And so this triad - pleasure, pain, and empathy - results in a wide variety of other virtues that we uphold, even if we originally had not held them because of this triad — DarthBarracuda
My claim, though, is that we cannot let these intuitions slip, at least not all of them or all the way. And so we find a justification for these intuitions, by appeal to the most basic value experience: pleasure and pain. It is undeniable that pleasure and pain is good and bad for me, so why shouldn't it be good and bad for other people? Thus, in addition to these basic experiences, we utilize the virtue of empathy to understand the circumstances of another person. And although these themselves are a product of society and evolution, we nevertheless can't help but be swayed by them. They are undeniable, and thus a perfect candidate for fulfilling the open-ended question.
what's pleasurable isn't always good and what's good isn't always pleasurable. — aporiap
I do like this idea of innate, universal intuitions being the guiding force for an ethical theory. But I think there are moral intuitions distinct from our pleasure/pain judgements. — aporiap
If we were thinking morally, we would have to identify then what is actually "the good" that nature had in mind originally, and how we can then re-introduce the constraints so as to arrive back at that "better" balance. — apokrisis
Here's the naturalistic fallacy again — schopenhauer1
In philosophical ethics, the term "naturalistic fallacy" was introduced by British philosopher G. E. Moore in his 1903 book Principia Ethica.[1] Moore argues it would be fallacious to explain that which is good reductively in terms of natural properties such as "pleasant" or "desirable".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalistic_fallacy
Once self-awareness becomes involved, we no longer "have" to do anything, whether that be re-introducing restraint or moving towards a "better" balance... These all become hypothetical imperatives.. prescriptions for this or that lifestyle, but none of them are justified in and of themselves, only suggestions for living this or that lifestyle. — schopenhauer1
For me, what "is" is material. And what "ought" is thus some empirical observation about the necessities of material self-organisation. — apokrisis
They become merely the same system observed over different spatiotemporal scales. — apokrisis
In the long-term, what that everything is, is then what it "ought" to be in the sense that by definition it must have struck on the fruitful balance that enables its own long-term persistence. — apokrisis
Unfortunately you give humans too much credit for self aware insight.
No one would get morbidly obese or a hopeless alcoholic if they could freely make well-informed choices. Most folk in fact struggle to help themselves - fight their evolved urges. And then our societies build in those bad choices for some reason - selling sugar by the bag, alcohol on every street corner.
So that is why we need morality that works. We have a real problem in being natural creatures in a world where we have got good at removing natural constraints.
And you are not going to fix that problem with a faulty philosophical model of morality. — apokrisis
You are taking empirical observation of what "is" and saying this is what we "should" be aiming for. — schopenhauer1
I guess to clarify what I was trying to say is that humans are not fixed instinctually to follow any balance. — schopenhauer1
Your ethical assumptions.. "Me like survival...survival good.." "I learn good ways for survival...this one-issue policy to stop global warming" "we follow that..everyone good".. "me ethical prophet intuiting what is good" "me Tarzan :)" — schopenhauer1
So the difference consists in actually knowing the purposes of nature and thus being able to make some conscious choice. — apokrisis
I am not a closet dualist like Darth and so the "ought" part only needs to have the ontological status of historical inevitability.
I think "purpose" is the wrong word to use here. It suggests intention, which nature doesn't have (unless you count us wanting things as nature having intentions, or unless you're arguing for panpsychism). — Michael
Natural philosophy is about taking finality seriously, but in ways that are suitably deflationary.
So finality is seen in nested hierarchical fashion as {propensities {functions {purposes}}}. Or to use systems jargon, {teleomaty {teleonomy {teleology}}}.
Things with brains thus can have purposes, conscious intentions, teleological plans. But at the other end of the spectrum, even the physico-chemical realm has propensities or teleomatic tendencies. — apokrisis
I'm just not sure how understanding natural propensities relates to normative rules of behaviour. Surely the former is only relevant if it helps us determine how best to achieve some desired end? It certainly can't tell us which desired ends are good, can it? — Michael
If the most general propensity of nature is to entopify, then we can consciously consider our moral precepts in that light — apokrisis
If your notion of "the good" has to be then modified to get passed its traditional transcendent presumptions, or even completely abandoned as a useful term, then great.
I think "purpose" is the wrong word to use here. It suggests intention, which nature doesn't have (unless you count us wanting things as nature having intentions, or unless you're arguing for panpsychism). — Michael
This is a problem. If intention is not something natural then it must transcend nature. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "good" is never going to be found so simply in personal feelings. — apokrisis
Otherwise chocolate and beer would be the highest good. :) — apokrisis
And thus you can see why a basic moral precept, like "do unto others as you would have them do unto you", makes natural sense. — apokrisis
You remain confused about this. It is Darth who is advancing the naturalistic fallacy here in suggesting that pleasure, pain and empathy are natural properties the good (and bad). — apokrisis
And there are issues here -- what's pleasurable isn't always good and what's good isn't always pleasurable. — aporiap
But the example of chocolate and sugar illustrates the fact that moral judgements have to be complex. What's good in the short-term as instant gratification of an impulse may be very bad as a long-term habit. — apokrisis
Well dung is good for dung beetles and rose growers, affection is good for humans. — unenlightened
Except that it doesn't. Quite apart from encouraging potentiallty damaging co-dependency even to the point of deviancy (sado-masochism, for example) reciprocity is not a desirable feature in most relationships. A teacher doesn't wish to be taught by his pupils, a parent doesn't seek discipline from offspring, a policeman doesn't wish to be arrested, a soldier certainly does not expect to be killed. — Barry Etheridge
So the relating is the relating which promotes growth or flourishing? — apokrisis
I think you're reading too much into it. When I say that nature doesn't have intentions I'm not saying that human intention is non-natural. I'm just saying, for example, that evolution (or entropy) isn't an intentional activity that the world-at-large engages in. It's just something that happens given the laws of physics. — Michael
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