing to appeal to at all, that one transitions from doing science to doing philosophy.
    The Codex Quarentis: Metaphilosophy
  • Does anybody actually agree here?
    If anything, maybe that just throws a further layer of complexity unto the issue. I agree with x, who disagrees with y, who agrees with z, who sort of agrees with x, who doesn't love y, etc. Complexity of disagreement.Noble Dust

    Yeah, that's generally what I experience here. Although, not so much the thing about non-commutative agreement, but agreement and disagreement on different topics. That's sort of what I'm wondering about in this thread... does anyone find that they have a kind of general agreement with anybody, more than just this piecemeal agreement on one thing here or there?

    Disagreement fuels the fire of discussion, no? I guess the ideal is situations where there's "shades" of disagreement, but within the shades there's a sort of "general color" of alignment of ideas.Noble Dust

    Yeah, that's the thing. I perceive the spectrum of philosophical opinions in two main camps, that I actually visualize as literally black and white: religious, statist, capitalist, generally authoritarian and hierarchical opinions in the "white" camp; and nihilist, relativist, subjectivist, egotist, solipsist, etc, opinions in the "black" camp. I consider myself opposed to both of them, off of that spectrum. And I see plenty of other people mixing and matching "black" and "white" opinions on different topics (most frequently, being black or white about reality and the opposite color about morality), and occasionally having opinions off of that spectrum on some topics too. But I've almost never seen anybody who seems "over here" with me, in the same area of the broader, multidimensional spectrum. (That's actually a big reason why I started writing my Codex: when studying philosophy, I was unable to find any known and named philosophical stance that broadly fit my own views, only piecemeal agreement on this topic with this guy and that topic with that guy, so I figured I had something new that deserved to be written down).

    I'm wondering if everybody perceives themselves as all alone with nobody of the same "general color" as them, or if everybody else feels like they're in good company with like-minded people who just have "shades of disagreement".
  • Bernie Sanders
    over 87% of people who were asked how they escaped poverty said they did so through “individual initiative”NOS4A2

    That's a textbook case of survivorship bias. You're looking at how many people who did escape poverty did so through individual initiative. What we're wondering is how many people who try to escape poverty via individual initiative succeed.

    How many lottery winners played the lottery? How many lottery players won the lottery? Very different questions.

    Also, people don't generally escape poverty due to government action, but rather are prevented from falling into poverty by the structure of their society, including its government. The kind of people who governments help keep afloat aren't people who would be described as having "escaped poverty".
  • Secular morality
    Whether ethical principles are right or wrong is an ethical questionSophistiCat

    No, it's a meta-ethical question. Just like the foundations of the physical sciences are found in answers to meta-physical questions (broadly, including epistemology in there).

    Whether or not there are correct answers to either type of question, what criteria to use to judge potential answers to either type of question, what methodology to use to apply those criteria, what each type of question even means, and so on, are all questions a level of abstraction away from those questions themselves.
  • Bernie Sanders
    Nonsense. It’s basically an exchange of value (including future value), which as I’ve explained can be generous from the lender side, fair, or exploitive. Whatever capitalistic incentives may lead to exploitation aren’t inherent in lending itself.praxis

    "Nuh uh" isn't an argument. You're just stated your disagreement, not said anything to refute my explanation of how interest (not just lending) is necessarily exploitative.
  • Against Fideism
    (I had accidentally written something here that belongs in another thread instead)
  • Bernie Sanders
    I've mentioned this before: There is no minimum cost to enter stocks or cryptocurrency. You could throw $5 into an extremely high risk one.BitconnectCarlos

    That's beside the point. The point is that someone who only has $5 safely saved up ("safely" as in money that they don't need to keep out of risky investments because they're going to need it soon) isn't going to be able to put as much money into risky, rewarding investments as someone who has $1000 safely saved up, never mind someone with $10,000 or $100,000 safely saved up. This whole side-track into risk has gotten us away from the main point, which is that having money gives you a means to make money, so the more you have the more you can make the faster. (And conversely, and more problematically, lacking money costs money, in the same way).

    Yes, there is risk involved there, in the sense that high-reward investment will involve a lot of short-term ups and downs along the way toward gradual long-term gains. But that nominal risk only becomes actual, genuine risk if you're going to have to cash out on those investments at a time when they might be down; if you can just wait for them to come back up, then there's no actual risk there. I "lost thousands of dollars" this week, temporarily, on paper, but I have next to zero doubt that that will be undone in time, probably not even very much time on the scales I care about, so I'm not actually in danger, at risk, of any kind of suffering on account of this week's market fluctuations. People who have lots of money are the ones who can afford to weather those ups and downs, because they have so much in excess of what they're going to need any time soon that they can let it safely sit there. Those who don't have much in the way of that excess either can't invest as much (if they're being smart), or else expose themselves to genuine risk by putting money on the line that they're going to need back soon when it might not be there.
  • Bernie Sanders
    Lenders or renters may give more than they receive in order to help others, make a fair trade, or take advantage of those in a weaker position.

    You seem to be claiming that lending is inherently predatory in nature.
    praxis

    I said exactly that, yes. And note the words "at interest", which are very important. Lending interest-free is certainly helpful behavior. Lending at interest is a transaction where someone who started out with more than they needed (enough to let someone borrow some) ends up with more than they started with, and someone who started out with less than they needed (requiring them to borrow something from someone else) ends up with even less than they started with. That is inherently exploitative of the poor by the rich.

    All that planning is fine and good, provided that your saving for old age isn't at the expense of your present happiness. I suspect that that may be the case, but correct me if I'm misreading you.

    If you're sacrificing or postponing some high value of yours simply because you're scared to be broke or homeless, I think a better balance is needed.
    Xtrix

    I am sacrificing and postponing major things to safeguard my future, yes. Mostly, I'm living in a much smaller space than many people would accept, and consequently can't live with the woman who would be my wife if only we could live together.

    I have been, for half a decade or so now, trying to live a bit more balanced than I used to, when I was much poorer (though even then, I was apparently still making a median income). Not only do I not cut every single corner like I used to do anymore. (Aforementioned girlfriend used to complain how I had no trash can in my bathroom, because I had one in the room right next door, so it seemed a waste of money to buy a whole other little trash can just to spare walking six feet to throw something away). I also let myself enjoy little luxuries that make life more enjoyable now and only make a tiny dent in my long-term savings plan, like... getting my car washed.

    But things that would consume my entire future, like renting an apartment big enough for two, I can't bring myself to do, because ...

    However, if you manage to do everything else you want to do, while also saving a bit of money, then I'm envious indeed! I have no savings for the future, no 401K, nothing. I don't have health insurance, and for years I had no car insurance (my car was fully paid, now I finance so I am required to have it). Maybe this is all very "risky," I don't know. I guess I figure there's social security and medicare, or else family and friends, and I'm confident in my resourcefulness. I don't require much materialistically in order to live well. That may change when I'm an older or elderly man, I don't know. Plenty of government help you can get, and if you live within your means that's generally good enough. If not, and I end up going bankrupt or accumulating a lot of debt that I'll never pay off, so be it. What do you make of this? Does this seem crazy to you?Xtrix

    ...I don't want to call you crazy, because I feel more sympathy than anything else toward you, but yeah that seems crazy to me. I know plenty of elderly people who never saved for retirement (not that I'm faulting them for it like Carlos would, many many people simply can't) and they're suffering immensely because of it. My own mother foremost among them. She survives at all only because there are government programs that can help her out, and even then barely so, and is always on the brink of homelessness. I'm not so sure I can even count on those to still exist when I'm here age, since the rich are constantly trying to destroy them.

    I used to be of the mindset that I was fine not worrying about money, going broke was no big deal, etc, back when all going broke meant was not eating for a while, because I had a free roof over my head (the roof my the tool shed next to my dad's trailer, but still). Ever since that got taken away, my top priority became to get back to a place where I could stop worrying about money like that again, where going broke wouldn't mean I would lose absolutely everything, because if I didn't constantly pay someone else for a right to exist somewhere, I would lose any right to exist anywhere. That seems like it should be the most basic of things a human being is entitled to, but apparently we're expected to fight our entire lives just to try to attain it and even then it may all be for nothing.
  • Bernie Sanders
    predatory lending, which pretty much all banks are involved withpraxis

    My analysis of the root flaw of capitalism could be phrased as "all lending (at interest) is predatory". There are degrees, of course, what we normally call predatory lending is just such an egregious case that we can't help but see what's going on there. But fundamentally all lending at interest (and rent more generally, as interest is just rent on money) is of the same qualitative character: those who have wealth to spare can profit at the expense of those who need to borrow it just to keep going.
  • The philosophy of humor
    A sort of mirror image of beauty, I hold, is drama, by which I mean an umbrella category encompassing both comedy and tragedy. The common factor to comedy and tragedy, and what I hold makes drama like a mirror image of beauty, is that while beauty is about experiences of something seeming in some way right, comedy and tragedy are both experiences of something seeming in some way wrong. The distinguishing difference between comedy and tragedy is how they approach that wrongness: comedy approaches it frivolously, with levity, making light of whatever is wrong; while tragedy approaches it seriously, with gravity, taking the wrong thing to be a weighty matter. This wrongness can be of either a descriptive or prescriptive kind, just like the rightness of beauty can be. I think this is best illustrated in the wide varieties of comedy, ranging from slapstick (where people experiencing physical violence is treated lightly instead of as a matter of grievous injury) and roasts or other jokes explicitly at someone's expense (that are treated as an acceptable transgressions of social norms), which are both making light of prescriptively bad things; to jokes that hinge on setting up and then subverting expectations (where something that was thought to true turns out to be false), including postmodern comedy that violates medium conventions such as breaking the fourth wall, and even things like puns where the wrongness is just the use of the wrong word in place of the expected one. All comedy hinges on something being, in some way or another, wrong, and yet treated as not a big deal. Tragedy, on the other hand, depicts something being in some way wrong, and makes a big deal out of it being wrong. Both of them are, for that wrongness that they depend on, in some way un-beautiful. Yet both can nevertheless be, in the end, beautiful in their own way. Comedy, in making light of bad things, shows them as not so bad, and so correspondingly good, at least relatively speaking, and thereby beautiful in a way. And tragedy, in treating bad things as weighty matters, can speak hard truths about bad experiences that people can really have, and so, for that truth, also be beautiful in a way.The Codex Quaerentis: On Rhetoric and the Arts
  • Secular morality
    Yes, I understand that you have some pet utilitarian systemSophistiCat

    It's not utilitarianism.

    The criteria of success for a system of ethics themselves belong in the ethical category. You have to have ethical judgment before you can judge a system of ethics. But if you already have ethical judgment, then what need is for a system?SophistiCat

    Do the criteria of success for a system of science themselves belong in the science category? Must you have a scientific judgment before you can judge a system of science?

    No. Same with ethics. We do philosophy to figure out what we're trying to accomplish with an epistemological method like that of science, and how to best accomplish that. We don't use science itself to judge the methods of science. Likewise, we can do philosophy to figure out what we're trying to accomplish with an ethical system, and how to best accomplish that. We can't use the ethical system itself to judge its own methods.
  • Bernie Sanders
    That's completely besides the point, which is disappointing because you seemed to have gotten the point before.

    Say there is a simple gambling game where a coin is flipped, and if you get heads you win something, but if you get tails you lose everything. Winnings and the weighting of the coin are such that if you keep playing over a long enough time scale, you're statistically guaranteed to come out ahead. Odds of winning * winnings > odds of losing * losses. I don't care about the actual numbers, plug in your own, the point is just that it's a game that you should definitely play if you can afford to stay in it long enough.

    But each play costs $1,000. To your average Joe who probably has at most that much in the bank, playing this game would be a terrible way to spend his money. He'll probably lose everything very quickly, and have to borrow money to keep living so as to keep making money to keep playing long enough to start coming out ahead, all the while he's servicing those debts and so sinking even deeper into the hole. This is why it's a bad idea for average Joe's to go into businesses for themselves: while some startups can be the path to a lucrative new life, most of them fail and cost their founders everything.

    But venture capitalists can afford to keep investing in startups over and over and over until they hit the jackpot with the one who makes it big, since they can afford to eat the losses in the meanwhile. Likewise, to a multibillionaire that coin game is a safe investment. Maybe not the best investment, depending on the exact numbers and the alternatives available, but they could park a bunch of money in playing that game and reasonably expect to gradually make some returns on it eventually.

    Risks that don't have odds like that (odds of winning * winnings > odds of losing * losses) are definitionally bad investments, and it is inadvisable for anyone to be putting money into them. But though risks that do have odds like that are definitionally good investments, it's much less personally risky for someone with enough money to put into them to wait and see the statistics average out to that positive return, than it is for someone who might only be able to stay in a few rounds.

    Seriously, this is basic investment stuff. If you're going to need your money back soon, and can't afford to wait for the market to recover, don't put it in risky investments that go up and down a lot, even if they are relatively safe in the long term. Consequently, those who have enough money that they're not going to need all of it back soon can afford to put a bunch of it into long-term investments and wait out the downs much better than those who need everything they have right now to pay the rent in a month. So people with lots of money can afford to weather the risk and wait out the short-term downturns and reap the long-term profits, while those who don't, can't, at least not without borrowing, which cancels out their long-term profits with long-term debt servicing.

    This is why I mentioned myself with this week's market downturn. I can afford to not care about the downturn, because if it doesn't come back up for a couple of months, I'll be fine. I'm only investing money I won't need for a very long time. Someone who's life is counting on having more money in their brokerage account at the end of this month than at the start of it, on the other hand, might be fucked.
  • Bernie Sanders
    you can associate greater wealth with greater numerical gains just like you can associate greater wealth with greater numerical loss.BitconnectCarlos

    That's not how the steps we just walked through work out.
  • Secular morality
    Whoever does that? We all know the citizens of our advanced economies are almost without exception dedicated to self-improvement, edifying spiritual and cultural pursuits, and the abandonment of hedonistic desires in pursuit of the greater good. (God knows I have never been able to live according to that standard.)Wayfarer

    I sense sarcasm here but I'm not quite discerning your point out of it.

    In any case, my point was that hedonism as a philosophical principle isn't selfishness, it isn't short-sightedness, it isn't unclassy low-brow living, it's just judging things on account of how they effect our suffering or enjoyment. A hedonist can and should concern themselves with the suffering and enjoyment of others besides themselves, with the long-term prospects of that suffering and enjoyment, with more subtle emotional and cultural objects of suffering and enjoyment, etc.

    Like Epicurus, in other words.Wayfarer

    From what I know of him, yes.

    Buddhism aims at the eradication of suffering, the complete going beyond of it.Wayfarer

    That is the limit, the extreme, of minimizing suffering. Surely the Buddhist doesn't think there's no point to getting only part way there; any progress in that direction has to be good, even if you haven't made it all the way there yet.

    Buddhism and the God IdeaWayfarer

    I don't see what this has to do with the topic at hand.
  • Secular morality
    As I said, I think appetites are altogether too limited a foundation for an ethical philosophy.Wayfarer

    What you said upthread sounded like you were talking about desires more than appetites. "An average of what people think pleasurable" (what they think, not what actually is), "the spell of delusion" (delusion being false belief), "what other cultures would see as obvious evils" (as in what they think or believe is evil, not something that actually inflicts suffering on them), "suffer as a consequence of hedonism" (a blatant contradiction, as hedonism is all about avoiding and reversing suffering).

    I get the impression that you're picturing people eating, drinking, fucking, doing drugs, etc, all wantonly, while laying about and neglecting to plan for their future, neglecting to think or introspect, to appreciate more subtle intellectual or "spiritual" goods. That is the colloquial way "hedonism" gets used, sure. But that's not what philosophical hedonism is. Someone looking to maximize pleasure and minimize suffering for themselves and everyone else needs to be restrained, pragmatic, thoughtful, etc. Just like someone who wants to be rich and have lots of money to spend needs to be frugal and budget and not waste their money.

    The reason why over-indulging in short-term pleasures and neglecting that restrained, pragmatic, thoughtful living is bad is because it results in longer-term suffering; where suffering is a negative hedonic experience. Even Stoic and Buddhist practices aimed at minimizing suffering through changing the way you think about things are still aiming for a hedonic good, the minimization of suffering.
  • Secular morality
    I think your model amounts to a kind of hedonic utilitarianismWayfarer

    There are similarities, but also a lot of sophisticated differences, that make all of the difference. Most of this was covered in the bit of my Codex I quoted in my last post.

    The most important one is the difference between desires and appetites, analogous to the difference between perceptions and sensations. The physical sciences doen't work off of what people perceive, because perception is post-interpretation. They go off of pre-interpretation sensations, or observations. Likewise, the ethical sciences need to work off of appetites, not desires. It doesn't matter what someone wants or doesn't want, it matters what actually feels good or bad to them.

    This is the blind men and the elephant thing: it doesn't matter that blind man #3 thinks what he's feeling is a rope, all that matters is that the full picture accounts for what he actually feels, and if an elephant's tail feels the same as a rope, then an elephant accounts for what he feels perfectly well, even if he's really sure that it's a rope and not an elephant and that those guys who think they're touching a snake and a tree are just dumb and should be ignored because it's obviously a rope.

    Relatedly, there's a difference between self-reports and replicability. The physical sciences don't just ask people what they saw and take their word for it, they ask for the full circumstances in which they saw it, and then have others stand in those circumstances themselves to check if they see the same thing too. Likewise, the ethical sciences need to be based on replicable experiences, not just self-reports.

    Between those two things, we're not just asking people what they want, but verifying what they feel, and looking for things that avoid making people feel bad.

    Also, unlike utilitarianism, and like the physical sciences, there's no majoritarian balancing going on here. Every replicable hedonic experience is a bit of "evidence" that must be accounted for in a complete moral account. You can't just say one course of action brings pleasure to a majority and pain only to a minority and so it is good. That's less bad than the other way around, sure, but it's still bad. The physical sciences don't just disregard evidence that doesn't fit with a theory that fits most of the other evidence. Every replicable observation has to be accounted for. Ethical sciences need to work the same way.

    Relatedly, unlike utilitarianism, my system is anti-consequentialist. I'm getting tired of retyping things I've already written extensively about so I'm just going to quote myself again (the same essay I quoted earlier, different part):

    The primary divide within normative ethics is between consequentialist (or teleological) models, which hold that acts are good or bad only on account of the consequences that they bring about, and deontological models, which hold that acts are good or bad in and of themselves and the consequences of them cannot change that. The decision between them is precisely the decision as to whether the ends justify the means, with consequentialist models saying yes they do, and deontological theories saying no they don't. I hold that that is a strictly speaking false dilemma, between the two types of normative ethical model, although the strict answer I would give to whether the ends justify the means is "no". But that is because I view the separation of ends and means as itself a false dilemma, in that every means is itself an end, and every end is a means to something more. This is similar to how the views on ontology and epistemology I have already detailed in previous essays entail a kind of direct realism in which there is no real distinction between representations of reality and reality itself, there is only the incomplete but direct comprehension of small parts of reality that we have, distinguished from the completeness of reality itself that is always at least partially beyond our comprehension. We aren't trying to figure out what is really real from possibly-fallible representations of reality, we're undertaking a fallible process of trying to piece together our direct sensation of small bits of reality and extrapolate the rest of it from them. Likewise, to behave morally, we aren't just aiming to use possibly-fallible means to indirectly achieve some ends, we're undertaking a process of directly causing ends with each and every behavior, and fallibly attempting to piece all of those together into a greater good.

    Perhaps more clearly than that analogy, the dissolution of the dichotomy between ends and means that I mean to articulate here is like how a sound argument cannot merely be a valid argument, and cannot merely have true conclusions, but it must be valid — every step of the argument must be a justified inference from previous ones — and it must have a true conclusion, which requires also that it begin from true premises. If a valid argument leads to a false conclusion, that tells you that the premises of the argument must have been false, because by definition valid inferences from true premises must lead to true conclusions; that's what makes them valid. If the premises were true and the inferences in the argument still lead to a false conclusion, that tells you that the inferences were not valid. But likewise, if an invalid argument happens to have a true conclusion, that's no credit to the argument; the conclusion is true, sure, but the argument is still a bad one, invalid. I hold that a similar relationship holds between means and ends: means are like inferences, the steps you take to reach an end, which is like a conclusion. Just means must be "good-preserving" in the same way that valid inferences are truth-preserving: just means exercised out of good prior circumstances definitionally must lead to good consequences; just means must introduce no badness, or as Hippocrates wrote in his famous physicians' oath, they must "first, do no harm". If something bad happens as a consequence of some means, then that tells you either that something about those means were unjust, or that there was something already bad in the prior circumstances that those means simply have not alleviated (which failure to alleviate does not make them therefore unjust). But likewise, if something good happens as a consequence of unjust means, that's no credit to those means; the consequences are good, sure, but the means are still bad ones, unjust. Moral action requires using just means to achieve good ends, and if either of those is neglected, morality has been failed; bad consequences of genuinely just actions means some preexisting badness has still yet to be addressed (or else is a sign that the actions were not genuinely just), and good consequences of unjust actions do not thereby justify those actions.

    Consequentialist models of normative ethics concern themselves primarily with defining what is a good state of affairs, and then say that bringing about those states of affairs is what defines a good action. Deontological models of normative ethics concern themselves primarily with defining what makes an action itself intrinsically good, or just, regardless of further consequences of the action. I think that these are both important questions, and they are the moral analogues to questions about ontology and epistemology: fields that I call teleology (from the the Greek "telos" meaning "end" or "purpose"), which is about the objects (in the sense of "goals" or "aims") of morality, like ontology is about the objects of reality; and deontology (from the Greek "deon" meaning "duty"), which is about how to pursue morality, like epistemology is about how to pursue reality.
    The Codex Quarentis: A Note On Ethics
  • Bernie Sanders
    Thank you, now you're speaking my language. I agree!BitconnectCarlos

    Okay great. And you said earlier that more risk comes with greater rewards. Combine those two things then: the more wealth you have, the more risk you can afford to take, and so the greater rewards you can reap. Mentioning that risk is a factor in the middle there doesn't change the basic connection of more wealth to greater rewards... and less wealth to greater costs, conversely. Which was my original point. The involvement of risk doesn't negate any of that.
  • Secular morality
    The point is that the 'objectively measurable' is not subject to opinion, in the way that ethical and moral judgements are held to be.Wayfarer

    My point is that ethical and moral judgements are wrongly held to be not "objectively measurable", and that the same kind of processes by which we tease out an objective picture of reality from our subjective empirical experiences can be used to tease out an objective picture of morality from a different kind of subjective experience, the hedonic kind. That it is a false dichotomy to say that morality must either be ascertained by appeals to religious faith (or secular laws, which I hold to be formally the same kind of thing), or else left to relativistic matters of mere opinion.

    The "is" and the "ought" are separate, but differ only in direction of fit, and can otherwise be treated in perfectly analogous ways. You say you've read all of my essays, so you should know my take on this already, and I think I quoted the summary of it earlier, but here it is again just in case:

    When it comes to tackling questions about reality, pursuing knowledge, we should not take some census or survey of people's beliefs or perceptions, and either try to figure out how all those could all be held at once without conflict, or else (because that likely will not be possible) just declare that whatever the majority, or some privileged authority, believes or perceives is true. Instead, we should appeal to everyone's direct sensations or observations, free from any interpretation into perceptions or beliefs yet, and compare and contrast the empirical experiences of different people in different circumstances to come to a common ground on what experiences there are that need satisfying in order for a belief to be true. Then we should devise models, or theories, that purport to satisfy all those experiences, and test them against further experiences, rejecting those that fail to satisfy any of them, and selecting the simplest, most efficient of those that remain as what we tentatively hold to be true. This entire process should be carried out in an organized, collaborative, but intrinsically non-authoritarian academic structure.

    When it comes to tackling questions about morality, pursuing justice, we should not take some census or survey of people's intentions or desires, and either try to figure out how all those could all be held at once without conflict, or else (because that likely will not be possible) just declare that whatever the majority, or some privileged authority, intends or desires is good. Instead, we should appeal to everyone's direct appetites, free from any interpretation into desires or intentions yet, and compare and contrast the hedonic experiences of different people in different circumstances to come to a common ground on what experiences there are that need satisfying in order for an intention to be good. Then we should devise models, or strategies, that purport to satisfy all those experiences, and test them against further experiences, rejecting those that fail to satisfy any of them, and selecting the simplest, most efficient of those that remain as what we tentatively hold to be good. This entire process should be carried out in an organized, collaborative, but intrinsically non-authoritarian political structure.
    The Codex Quaerentis: A Note On Ethics
  • Bernie Sanders
    I'm much more comfortable talking about investment here because it's something I do regularly and read up about. I guarantee you that wealth invested does not automatically mean more wealth. The more risk you're willing to take on the higher the prospective returns.BitconnectCarlos

    The more wealth you have, the more risk you can afford to take.

    If there is some gamble you can take where for 49% of the time you lose everything and 51% of the time you win a million times what you put in, and you've got enough cash to take that bet over and over again thousands of times, losing as much as you need to to get that big win, then you're virtually guaranteed to come out ahead. But if you can only afford to lose once and then you don't have anything to gamble with at all anymore, that's an awful bet.

    A huge chunk of my net worth is in stocks. I lost thousands of dollars overnight, several days in a row, this week. And I don't care, because I don't need that money immediately, I can afford to wait for the market to recover, and the drop wasn't even enough to undo the unearned gains I've made from having that money invested for just a few years now. I guarantee you that billionaires are even less worried about it than I am. While someone who really needed that money soon... probably shouldn't have had it somewhere risky like stocks, and so wouldn't have been making those kinds of returns on it if they were doing the smart thing and not risking it, and would have just lost something they can't afford to lose if they had been desperate and reckless enough to risk it anyway.
  • Responsible Voting
    This is easy enough to accept, but at least sometimes what is good for yourself is at odds with what is good for your country, etc. Then how do you decide?Pinprick

    That depends entirely on the situation. If you are in a disadvantaged minority (not necessarily racial, just numerically) facing some kind of systemic injustice, voting to correct that injustice benefits you, and maybe removes an advantage that many more people enjoyed, but since that was an unjust advantage, that's the right thing to do. But if you're in some unjustly advantaged minority (again, just numerically; "the 1%" are a numerical minority by definition), voting to maintain your unjust advantage over others is wrong. Likewise if you're in the majority, voting in ways that advantage or disadvantage most people (like yourself) could be good or bad, depending on who they're advantaging or disadvantaging them over and how and why.

    How to judge what is right or wrong, just or unjust, good or bad, etc, is the whole question of ethics, but whatever method you're using to make those judgements, vote in whatever way brings about good ends, by just means, etc.
  • Responsible Voting
    That would certainly be true if I was interested in seeking and maintaining power, or as a corollary, blocking someone from achieving it.NOS4A2

    It's not at all about power, it's about getting the policy results you want.

    Say the thing you care about is the well-being of puppies.

    - Candidate A promises to feed and shelter all stray puppies until they can be placed in loving homes.

    - Candidate B has no particular plans about puppies but is open to working with other politicians to find a solution to the puppy problem.

    - Candidate C promises to send death squads out to hunt down and kill every last puppy.

    Obviously candidate A would be the best pick to achieve your goals, and candidate C would be the worst.

    But suppose that given the whole electoral system:

    - If you don't vote, Candidate C will probably win, and all puppies will be killed.

    - If you vote for Candidate C, he will probably win, and all puppies will be killed.

    - If you vote for Candidate B, he might win, and likely very little will change from the puppy status quo.

    - If you vote for Candidate A, Candidate C will probably win, and all puppies will be killed.

    Given your principles regarding puppy well-being, how are the first or last of those voting options, where all puppies get killed, somehow better than the third, where nothing significantly changes? True, none of them is your clear favorite choice of providing food and shelter for all strays, but of the available options, it's pretty clear which gets you the closest to that, and it's not the first or last ones.
  • Bernie Sanders
    Carlos, the thing that you really seem to miss here, which should really be obvious because it's a basic tenet of mainstream capitalist economics that every business owner or manager has to understand just to continue operating:

    -lacking wealth increases expenses
    (you have to service debts on the borrowing you have to do to continue operating)
    - having wealth increases revenues
    (you receive returns on the investments you can put that wealth into).

    Individual people and families are no different in that respect. Poverty costs you money on an ongoing basis. Wealth gains you money on an ongoing basis.

    So those who start our poor have to struggle all the harder just to stay where they are wealth-wise, while those who start out richer can afford to fuck up constantly and still stay where they are wealth-wise.

    Two people who are equally fiscally responsible, but differ drastically in wealth, will see drastically different outcomes, because the poorer one gets an automatic negative on their balance sheet just for being poor, and the richer one gets an automatic positive just for being rich.

    And as the gap between the rich and poor increases, fewer and fewer people are capable of performing at the requisite levels of fiscal responsibility necessary to overcome their wealth disadvantage, and fewer and fewer people get the luxury of being able to make reasonable mistakes in the course of their life and still expect to get to keep living it with reasonable human dignity.

    All else being equal, people should be responsible for themselves, sure. But the problem that all else is not equal. It's an enormous, nigh-impossible uphill battle to get from the poverty most people are born into up to a truly middle class position (where returns on investment cancel out servicing debts, so your changes in wealth are truly down to your own actions), and then an increasingly downhill ride to work from that position up to staggering wealth.
  • Bernie Sanders
    It's not someone's fault for being [born] into poverty, but it is their fault if they die poor.BitconnectCarlos

    And the fact that the greatest predictor of a child’s future wealth is the wealth of their parents doesn’t contradict that at all?
  • Bernie Sanders
    If someone retires with 0 in savings that's not the fault of capitalism or the evil systemBitconnectCarlos

    It totally is if they can’t find a high enough income or low enough living expenses to live more than check to check. Which apparently most Americans can’t. And the power to determine the pay and rent and interest that affects that situation is far more in the hands of the wealth people who own the businesses and housing and money than the poor people who need to work at and live in and borrow them.
  • Bernie Sanders
    Thanks, I took that as complimentary. And don’t fault yourself for not finding a cheap deal in rent yet: by definition they are hard to come by, and if they weren’t there wouldn’t be a problem. I’ve been very lucky to have found the deals I have in my life, which is why I’ve put up with so much intolerable shit to keep them.
  • Bernie Sanders
    I’m still not sure I will be able to retire at all, never mind “and then some”, off of even twice a median income.

    In the past seven years since I last went flat broke, I have saved up about two years worth of my current living expenses. At that rate, if nothing catastrophic ruins my life again, and I keep living how I live now in this tiny trailer, by myself, never getting married, then I could retire at 65 with about ten years expenses saved up. But I hope to live past 75, so...

    (This is reinforcing your point, not arguing against it).
  • Responsible Voting
    I think it would be irresponsible to vote for someone along party lines or for strategic purposes, because to do so would be for the sake of power-grubbing, not principle.NOS4A2

    Strategic voting is about not making perfect the enemy of good.

    Say there are three candidates, A, B, and C.

    A if your favorite candidate. B has problems, but C is clearly way worse than them. All measured by principles: A best supports your principles, C violates them the worst, and B is not as good as A but not as bad as C.

    It becomes clear that A will almost certainly not win whether or not you vote for them. But B could beat C, and your vote might make the difference, and that would further advance the cause of your principles, or at least impede attempts to violate them. To abstain from voting might be to allow C to win over B, just because you couldn't have A.

    So, for the sake of defending your principles, B is the strategically best way to cast your vote.
  • Why do we demand Saffron?!
    I know there's labor injustice throughout the agricultural world, but I'm just made about saffron. 'Cause saffron's mad about me.

    a brilliant, florescent yellow with an aroma and taste I am unable to describeMichael Lee

    "Mellow yellow"?
  • Responsible Voting
    A responsible vote is a vote that maximizes the good that is likely to get done. For yourself, your country, the whole world. This includes doing research about the options, of a depth proportional to the weight of your particular vote; just enough to come to a reasonable informed opinion. It could include abstaining from voting if you have no idea one way or another which is the better option on that topic. It includes strategic voting, like avoiding voting for someone better yet who has no chance in a race where that increases the odds of a worse candidate winning than if you had voted for someone slightly less optimal with better chances of winning. Strategy also means knowing when that is not the case, and when a vote for a better loser actually does more good (e.g. if you live in a "safe" state and think a third party candidate is better, voting for a mainstream candidate is the actual wasted vote, since a particular mainstream candidate will win anyway and your "wasted" third-party vote could at least influence party alignment in the future).
  • Secular morality
    The whole point of having agreed measures, peer review, and so on, is to screen out the subjective elementsWayfarer

    Yes, but you’re still building that objective view out of subjective views. Nobody can get outside their own first-person perspective; but we can build models that account for many first-person perspectives simultaneously. Nobody can have a truly third-person perspective on everything, but they can filter out and control for their own biases and so approach one arbitrary closely. Whether investigating reality or morality.

    But it is the implicit bracketing out of the subjective which makes it radically different from the quality of sagacity as understood in the earlier, and broader, philosophical tradition.Wayfarer

    It is the bracketing out of the subjective that drives progress toward more universal truth. It’s just the elimination of bias, the concession to other points of view, the willingness to admit to being wrong and move on to try to find something less wrong, together. Objectivity isn’t about saying that nobody’s subjective experience matters, it’s about saying that everybody’s subjective experience matters equally, and looking for some way to reconcile all of them together.
  • Secular morality
    The issue being the fact that the reliability of science is based on quantitative analysis, whereas qualitative factors are intrinsic to moral principles.Wayfarer

    Science is based on “subjective” first-person experiences just as much as my ethical system is. We compare and quantify aspects of those experiences in the building of our models of reality, and there is no reason in principle we cannot do the same for our models of morality.

    But implicit in that parable is the belief that the sage is someone who 'sees the whole'.Wayfarer

    What is a sage but a wise man? What is wisdom but the ability to discern truths from falsehoods? What is a scientific method but a means to such ability? Scientists are modern sages, and what I am proposing is an ethical analogue of the usual physical sciences.

    The important thing I draw from that parable is the difference between experiences and interpretations. The three men judge based only on their own immediate interpretations of their own experiences. The “sage”, or scientist, searches for some possible interpretation of all of their experiences combined. And then keeps searching for more experiences to test that interpretation against, and new interpretations as necessary to account for those experiences, forever.
  • Secular morality
    And by what standard, pray tell, do you judge the reliability of your system of morality?SophistiCat

    Short answer: Same way I judge the reliability of science.

    Long answer is about 80,000 words if you care to read it. You could start here for just the objectivity part or the last section of this for a general overview.
  • The Philosophy of Commensurablism
    You say first that I'm not reading carefully to give good feedbackboethius

    That was far from the first thing I said. The first thing I said was just to answer your question about my relationship to Rand / use of the word "objectivism", and comment that I should add such a clarification to the essay itself. (I didn't have time yet this morning. I've since done that already by now). That was engaging positively with your initial feedback. Anything else that's happened since then has been on you; I'm just replying to you when you keep coming back to this. As far as I was concerned this could have been dropped after that first reply.

    careful reading is only needed for the first point, which I've already stated is very much related to the othersboethius

    Where have you stated this? I haven't seen you address the first point ("Is it clear what my views are, and my reasons for holding them?") at all.

    Well is "eventually" mean now or eventually. You should make this clear in the OP.boethius

    In the OP I say "I'm not so much looking to debate the ideas themselves right now, especially the ones that have already been long-debated (though I'd be up for debating the truly new ones, if any, at a later time)."

    I'm trying to get the presentation of my argument clear, before field-testing it. You wouldn't complain that a prototype of a product isn't being sent to market yet "because the designer is afraid it won't sell" or something. Duh, it's a prototype. It's not done yet. I'm looking to tighten up the design first, and then bang on it to see if it stands up to vigorous use later.

    You make it pretty clear you want to know where the ideas you present might come from, if they're over 2000 years old, that's simply the case. The Hellenistic philosophers were amazingly sophisticated thinkers, there's no reason to dismiss them; in particular if you're interested in the history of ideas and where your ideas can be traced to.

    If debates have been going for more than 2000 years, probably they are about something pretty relevant. If you're familiar with them, it's a lot more efficient to just say where you are positioned in relation to them, then assume that I'm able to assume that you already know these arguments and assume that I'm furthermore able to deduce where you stand in relation to them and also just assume that you'll get around to commenting on them later but that for now it would be a waste of time.
    boethius

    This is, again, conflating two different things.

    On the one hand, I want to know if I have neglected to mention prior sources of the same ideas I am putting forward. So mentioning ancient Hellenes is useful in that case (though just "Hellenistic philosophers" in general isn't specific enough to be a useful mention in the text, which is why I didn't incorporate that from your previous comments, but I appreciate that you were trying to be helpful there).

    On the other hand, for example, when I mention the Euthyphro argument as a paradigmatic case of my form of argument against appeals to authority, I'm not interested in having that immediately derailed into some long argument about medieval counterarguments in support of divine command theory. That would be a discussion-consuming tangent off of one small part of the much broader topic under consideration, and would probably not be a productive discussion since it's one that's been going on for ages and it's likely that nobody would have anything new to say on the topic.

    I want to save that kind of actual debate for ideas that are genuinely new. Which first means being sure that what my ideas are is communicated clearly, and then identifying which if any of them are genuinely new.
  • Against Fideism
    Based partly on feedback in this (and other) threads, I have completely restructured the essay Against Fideism, now putting the reasons for rejecting it at the forefront instead of the end, and addressing appeal to intuition first after that, and then authoritarianism as an abstraction of that, populism as a variation on that, and new closing comments on how I come close to agreeing with that populism at the end.

    I'd appreciate it if anyone would give it a re-read and let me know if this is an improvement.
  • Against Nihilism
    Based partly on feedback in this (and other) threads, I have completely restructured the essay Against Nihilism, now putting the reasons for rejecting it at the forefront instead of the end, and addressing solipsism and egotism first after that, and then relativisms as an abstraction of those, (subjective) idealisms as a variation on that, and my closing comments on how I come close to agreeing with those idealisms at the end.

    I'd appreciate it if anyone would give it a re-read and let me know if this is an improvement.
  • The Road to 2020 - American Elections
    Progressives... progress.
  • The Road to 2020 - American Elections
    FiveThirtyEight is showing Texas so far (at 39% reporting) leaning toward Bernie, which as I mentioned earlier shifts the predicted outcome toward a Bernie plurality.

    However, unexpectedly, Massachusetts and Minnesota are currently (at 30% and 42% reporting respectively) leaning toward Biden, which shifts the predicted outcome even further in Biden's favor than it was prior to today. :-(

    A probably-trivial wildcard though: American Samoa, predicted for a Biden win, went to Bloomberg. 538's model didn't account for any timelines where that happened, so it's not able to tell me what the probable outcome of the whole primaries will be accounting for that. But it probably makes only a trivial difference (six delegates).

    From 538 themselves:
    3rbxa6.jpg