If this follows then "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral" would also have to follow (since you say that normative statements automatically define a moral law). Do you really think "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral" should follow from "I have a goal of eating"? — khaled
In the same way that these are non sequitors
"I have the goal of eating"
"I (morally) should eat"/ "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral"
Neither of these follow. If you had meant should in the same sense that you use should in "You should turn on the stove to cook the stake" then it makes sense (I (instruction)should achieve stability because I want it) but then you're not making a normative claim — khaled
Is literally an oxymoron. Why do you think heat death is more stable than right now? Because that's what this implies — khaled
I've heard similar arguments before and I'll reply in the same way, there is always a semantic shift in the use of "should" when this happens. In this statement "should" simply indicates instructions as in "To cook the steak you should light the stove" there is nothing moral about it. To tell the difference between the instructional should and the moral one try replacing them with "would need to"
People go towards stability goes to:
"They should achieve stability"
"They would need to achieve stability"
The two sentences mean the same thing, so it's the instructional should being used here and there is nothing moral about the assertion.
An example of a moral should:
"You should give to the poor"
"You would need to give to the poor"
The two sentences are clearly different, so it's a moral should — khaled
That's what we see because we have flowers in our eyes. Ever heard of entropy? — khaled
That's what I'm saying though. This is NOT normative. Logically necessary? Maybe but not normative.
The statement is: People necessarily seek stability
A normative statement would be: People should seek stability
This falls right back within the guillotine. You can't go from either of those statements to the other. — khaled
In general I find it a lot easier to argue for absence of something negative.
I don't see happiness, joy or contentment as the result of gaining something positive but losing something negative. In mathematical terms going from -1 to 0 you achieve happiness. Not going from 0 to 1 because of the 'mean reversion' the revert to the average you will always end up in 0 again.
People should be content at zero but don't realize they are. — ovdtogt
That is a nice belief but there are elites whose voice of authority weighs much more than others, and they can prevent correction just as the church of old was able to prevent correction, short of torturing and killing people. Only a person with much persistence and knowing people with strong connections can get past the control of these guardians of truth. — Athena
I would emphasize that there are schools of thought in science, not mainstream and fringe science itself. The foundations of science are the same. The experiments are the same, publish them or not. You either have science or then you have non-science, humbug. You can have scientist disagreeing on a variety of issues, but either one is right and another is wrong or they are talking about different issues. — ssu
Everything could just be wandering from instability to instability — khaled
I don't think it does. First off I don't agree this seeking for stability has anything to do with logical necessity. Secondly even if we give that there is a "logically necessary" goal for everyone that doesn't translate to it being moral to seek. Say eating is a "logical necessity", does that make it moral to eat and immoral to eat? — khaled
So in my mind re-wording it to something like : "Emotions and Ethics based on Homeostasis" seems a bit more appropriate/intriguing. — 3017amen
Of course, you set yourself up for failure by the very premise of your inquiry: developing a logically necessary ethics. Anything that is logically necessary cannot tell us anything about what is or what ought to be. Logic is a sealed system, it is limited to its own abstract playground. Unless you feed it some real-world premises - which you will then have to justify - it cannot accomplish anything that doesn't collapse into triviality. — SophistiCat
But you cannot just define goals. I as a moral agent select my goals according to what I judge to be good or bad; you cannot unilaterally define my goals for me and then call it a "logical necessity." — SophistiCat
You keep repeating this, but it makes no sense whatsoever. It is trivially true that every thing either changes or it does not, but no normative statements can be logically derived from this truism. — SophistiCat
What's logically necessary about it? I wouldn't call it "logically necessary". In the same way that food isn't "logically necessary" neither is seeking a more stable state. Sure you try to do both, but there is nothing logical about that — khaled
Unsubstantiated claim — khaled
Also if you could be so kind to provide us with a numbered list of your theories foundations it would be great. — TheMadFool