We went over this before, if I could get away with prefixing every word with " the ", I would. — Merkwurdichliebe
Then may I invoke the gravely overlooked guillotine of Nietzsche, that the only correspondence between what happened, is accidental or conditioned, there is no necessary causal or logical relation between what we experience, and what that experience means. — Merkwurdichliebe
This is a fundamental assumption for what we are discussing here... — Merkwurdichliebe
We cannot call the true, or what is, without tossing this discussion out with the bathwater, and beginning with epistemology. — Merkwurdichliebe
Fear and Loathing?
— creativesoul
You had to bring it up. A book that constantly reminds us of the highest morality - qua. the tragic hero. — Merkwurdichliebe
I think it would be wise, in the context of this discussion, to honor the great guillotine of Mister Hume, and leave out the notion of "true" thought/belief. Otherwise, we are going to end up in a different universe, a new thread. I think rational thought/belief is fair enough here. — Merkwurdichliebe
I'm suddenly reminded of Russell's Why I am not a Christian.
— creativesoul
I don't think he read much Kierkegaard — Merkwurdichliebe
...moral dumbfounding occurs at an advanced stage of morality, well beyond the primitive stage of prelinguistic thought/belief.
— Merkwurdichliebe
Indeed. Cognitive dissonance requires a pre-existing worldview. Moral dumbfounding is a kind of cognitive dissonance.
— creativesoul
So intuitive, non-linguistic, subconscious, whichever you want to call it then? — praxis
I'm under the impression that "one was morally dumbfounded when and if they could not answer certain questions regarding why they believe something or other(strongly), and/or how they've come to such hold such conviction in moral belief", I would have to add: only when the question posed is done so rationally (by a relatively normal person), and is meant to elicit a rational answer. For the one who is morally dumbfounded, his reasons are perfectly rational and completely justify his position.(bolding mine) — Merkwurdichliebe
Moral dumbfounding can perfectly explain why Socrates drinks the hemlock. — Merkwurdichliebe
...moral dumbfounding occurs at an advanced stage of morality, well beyond the primitive stage of prelinguistic thought/belief. — Merkwurdichliebe
I'm actually beginning to wonder why that seems to be something so troublesome to agree on for some here.
— creativesoul
I think that I may have figured it out, and in the process identified a basic flaw in the project of attempting to develop a universal criterion for what counts as a moral thing, which is essentially that we may be blind to morals frameworks (and their particular sets of values) that differ from our own. — praxis
I agree. But in the absence of any other criterion, this become the only ground to stand on. — Merkwurdichliebe
...modern day reductionism/analytics, which is not only guilty of perpetuating the nonexisting problem, but of compounding it, mutilating it beyond recognition, and into a greater delusion that, again, thinks something might actually be resolved. — Merkwurdichliebe
The point is that no purported T1 can be altogether without change — Janus
The distinction is between considering behaviour towards another and considering one's own thought, belief, and/or behaviour in a specific context that is not considering behaviour towards another.
— creativesoul
I think the point you are missing here is that in moral thought we are considering what kind of person we want to be, and that makes no sense in the absence of the other. — Janus
I’m just trying to understand your distinction between behavior towards others and behavior not towards others, as it relates to morals.
If you don’t want to cooperate that’s fine. It’s entirely your choice. — praxis
One of the intractable problems I see with trust when it comes to professional therapists is that they charge you for their services, and just as you would not expect a prostitute to love you or know you, why should you expect that the therapist really knows you or cares about you? How can you trust someone if you do not feel that they genuinely know you and care about you? — Janus
What had been traditionally the therapeutic effect of talking about one's issues with trusted friends has been appropriated, and turned into a paid service, it has been monetized and turned into a kind of prostitution. Therapy is also very expensive and not affordable to those on low incomes.
It always takes an other. That's all I'm saying my friend. Always. In isolation there is no possibility of recognizing one's own mistakes in thought/belief, and/or unhealthy habits of mind, whatever they may amount to.
— creativesoul
If you just mean that it is only through interactions and specifically talking with others that one's traumas mys be dealt with, then I would say that may be right. If you are suggesting that it must be through some expert other, then I would consider that a baseless assertion. — Janus
Also, more generally, the absurd notion that there is no shared meaning, if accepted, would render all discourse futile, because interlocutors could never be doing anything other than talking past one another. A lamentably useless position to hold! — Janus
...you’re also saying that it’s not about considering behaviour towards others. You must see that that’s where we disagree, or I don’t follow your meaning — praxis
You agree that there is at least one moral to the story. That's all I'm saying here.
— creativesoul
Not exactly... — praxis
I'd like to resolve this, but it's fine if you'd like to move on.
I've identified two morals in the fable... — praxis
Incoherence anyone?
— creativesoul
We can be both referring to A (or P or whatever) at time T1. — Terrapin Station
Meaning is the act (or event) of making mental associations. — Terrapin Station
...what we're talking about can be identical. — Terrapin Station
I don’t think this line of thought is important to the project of determining the source of morals. I’ve found it interesting though. — praxis