No, it's not anthropomorphic nonsense. — darthbarracuda
To quote Voltaire, then, if animals cannot feel or have no sentience - then why are their bodies structured and their behaviors so as if they do feel and have sentience? — darthbarracuda
Put yourself in the shoes of a lab mouse. Do you really think it would be alright for the scientists to experiment on you just because they think you're not actually "there"? — darthbarracuda
Do you think there is a problem or not in regards to animal suffering? How am I wasting time by pointing out what I see to be problems? Essentially your positions comes down to "I don't quite agree with what OP is saying, therefore he is wasting is time." — darthbarracuda
Each person believes the candidate to be the best, despite having differing reasons, and these differing reasons don't concern them so long as the candidate is elected. — darthbarracuda
The problem is that if people see themselves in terms of the world they will inevitably come to deny their own freedom and responsibility; their selfhood, This may already be seen in the way the scienitfc image of the human as being just another species leads to an inability to see humans as anything other than completely determined by nature, genetics and/or culture. — John
There is video evidence of penguins looking back at their clan as if they are looking back in forlorn. They know exactly what they're doing. — darthbarracuda
Absolutely not. It was the Enlightenment after all that produced the Cartesian view of animals as simply "machines" that has persisted for centuries. — darthbarracuda
You're operating under the assumption that what we can fix is all we ought to fix. This limits the content of our theories. — darthbarracuda
And you seem content with diminishing this perceived rift between the self and the rest of the world as if it's not important at all, thus shifting the focus of ethics from people as they perceive themselves as people to some abstract universal concept of entropy. — darthbarracuda
Well, I mean I am a consequentialist. I would prefer if you were vegetarian and antinatalist for good reasons, but what matters ultimately is how your actions are affected by your views regardless of their justification. — darthbarracuda
One of the points of abolishing speciesism is becoming an active role in the ecosystem - i.e. intervening and eliminating predation, helping diseased animals, etc. — darthbarracuda
Penguins actually have been recorded to kill themselves. If they cannot find a mate, they walk into the ice desert of Antarctica and die. — darthbarracuda
So to mitigate the suffering of non-human animals because they lack socially constructed propositional language is, as I see it, dogmatic and narrow-minded. — darthbarracuda
Morality need not be possible to attain for it to be so. — darthbarracuda
How so? Singer actually argues that if we adopted vegetarianism or something like this, we could solve a lot of the world's hunger problems. — darthbarracuda
Applying holistic habits of thermodynamics to acute problems in morality obscures the identity of morality. — darthbarracuda
Yes, and I am advocating a moral non-naturalism. Nature is not inherently good, in fact many times it comes across as entirely indifferent or perhaps even sinister. — darthbarracuda
You are asserting that propositional mental content is required for self-consciousness, or any sort of experience at all for that matter, — darthbarracuda
Furthermore, humans are not the only ones with language - look at birds, dolphins, whales, primates, etc. — darthbarracuda
In any case, it is clear from the behavior of animals that many, if not most, fear death, which is why suicide is almost unheard of outside of human civilization. — darthbarracuda
It is clear that animals react to painful stimuli in similar ways that we do. It is clear they nurture their young and care about the pack. And until we have good evidence that animals aren't conscious in some sense (evidence is leaning the other way), it would be wise to act as if they do have consciousness. — darthbarracuda
The super rich ignore the super poor right outside their doorstep. — darthbarracuda
It's only natural to care for one's family — darthbarracuda
Bottom line here is that appeals to proximity or emotional support groups (like nationalism) is tribalism, a worn-out doctrine that can and should be replaced by a cosmopolitanism. — darthbarracuda
I'm not really sure what you're saying here, but from what I can tell you are associating comfort with morality. — darthbarracuda
Speciesism cannot be held up without leading to a slippery slope. — darthbarracuda
So where is this justified that we should/can "shoot" at flourishing? — schopenhauer1
Instrumentality is the absurd feeling that can be experienced from apprehension of the constant need to put forth energy to pursue goals and actions in waking life. — schopenhauer1
You make a pipe dream out of this "flourishing" rather than see the instrumentality that is inherent in all actions, situations, decisions, motivations. — schopenhauer1
Yep, otherwise we are just talking past each other. — schopenhauer1
I am asking you to define the neologism that I am using — schopenhauer1
I'd first like to see you define instrumentality in your own words, — schopenhauer1
all structural parts of life — darthbarracuda
any action that eats up free time — schopenhauer1
I doubt this. Surely we can feel pain without feeling pleasure. Surely we don't need black to see white. We just see white. — darthbarracuda
I thought you were all about pragmatism. — darthbarracuda
Right, cause the majority can't at all be wrong, or because the majority wins by sheer might. — darthbarracuda
It is actually THE natural state.. upkeep/survival and entertainment for big-brained social animals. — schopenhauer1
What is more realistic is that society developed initially to support our needs to survive, but later began to develop as a means of keeping ourselves entertained. — darthbarracuda
Done unbiased it shows how humans have developed civilization as a hodgepodge method of postponing/procrastinating death. — darthbarracuda
Oh, it exists sure, but we're not focused on the World, are we? We're focused on the inhabitants of the World! The basic focus of ethics! People! Not the relations they have to the environment or how they are part of the great cosmic plan of entropification. — darthbarracuda
You're making this impossibly difficult. Pain exists where people exist. If people do not exist, then pain does not exist. — darthbarracuda
We're not just talking about things that already exist, we're talking about potential existants. — darthbarracuda
Just because the lack of pain would be good for us, doesn't mean the lack of pain would be good for potential, unborn people. — darthbarracuda
That was meant to convey that LIKE being a on a desert island where we are solely focused on upkeep/entertainment- — schopenhauer1
...SOCIAL reality that we actually DO live in, is the same except DUE to the social nature of it and more complex environmental/historical situatedness of it, we may THINK that it is otherwise. — schopenhauer1
You make a strongman because you think I deny that we are social animals. I do not deny this at all. — schopenhauer1
And you're trying to reduce transparent phenomenological experiences to a foreign anthropological structure. As if recognizing the sustaining force of our existence doesn't make it less (or perhaps more?) absurd. — darthbarracuda
Because phenomenologically that is the case, and that is where ethics resides. — darthbarracuda
Suppressing the potential for tortured lives only benefits those who exist. — darthbarracuda
And then we have the non-identity problem, and the related issue of lives that are inherently shitty - i.e. if they weren't shitty, they wouldn't be the same life. — darthbarracuda
Well, sure, but we're talking about an individual china plate, just as we are talking about the advantages a potential, single person can have in non-existence. Does non-existence benefit anyone? I answer in the negative.
Everything else is gibberish, sorry. — darthbarracuda
If we were to prune everything down to one person sitting in a deserted island with enough food to stay alive...
...Life is just an expanded version of this scenario.. — schopenhauer1
I don't see how this is necessarily of cosmic importance. — darthbarracuda
I've said this before, the ethics I work with is not necessarily of cosmic importance, rather, it's of person-al importance. — darthbarracuda
Well, sorry, you've just ignored the whole point of my post. — darthbarracuda
So non-existence initially seems like it might be advantageous to the tortured child - yet clearly if this child does not exist, then there are no advantages to be found. — darthbarracuda
If a red chinaplate does not exist, what color is it? It's an inane and irrational question: the plate isn't even able to even have a color to begin with in virtue of it not existing. — darthbarracuda
Alternatively, we can say that non-existence is characterized as the differences between possible worlds. — darthbarracuda
If a bad thing happens, then the avoidance or resolution of this bad must result in a good outcome. But this is entirely irrational. It is the exact same reasoning behind the valuing of recovery - if I recover from cancer, recovery must be a good in itself, right?! — darthbarracuda
Therefore, many of our actions seem to involve a faulty image of non-existence and a need for a good outcome. — darthbarracuda
It seems the problem is the government, having severely limited the construction of new homes, thus making demand high and supply low and thereby creating increased prices.
The other solution is to get a better job. I know it sounds so American of me, but when there's a problem, how about looking within for the solution instead of asking for help. — Hanover
But I don't say experience is a complex state. I say it is not many things, and so not complex. — Dominic Osborn
I can also adduce Ockham’s Law of Parsimony (razor) in support of my assertion that there is nothing other than my experience. Why postulate anything other than my experience? My experience is, I concede, unexplained and inexplicable. But so is a physical universe. And so is a self. All of these are utterly mysterious; all of these represent the end of a line of enquiry. Why not choose the simplest ontology––there is my experience, and nothing else––? — Dominic Osborn
But we can and perhaps even should stop at some point. Especially if our previous line of argument is something which will offer no terminus (and we happen to desire a terminus — Moliere
It's no secret that the mind can sort of 'fill in' details where they 'normally' would be to produce a kind of impression. But you're not actually seeing the edges of the triangle except where there is black and white contrast. — John
To admit this is not to admit idealism though, because idealism claims that percepts are not merely mediated and added to, but entirely constituted by, ideas. — John
The difference between real delineation and the visual suggestion is that the first produces an actual image of a triangle, and the second produces a mere impression, — John
I really can't see the issue with the triangle illusion apo, it exists as an image on a screen or on paper or as something, whatever doesn't really matter, that reliably gives us the impression of a triangle,but is not seen as a fully delineated triangle. — John
So a considered naive realism is simply based on the fundamental logic of the experienced differences between waking and dreaming, veridical perception and hallucination. — John
I think what you are failing to see is that realist assumptions are not made on the basis of a belief that one possesses any knowledge of the "ultimate nature of things" or anything like that, but simply on the basis that when something is available to perception in common, that is when something is publicly available, then it is classed as real, in the sense of being concrete, and is understood to be logically independent of any particular percipient. — John
In Mach-bands we see grey shapes as they are, but exaggerate the contrasts between the greys. The exaggeration is a use of the greys that we see, a way to organize them, but which is incorrectly passed for something present in our eyes or minds, yet absent somehow. But absent things are not present, neither in your eyes, nor inside your head. A memory of something absent does not possess parts of what it is a memory of. — jkop
The whole point is that you don't know that, because you haven't antecedently figured out that all, or any particular, perception is not an illusion. — The Great Whatever
? — jorndoe
Where do you see naïve realism — jorndoe
The quantity of cows seems real enough to me. — jorndoe
I often notice that in debates about Platonic realism, that there that they founder on this notion of 'where could such a domain be'? As I have tried to explain, I think this is based on a misconception. Or rather, I think it is 'the habit of extroversion' that our culture has drilled into us. — Wayfarer
The 'empiricist' mindset is such that 'what is real' must have a location in the physical matrix of matter-energy-space-time. So everything we say exists, must be either locatable there, or be shown to have some evidence or consequences in that domain. That is what 'empiricism' means, right? — Wayfarer
I have been hanging out briefly on another forum and discussing this point with a diehard materialist, and he simply cannot accept that something can be real in any sense other than being somewhere. 'To be real' is 'to have a location in time and space'. If I ask 'what about abstract ideas', the answer is, 'they're located also - in the mind, which is generated by the brain'. And that is the sense in which they're real. End of story. How they're predictive and so on - 'we're working on that'. — Wayfarer
There is only one sense in which something exists, and that is that it is real, and that applies to chairs, apples, real numbers, sentences, snowflakes, or whatever. Whereas fictional or imaginary things don't exist except for in the mind, which is in the brain, which is physical. — Wayfarer
I think in the Platonic and neo-platonic understanding, existence is hierarchical, with nous and its objects higher, and the senses and their objects, on a lower level. — Wayfarer
But the key point is that insight into mathematical principles, is insight into a different domain. And the problem we now have is that we have no means of envisaging such a domain, because we are so habitually disposed to locating everything in time and space. — Wayfarer
