Pieter R van Wyk
You don't find anything ethical because you are not looking at the question of an ethical foundation. — Constance
Please share this firm ground with me, so that I may gain understanding. — Pieter R van Wyk
Consider: decisions risking their own lives to hide runaway slaves from a posse of slavers or to hide Jews / homosexuals from gangs of Nazis ... or families of murder victims opposing the executions of their murderers ... — 180 Proof
I like sushi
Truth Seeker
I am right. You are wrong. Because I say so.
Infallable! — I like sushi
Constance
What do you mean by "God is a moral concept"? (or by "moral concept' itself?) — 180 Proof
Truth Seeker
Constance
I do not deny the validity of the question posed by this thread: What is right and what is wrong and how do we know? You do not refute nor negate my answer, but keep on insisting that the question is the fundamental question of the study of ethics. If it could help I will stipulate: this question is the very fundamental question of the study of ethics. My argument is that, even after thousands of years of study, this study of ethics have not found an answer to this question - by proposing an answer that is apparently outside the ambit of the study of ethics - therefore, apparently, not to be considered. — Pieter R van Wyk
180 Proof
Pieter R van Wyk
Well, Pieter, I cannot help but notice that your response makes no reference at all to the things I said. Errr, curious. — Constance
Pieter R van Wyk
I gave examples of ethical decisions that were politically defiant and not "expedient" – ethics is not a shallow (or conformist) as you suggest. Read Laozi, Kongzi, Epicurus, Aristotle, Epictetus, Spinoza ... Philippa Foot et al. — 180 Proof
Constance
Where you pursue the whatness of Being, I’m drawn to the ought that emerges within Being: the affective and ethical textures through which existence discloses itself. When a child is burned or a slave is whipped, what matters first is not that Being manifests itself in suffering, but that suffering calls us to respond. This “call” is not derivative of ontology; it is equiprimordial with it. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Constance
That’s why I invoked Hitchens - not as a metaphysician, but as an ethical phenomenologist avant la lettre. His critique may lack ontological precision, but it exposes the pathic structure of moral life: how conceptual fictions (like “God” or “sin”) can channel either empathy or cruelty. The moment consciousness awakens to that relation, philosophy is already in motion. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
180 Proof
What of Levinas' meontological notion of 'ethics as first philosophy' (from Totality and Infinity)?the ethical and the ontological are not two regions but two inflections of the same opening — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
180 Proof
:fire:[O]ntology opens the space for encounter; ethics [even more than "love" pace Iris Murdoch/Plato] keeps that space from closing into self-sufficiency [solipsism, egoism, narcissism]. — Truth Seeker
Tom Storm
Thank you very much for your excellent question. Levinas’s meontological move in Totality and Infinity is precisely what I had in mind when I spoke of the ethical and the ontological as “two inflections of the same opening.” For Levinas, ethics is first philosophy because it arises not within Being but before it - me ontos, beyond-Being. The face of the Other interrupts ontology’s self-enclosure; it calls me from a height I did not posit, demanding responsibility prior to any theoretical stance. In that sense, Levinas radicalizes Heidegger’s Geworfenheit (thrownness): I am not only thrown into Being but summoned beyond it.
Where I diverge slightly is in emphasis. Levinas’s meontology can sound like a complete rupture - an absolute outside to Being. I read it, rather, as the self-transcendence of Being itself, its capacity to exceed its own totalization through the ethical relation. In other words, the ethical call is not alien to ontology but its deepest disclosure: Being showing itself as vulnerable and relational. The “firstness” of ethics is not chronological or hierarchical but modal: the primordial tone of existence as care, exposure, and obligation. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Tom Storm
I don’t mean that ethics emerges as a factual property within Being, but that in the event of encounter - when another’s vulnerability impinges on me - — Truth Seeker
To put it less abstractly: when we encounter pain - human or non-human - we do not first deduce an ethical rule; we are already moved. That movement of concern is the disclosure of Being’s relational core. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Tom Storm
I agree that the record of our species reveals both tendencies in abundance: tenderness and atrocity, rescue and massacre. — Truth Seeker
So when I say compassion is the more natural relational core, I don’t mean it is the statistically dominant behaviour, but that it reveals the more fundamental truth of coexistence. — Truth Seeker
In this light, Compassionism isn’t the claim that humans are compassionate, but that compassion names the deepest possibility of what it means to be. The conqueror and the caregiver are both human, but only the latter manifests what humanity is capable of when it fully hears its own ontological vocation. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
180 Proof
True ... and yet, yinyang-like, "compassion" presupposes "chaos" (just as every ceasefire presupposes a war), no?Without compassion, the circle breaks into chaos. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Tom Storm
So I see Compassionism not as an ungrounded belief but as the minimal metaphysical condition for an intelligible world: if meaning is possible, some form of care must already be operative. The Ouroboros image you mention captures this beautifully - yes, suffering and healing seem entwined, but the loop only closes through response, not indifference. Without compassion, the circle breaks into chaos. — Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
180 Proof
:fire:In that sense, compassion isn’t an invented rule but an encountered reality - the felt structure of coexistence itself. When I harm another, I don’t merely break a social convention; I diminish the field of meaning that connects us. The “realness” of ethics lies in that experiential invariance: wherever sentient beings coexist, the possibilities of care and harm appear as objectively distinct modalities of relation. — Truth Seeker
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