I would agree that people just "feeling something is wrong" is a very unreliable system of morality. — Bitter Crank
Would you argue that the definition of harm and well-being as they are defined as concepts in our society is wrong? In what other ways can you define these concepts? Do they ever become so differently defined that — Christoffer
No, rather I would argue that harm and well being are their own ends and not the basis of morality at all. — DingoJones
You’ve read Sam Harris I take it? You are trying to paint a moral landscape? — DingoJones
There are other perfectly legit things morality can mean. — DingoJones
Such as? Outside of religious ones and emotional ones I really want to know what people define it as further. I argue that religious morality and emotional-based morality are flawed and cannot be used to define morality since they become such an undefined mess.
In what more ways do you define morality without it becoming "whatever you want it to be"? — Christoffer
I know of Sam Harris and some of his thoughts, but this method is myself trying to deduce a working method out of a moral base that isn't emotional and free from religious doctrine. — Christoffer
That isn't what I proposed though. I said they are parameters within the method that is used to define moral choices. — Christoffer
I suppose it depends on what you define as emotion based, but any number of ethical systems that operate from a rational or logical basis are just as legitimate as yours is. Anything you must consistently reference in order to determine what is right and wrong. Any moral system with a system of measuement, like the 12” ruler in my analogy. — DingoJones
This is what he endeavors to do in “The Moral Landscape”. His argument is very similar, you may find it a good read. — DingoJones
It forms the basis of your method, if you removed them, what basis would you have left? — DingoJones
What then is morality? How do you define morality outside of these concepts? — Christoffer
ChrisH -- this is still farily general, but more specific. Does this help? — Moliere
your basis and the basis of every moral system starts with an axiom, a definition of what the purpose of morality is. — DingoJones
This is most to the fore when what you want is not what you know you ought do. — Banno
The role of emotion in morality has been one among different postulates.
— Andrew4Handel
So? These comments are irrelevant or at least incomplete — S
I think when someone says "Murder is wrong" they mean it is wrong to inflict serious harm on someone and rob them of life.
— Andrew4Handel
That only makes sense in the hidden context where they already feel that serious harm is wrong. Whatever you say, you can always go back a step until you can't go back any further, and that's where it ends in the emotional foundation. — S
So, just because you can't change your own past, you now see no "point" in moral intuition? — S
Because your usage simply does not reflect how words such as like and dislike are commonly used. — ChrisH
I asked you earlier for an example of an indivisible aspect of an object of evalutaion which resulted in both a 'like' and 'dislike' response. Can you come up with anything? — ChrisH
From observing common usage.Because your usage simply does not reflect how words such as like and dislike are commonly used. — ChrisH
Oh? How is that determined? — Moliere
That we have mixed emotions about a person is not surprising. There are many aspects to a person, some of which give rise to negative emotional responses others positive but never both simultaneously. Do you have a simple counterexample?…..sometimes that's not what we mean or have -- we have different emotions towards the same person or aspect. — Moliere
If someone says "The Eiffel tower is a tall structure" What they are referring to is something in the external world. The harm of murder and the suffering is real and in the external world.
I am not saying people do not have an emotional feeling that it is wrong but that this feeling is provoked by the event. It is not the feeling that makes the event seem wrong but features of the event itself.
Someones belief that the Eiffel tower is tall is caused by something external.
I am not saying the harm of murder justifies a moral stance but I don't see how it can be completely irrelevant and subservient to how someone feels about it. — Andrew4Handel
Did I say that feelings aren't provoked by events? — S
Your position apparently implies a disconnect between moralizing and the activities that provoke moralizing. — Andrew4Handel
If a situation is clearly harmful then that would be sufficient reason to moralize about it without emotions. — Andrew4Handel
I am making a general point on the topic that external events are more of a cause of morality than how we feel. — Andrew4Handel
To me the main problem is in enforcing morality. Having moral rules that are (rationally?) compelling and legitimate. — Andrew4Handel
My own experience of my failure of moral intuition counts against a theory of valid moral intuition/feeling. — Andrew4Handel
My own experience of my failure of moral intuition counts against a theory of valid moral intuition/feeling.
— Andrew4Handel
No it doesn't, not to anywhere near the level required to reject the theory. That would be like saying that we should reject the scientific method because of superseded theories like phlogiston theory. You can see that that's a poor argument, right? — S
Then you have the burden of explaining a whole bunch of counterexamples which seem to make little-to-no sense under your understanding, like why slavery was considered acceptable for hundreds of years. Your account lacks explanatory power in comparison to my account. — S
To me the main problem is in enforcing morality. Having moral rules that are (rationally?) compelling and legitimate.
— Andrew4Handel
That's a separate issue to the meta-ethical issue that we've been discussing — S
I said my experience counts against the theory. I didn't say it defeated it. — Andrew4Handel
In science my type of evidence would not defeat the methodology but it would count against the theory that people have adequate moral intuitions. It is like a scientist replacing one tool with another to get better results. — Andrew4Handel
What happened when I became an adult is not that I developed better intuitions but that I had new ones. It is controversial to claim I had better intuitions, because who is to judge and what is that fact? — Andrew4Handel
I have been trying to recover from religious indoctrination since childhood and I find emotions are probably the key thing trapping me. Because I intellectually rejected the religion along time ago. I came across a web site in my early twenties outlining numerous contradictions in the bible and other problems with it.
So I know my emotions are giving me false signals.
This kind of personal account to my mind is more realistic than conceptual theorizing because this is the kind of complex milieu moralizing happens in. — Andrew4Handel
I am currently a moral nihilist so I don't have an ethical position per se. — Andrew4Handel
I was arguing against the disconnect between emotions and events. — Andrew4Handel
I think your ideas are much more undermined by slavery than mine. Slavery supports moral nihilism if anything. But on the emotive position people continuously failed to have the appropriate attitude towards gross humans suffering and exploitation. — Andrew4Handel
I didn't say that bad events automatically lead to moralizing but that moralizing was reliant on aspects of events. — Andrew4Handel
However I think emotional manipulation is probably the reason lots of atrocities have happened. For example telling people that other people are inferior, stirring up fear about certain behaviors. Notice how much propaganda the Nazis had to use. The persecution of homosexuals has not been based on reason largely. — Andrew4Handel
The way my family and church enforced a draconian morality was through fear and threats. It was so over the top that it eventually prompted me to leave because of anxiety. Society often just results to emotional manipulation to enforce a moral issue. — Andrew4Handel
I think a moral system is most undermined based on the degree to which it is unenforceable and the level to which it resolves moral disputes. That is one of my key criticism of the feelings method. I feel that the feelings method will only be enforced by brute force as the final way to resolve moral disputes. Whereas a position like utilitarianism could be enforced by calculation and pragmatism.
Deontology could be enforced consistently because you have set of rules like the law to follow. — Andrew4Handel
Then you're not arguing against what I actually said in response to that topic when you raised it the first time around, and you're therefore missing the point yet again. — S
Any supposed difference seems ultimately to amount to nothing other than a difference in feeling. — S
Obviously it is people, like you and I, who judge what's better or worse. And you've already suggested that you consider your current outlook to be better than your past outlook. — S
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