1) Are goals "real" in that they are a natural phenomena that are a part of certain animal biological/psychological make-up, or a nominal label for a very pervasive social convention/habit? — schopenhauer1
The problem now is that, even if one recognises goal-directed behaviours as being biologically defensible, the question becomes 'which goals'? Obviously, from the perspective of evolutionary theory, the goals are always the same: successful reproduction and survival. But if that is taken as a philosophical purpose, then it is reductionist: our only 'goal' from that perspective, is to marry and have children. I suppose that's better than nothing - after all, Freud said the aim of his work was to enable people 'to work and to love' - but in the grand scheme, it leaves out nearly all of what philosophy was originally intended to encompass. Or so I would think. — Wayfarer
It explains the difference between goal-oriented and goal-directed behavior, with examples. He also has another book, "Mindreading Animals", both of which are an interesting read. — Harry Hindu
Do you think that the "goals" you are talking about like reproduction and survival and "goals" that I am talking about in terms of linguistic-thought based goals (I want to go to X place to meet X person) are the same thing or wholly different? — schopenhauer1
What concerns us is the telos of a human being. Just like everything else that is alive, human beings have a telos. What is it that human beings are meant by nature to become in the way that knives are meant to cut, acorns are meant to become oak trees, and thoroughbred ponies are meant to become race horses? According to Aristotle, we are meant to become happy. This is nice to hear, although it isn't all that useful. After all, people find happiness in many different ways. However, Aristotle says that living happily requires living a life of virtue. Someone who is not living a life that is virtuous, or morally good, is also not living a happy life, no matter what they might think. They are like a knife that will not cut, an oak tree that is diseased and stunted, or a racehorse that cannot run. In fact they are worse, since they have chosen the life they lead in a way that a knife or an acorn or a horse cannot.
Someone who does live according to virtue, who chooses to do the right thing because it is the right thing to do, is living a life that flourishes; to borrow a phrase, they are being all that they can be by using all of their human capacities to their fullest. The most important of these capacities is logos - a word that means "speech" and also means "reason" (it gives us the English word "logic"). Human beings alone have the ability to speak, and Aristotle says that we have been given that ability by nature so that we can speak and reason with each other to discover what is right and wrong, what is good and bad, and what is just and unjust.
Note that human beings discover these things rather than creating them. We do not get to decide what is right and wrong, but we do get to decide whether we will do what is right or what is wrong, and this is the most important decision we make in life. So too is the happy life: we do not get to decide what really makes us happy, although we do decide whether or not to pursue the happy life. And this is an ongoing decision. It is not made once and for all, but must be made over and over again as we live our lives.
I agree that Aristotle seems to fall into a kind of category error — schopenhauer1
So to refer back to the OP, does goal-directed behaviors fall into the nominal camp of social conventions? — schopenhauer1
Schopenhauer's whole metaphysical and ethical schema had goal-driven behavior as a an important factor. Much of what humans experience are the pangs of goals that are never satisfied that well up unconsciously via the essence of our (and all) being, namely Will. In fact, goals are a main source of dissatisfaction in the human experience as they are often frustrated, temporary, cause anxiety, and allow for little reprieve. — schopenhauer1
Who are you agreeing with? I didn't say that Aristotle falls into a category error; I posted that quote because I think there's wisdom in it. — Wayfarer
If you're a moral relativist, they must, because they're only directed by social conventions. If you're a moral realist, then they don't, because there are genuinely real and important goals that aren't dependent on social convention. — Wayfarer
I don't know if Schopenhauer would agree that the will is goal-directed. The will is blind and unconscious. And it's not goals can't be reached, more that desires can't be satisfied. 'Man can indeed do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wants.' But Schopenhauer also recognized asceticism as a way - indeed the only way - of freedom from the tyranny of will, and of the importance of compassion. — Wayfarer
Much of what humans experience are the pangs of goals that are never satisfied that well up unconsciously via the essence of our (and all) being, namely Will. — schopenhauer1
Your namesake would have made the distinction between essential, or natural, pursuits and artificial pursuits. Natural pursuits being those like acquiring food, water, shelter, intercourse (but that is debatably essential), artificial pursuits being those imposed and constructed by society, like money, fame, and power. — darthbarracuda
Without anyone else, there would be no real value to being an individual - a hermit is a hermit in relation to the rest of society. Our heritage (Heidegger) is rooted in the surrounding culture, heritage is literally part of who we are even if we don't like it. — darthbarracuda
I see his emphasis on heritage as an escape from the "nothing" - Heidegger isn't willing to see "nihilism" to it's end. He wants to save meaning and purpose by simply turning his gaze away. It's quite inauthentic. At least that's what I interpreted it as. — darthbarracuda
No. You didn't read enough and you projected something unrelated into what was explained in the book. Linguistics was never used in the link I provided to distinguish goal-oriented behavior from goal-directed behavior. Linguistics has nothing to do with it.I'll try to read some of this. Yes, this is what I might have been getting at with Wayfarer. Goal-oriented is not linguistic-based. Or perhaps when an animal makes a tool he is goal-directed because the end goal is apparent and there are concrete steps, but his desire for food is goal-oriented as it is a vague feeling and not consciously thought about. But, even tool-making might be just problem-solving without the goal really consciously known. That is more cognitive science though. — schopenhauer1
No. You didn't read enough and you projected something unrelated into what was explained in the book. Linguistics was never used in the link I provided to distinguish goal-oriented behavior from goal-directed behavior. Linguistics has nothing to do with it. — Harry Hindu
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