Don't forget the daoist 'yin-yang'. Imbalances cause oppositions-reversals (i.e. complementary effects ... not unlike Hegelian/Marxist dialectics). Laozi's "harmony" (balance, wu wei) is analogous to Aristotle's "golden mean" (arete). — 180 Proof
That is an extrinsic benefit.What's the most baseline intrinsic behaviour there is? Survival, no? — Hermeticus
Surviving =/= thriving (i.e. surviving is necessary but not sufficient for thriving). To thrive – self-cultivate – is an intrinsic benefit.So all these extrinsic benefits were adopted for an intrinsic purpose.
Yes, as you point out: no quid pro quo.Can altruism ever be non-reciprocal?[ Even if there is no immediate return -
Helping a dying person die doesn't raise your standing with the dead.helping others inevitably raises my standing with the helped.
The rabbi reminds us, I think, not to do anything we know is hateful to another so that we avoid that our 'hating' becomes a (self-immiserating) bad habit, or vice.Does Hillel urge us not to hate for the sake of goodness, or does he urge us because he does not want to encounter hate himself?
That's simply due to how we define good and evil. — Hermeticus
The other view is that death is a part of life just like anything else and there is nothing inherently evil about it. — Hermeticus
Furthermore, I believe morals fail immediately once we take them to the extreme. — Hermeticus
This is good and evil:
Good, someone who I can trust. Bad, someone who is a threat to me.
Everything else, the varied aspects of morals and ethics simply evolved from there. — Hermeticus
Have you even read the Daodejing? What "opposites"? The yin-yang are complementaries entwined with each and not separate, discrete, "opposites". Imbalance is the diagnosis – rigidly fixating on one complementary and neglecting the other; seeking balance (via effortless (fluid, flowing) activity) is the treatment.
When imbalance is absent balance is present. When balance is absence, imbalance is present.
(Imbalance : illness :: balance : good health & diet :: seeking balance : medicine.)
Still not clear? Read Laozi, Fool. :sweat: — 180 Proof
Care to explain how survival is an extrinsic benefit?That is an extrinsic benefit. — 180 Proof
Still means that extrinsic benefits have been adopted for intrinsic purposes (thriving rather than surviving in this case).Surviving =/= thriving (i.e. surviving is necessary but not sufficient for thriving). To thrive – self-cultivate – is an intrinsic benefit. — 180 Proof
Very good point. But in regards to myself: The reason I'd help a dying person die is because I think it's "the right thing to do". I think it's the right thing to do because if I ever were in the same situation, I'd hope someone would help me die in the same way.Helping a dying person die doesn't raise your standing with the dead. — 180 Proof
No, you can not define my joy and suffering away because my joy and suffering depend on my definition.So, I could then define your joy and suffering away? — TheMadFool
You've got it the wrong way around, Fool! There is no dukkha in what is. Dukkha arises from desire and expectation - the oughts.Remember, morality is about oughts and not ises, the latter is a cause of much dissatisfaction (dukkha). — TheMadFool
We're all stuck in the ises. Ises is what is. Oughts is dreamland. It doesn't exist. Ises is what is important. If I can't run an ought through any given scenario, what's the point of having an ought?Again, you're flip-flopping between oughts and ises. Because you're stuck in the ises, the oughts appear extreme. — TheMadFool
You're just demonstrating the subjectivity of good and evil. Of course the devil thinks God is evil and of course the thieves think that their mates are good.This doesn't make sense. God is a threat to the devil. So, is God bad? A gang of thieves can trust each other, are they good? — TheMadFool
No, you can not define my joy and suffering away because my joy and suffering depend on my definition.
You can however, define your own joy and suffering away. — Hermeticus
You've got it the wrong way around, Fool! There is no dukkha in what is. Dukkha arises from desire and expectation - the oughts. — Hermeticus
We're all stuck in the ises. Ises is what is. Oughts is dreamland. It doesn't exist. Ises is what is important. If I can't run an ought through any given scenario, what's the point of having an ought? — Hermeticus
You're just demonstrating the subjectivity of good and evil. Of course the devil thinks God is evil and of course the thieves think that their mates are good. — Hermeticus
Precisely. Masochists do exactly that, associating pleasure with pain.So, I define my joy as the feeling that I get when someone punches me in the face, that punch on the face will magically transform in terms of the accompanying sensation into something else? — TheMadFool
Yes. More accurately, the person is unhappy because they knew happiness before. You've actually inquired about this just earlier.So, a person who's being tortured severely is unhappy because he can conceive of a world in which he isn't tortured? — TheMadFool
The yin-yang are complementaries entwined with each and not separate, discrete, "opposites". — 180 Proof
I don't understand how anyone wouldn't be "in the is". "Ises" as you say, that what is, is simply reality - or do I misunderstand something about the words you use?Some of us aren't. — TheMadFool
I'm not saying my claim is not objective. I'm saying objectively, good and evil are subjective.But, are they? if your claims are not objective then why are you trying to convince me of your views. — TheMadFool
This doesn't make sense. God is a threat to the devil. So, is God bad? A gang of thieves can trust each other, are they good? — TheMadFool
Precisely. Masochists do exactly that, associating pleasure with pain. — Hermeticus
Yes. More accurately, the person is unhappy because they knew happiness before. You've actually inquired about this just earlier. — Hermeticus
Dukkha arises from desire and expectation - the oughts. — Hermeticus
I don't understand how anyone wouldn't be "in the is". "Ises" as you say, that what is, is simply reality - or do I misunderstand something about the words you use? — Hermeticus
I'm not saying my claim is not objective. I'm saying objectively, good and evil are subjective. — Hermeticus
Yes, loyalty to our group is good. — Athena
The beneficial conditions or requirements of survival are external to the survivor.Care to explain how survival is an extrinsic benefit? — Hermeticus
Okay. "Purposes", however, are not synonymous with "benefits".Still means that extrinsic benefits have been adopted for intrinsic purposes (thriving rather than surviving in this case).
Agreed. One is altruistic in order to fulfill one's immediate (conditioned) sympathic responses (needs) and not in exchange for something the patient can do in return. In the main, for example, nurturing children and caring for debilitated elders, feeding the hungry and donating blood or organs, etc, are not 'acts of reciprocity'.I don't really think there is any good behaviour that is good just for the sake of being good.
So, a group of genocidal maniacs who are loyal to each other are good? Why the hell then are they put on trial and sometimes sent to the gallows?
Something's off. You need to rethink your idea of good & bad. Looks like it might get really interesting very fast. — TheMadFool
Not stealing because it could lead to going to jail, is not a very high standard of morality. There are many legal ways to take advantage of people. And calling a band of thieves genocidal maniacs is a bit hyperbolic don't you think? — Athena
You're evading the question. You said, all that matters to goodness is loyalty and hence my question about a band of genocidal maniacs people who are loyal, let's even say deeply loyal to each other and whether they qualify to be counted among the ranks of, say, the Buddha or Jesus? — TheMadFool
But is it inevitable that humans with a complex language would always have constructed such formality? [ I.e., moral and ethical systems, I guess. ] Why when animals are able to form order and organisation without this does the human stand alone. — David S
Yep. I want your opinion on something that's bothering me for as long as I can remember. The Taoist harmony principle between opposites (hot-cold, good-bad, and so on), to my reckoning, implies the existence and, shockingly, the necessity for disharmony (the counterbalancing force of harmony). This, as far as I can tell, means there should be discord/strife/struggle/chaos in the universe. If so, what's the point at all of seeking balance/equilibrium? — TheMadFool
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