So aside from outcomes and intentions, what kind of action also seems to matter. — ChatteringMonkey
The football example is actually an interesting one, because in football (and I'm talking about soccer here) they have very clear rules about what kind of tackles are allowed and which are not. Intentions usually are not considered in determining whether the player has made a fault. Either way such a tackle usually isn't considered morally wrong, even if it was a fault. But if you were to tackle someone outside of a football-field then it would be considered morally wrong. Intention to harm is assumed because why would you be tackling someone otherwise. So here we have basically the same actions that are judged completely differently because context matters. — ChatteringMonkey
Nevertheless, I would say that there is a fundamental difference of intention between communicating with oneself and communicating with others, implying a difference in meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
If we do not act on our intentions, are they intentions? — Kenosha Kid
I thought he meant that we judge something on what the intended or desired outcome was, not on the actual outcome. And while that seems to be the case for the most part, it isn't that cut and dry. In certain cases we do think intent to harm isn't necessary for something to be immoral, like say in case of doing harm because of drunk driving or negligence. — ChatteringMonkey
This is why I find it illogical to construct an ethics of outcomes. One does not act according to outcomes; one acts according to intentions. — Kenosha Kid
In my view it all comes down to if your suffering will be worse than the animals'. — Down The Rabbit Hole
There is a rich history of people making markings to serve as memory aids. This is very distinct from using language for communication. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think there is a danger of certain basic needs just being seen as attachments rather than as essential needs. — Jack Cummins
No it means you're attached to having enough liquids to live. A reasonable expectation in the moden age. — khaled
My point is that you can keep asking someone "Why do you want X" and they can keep giving answers. Are you saying the last answer in that sequence is the "attachment" and the others are the "desire"? — khaled
How big of a problem it is not to have the thing. Which I find to often be different from how much you want the thing. Sometimes you want things that you would not be distressed at not having, such as a new car or a particular christmas present (Desire without Attachment). Other times, it seems like a huge problem to not have something even though you don't really want that thing, like with smoking and gambling (Attachment without Desire). — khaled
Don’t understand the question. — Wayfarer
I think the Buddhist answer is that it’s our faith in the security and permanency of our day to day lives which is groundless. — Wayfarer
The way you defined it I don't see a hard line between what counts as a "desire" and what counts as an "attachment", they both just seem to be talking abou the same thing to me. — khaled
"Why are you participating in the tournament?" "Because I want to win" is that attachment or desire? — khaled
The way I use the term "attachment" is radically different from what you just outlined. — khaled
I find the first much more likely considering how many people seem to find sense in what he says. — khaled
You guys seem to be equating attachment with desire. They are very different things. As you say, if the Buddha hadn't desired anything, he wouldn't have got out of bed to eat. But he did. So that suggests that they're not the same thing. — khaled
If only it was that simple. — Jack Cummins
So, the question is how do we prioritise? — Jack Cummins
This makes me think of a hypothesis I've been mulling over lately: are all mental disorders just distortions or exaggerations of aspects of normal mental functioning? — Pfhorrest
I would like to know peoples' opinions about how to approach reason itself. What kind of a faculty is it? Is it mainly good? Is it mainly reliable? What are we to make of it? Thanks — Gregory
Cognitive empathy. — Brett
That is, I think, a very good principle in itself, and the moral analogue of critical rationalism, which I think is the correct epistemology. Both in deciding what to believe and in deciding what to intend, the focus is best put on avoiding the most wrong options, rather than on identifying one specific uniquely right option. — Pfhorrest
So, let's make ourselves happy. — TheMadFool
But since you say that in practice you ignore all those things that you say you think, it still looks like you don’t actually think them, but just say you do. So I’d recommend instead saying that you think the things that you act like you think, and finding the right label for that instead. — Pfhorrest
It's only that there's no single method we use to determine a course of action in moral dilemmas, we use different approaches as the context changes. — Isaac
If it could make a difference, then they wouldn't be nihilist, because something - i.e. what you said - would matter. — Wayfarer
Problem is that's going to be a miniscule portion anyways. — khaled