This being TPF, of course you're wrong! I'm joking. Actually I think you are correct in that human flourishing is an ideal towards which humanity stumbles. Historically, though, I think it was first the well-being of the tribe, then the king, then the ruling classes. I think it's an ideal in the US. But there is in the world those who believe it is the well-being - the flourishing - of the state, at the expense of the people.Am I wrong? — Thomas Quine
Am I wrong? Can anyone provide an example of a moral precept held by any community past or present who did not come to that position on the belief that it served human flourishing? — Thomas Quine
I am saying only that those communities who considered these sorts of behaviors to be moral, ethical, right, and proper, held that belief because they were convinced (rightly or wrongly) that they ultimately were in the best long-term interests of human flourishing.
Am I wrong? — Thomas Quine
The Shakers of course saw their truest flourishing to happen after death and their beliefs were meant to lead them to it... — Thomas Quine
I think you are in essence right. The problem is how do you then define flourishing?
Isis flourished in some sense as a community bound by shared precepts. — apokrisis
Even those who intend to serve only the immediate interests of their tribe do so because they identify the interests of their tribe as synonymous with the best interests of humanity. — Thomas Quine
I think population metrics are a better yardstick by which to measure human flourishing, in the same way if we ask whether bison are flourishing in Yellowstone, we don't track the life history of an individual bison. — Thomas Quine
...even within the local context it would be hard to make an argument that the activities of ISIS promote human flourishing. — Janus
Any community of human beings who have collectively agreed that such-and-such an act or course of actions is moral, — Thomas Quine
I go with the dictionary definition of "flourishing", it's nothing mysterious. To do well in a hospitable environment. A human community is doing well when there is personal safety, healthy lifespans, economic security, healthy environment, reasonable opportunity for personal growth, adequate water and nutrition, fulfilling work, etc.There are global wellness indicators out there. — Thomas Quine
I think population metrics are a better yardstick by which to measure human flourishing, in the same way if we ask whether bison are flourishing in Yellowstone, we don't track the life history of an individual bison. — Thomas Quine
The other reason I like the term flourishing is because it seems to me a more active verb better suited to creatures like ourselves who have a certain agency — Thomas Quine
I disagree. Even those who intend to serve only the immediate interests of their tribe do so because they identify the interests of their tribe as synonymous with the best interests of humanity. — Thomas Quine
I don’t mean to present any ethical norm, but to offer what seems to me to be a simple description of human reality: all moral precepts are an attempt to answer the question, “What best serves human flourishing?” — Thomas Quine
Note that I am not of course arguing that all morals past and present actually did serve human flourishing, only that those who adhered to them believed them to do so. — Thomas Quine
That's my next step but don't want to get ahead of myself... — Thomas Quine
My next point is that we can actually determine what best serves human flourishing through science and reason. This means if we can agree on the common goal, we have an objective starting point for ethical considerations. — Thomas Quine
some primitive tribes might have a narrower view of human flourishing - many tribes name themselves using a word that in their language simply means "the people". Their view of human flourishing may not encompass the whole of humanity, but only the part of humanity that matters to them.
This is not much different from those who went to war and justified it on the basis of their own racial or cultural or religious superiority. — Thomas Quine
Of course some primitive tribes might have a narrower view of human flourishing...
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I also read a lot about chimp wars and chimp justification for war, and what you might call universal values of chimp society are simply this: might makes right. We are justified in wiping out our rival troupe because we are stronger than they are and we need what they have. It is just and right that we should flourish and they should not. So even among chimps, what is just and right is grounded on what serves chimp flourishing... — Thomas Quine
Is there an objective definition of flourishing that would avoid us smuggling in our own culturally-subjective agendas? Isis would be an example. If it represents a community that believes humanity would be better off without the presence of the infidel, how do we rule out that as a valid definition of "flourishing" in its eyes? — apokrisis
I suggest that you read Dawkins or the like. — praxis
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