Questioner
I like oranges, but the colour is odd. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Leontiskos
This is tricky to give a yes or no to. The answer properly is 'yes'. But what i've said there is about how I behave, Not what I try to have others do around me, if you can grok the difference. — AmadeusD
I think you're being a little callous in your capturing of the situation, — AmadeusD
...but in a significant sense, yes, that's right. When I speak about how i interact with other people, i try my best to help people toward their goals. The decision to do so is moral. The activity of, lets say, educating someone as how best to achieve their goal in my view, is entirely practical as I see it. I could just as easily leave off and nothing would be different morally. — AmadeusD
If my behaviour violates other people's rights, that's counter to an overarching moral intention to maintain social and cultural cohesion. This is a legal argument rather than a strictly moral one, but to be sure, I am making a moral call to resile from a behaviour once I note it may be violating another's rights of some kind. — AmadeusD
There's no inconsistency. If I am trying to get someone to act, its on practical grounds due to a moral decision to help them. You must clearly delineate the two modes. A moral decision is made in my mind - I then behave without moral reasoning in persuading the other to act toward their own goal (not mine. That's incorrect). My (moral) desire is to help the person. Not their goal, per se. The how-to is somewhat arbitrary. — AmadeusD
Roughly moral reasoning is that which gets us to do something because of its rightness or wrongness. Practical reason is trying to do things which will achieve an arbitrary goal. — AmadeusD
So, in my example, if my moral position was that it's good to help anyone whatever then you might find me teaching a racist how best to gut Chinese children. But my moral reasoning tells me not to help that person toward their goal. The reasoning-to-act issue never arises. Had it, the moral problem would be in my decision to help them, not my reasoning on how best they could achieve their barbaric (i presume moral) outcomes. — AmadeusD
My general point here is that it is hard to believe that you are a thoroughgoing moral subjectivist (or emotivist). — Leontiskos
I think most people have this trouble; particularly the theologically inclined. For instance I don't need answers to 'why are we here' or 'what does it mean to be human' or whatever to get on with my life all hunky dory. I don't care. We are here. We are human. What the 'means' is made up stuff we do for fun, basically. I get that its tough to understand, but there's a massive difference between being a subjectivist when it comes to morality, and being either a-moral, or dismissing morality entirely. Alex O'Connor does a good job of discussion emotivist in these terms imo. — AmadeusD
How does a moral subjectivist claim that the law is often wrong when it comes to moral regulation? — Leontiskos
As an example, with wills and estates there is generally a 'moral duty' to provide for one's children after death (if one has anything to pass on, anyway). I think this is wrong, overreach and inapt for a legal framework that doesn't interfere with people's personal affairs. So, that's my personal moral view. I don't think that's going to be true for the next guy. So i don't care to do anything about the policy. I have to enforce it regularly, actually (well, I have a part in doing so regularly).
This is why I think the Law does a pretty good job. For the most part, its been 'democratically' hammered out over time, through common law, into something resembling a "close-to-consensus" and I'm happy to live with that. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Well this whole threa — Leontiskos
This seems to indicate that when you are merely trying to get people to act or not act (regardless of any intention), you have your own goals primarily in mind rather than their own. — Leontiskos
ut are you saying that your decision to help people towards their goals is moral, or not? — Leontiskos
Isn't that a contradiction? — Leontiskos
Your behavior in cases such as these is moral in nature, or in your words, it requires "making a moral call." — Leontiskos
Is the idea that helping others is moral, but the thing that the other person is being helped to do need not be moral? — Leontiskos
It seems to me then that in the interaction you would be acting morally throughout (insofar as you are helping), and the person would be achieving some practical end with your aid. — Leontiskos
Thus from the perspective of the person being helped, you are acting morally insofar as you are helping them, but you are only acting practically insofar as the means-end intelligibility is being discovered. Is that right? — Leontiskos
helping them act and think and understand — Leontiskos
But why is your unspecified decision to help someone moral, as you earlier said it was? — Leontiskos
A simple case is your point about how you respect others' rights, and that this respect is moral in nature. If you were a subjectivist or an emotivist I'm not sure how that would work. — Leontiskos
But how does the subjectivist claim that the law is right or wrong? — Leontiskos
This is utterly strange to me. — Leontiskos
If you really think a law is wrong, then by definition it would seem that you want it to be changed. — Leontiskos
If you have no desire that it be changed, then I'm not sure you can say that it is wrong. And if you are a subjectivist then I think that would be consistent. Yet you say it is wrong. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
Hey man, great set of questions/objections etc.. I have to prime you that I'm blunt in a few of these responses. Its not personal, or meant to indicate a shortness with you. — AmadeusD
Roughly, yes. I think difference cases would be phrased slightly differently, but that's the delineation I am illustrating. It's 'good' in my view to help my younger son build legos. Building legos has absolutely no moral valence at all — AmadeusD
When i was sociopathic I often "helped" other people. Largely out of boredom. There was no moral decision. At all. The difference is my internal intention — AmadeusD
If I getting this right, from you, then yeah pretty much. I guess it would be cleaner to say that i act is morally, but what my action is is not, in this case. — AmadeusD
Contrasted with perhaps dragging a struggling kid from a pool - I'm not going to check if the kid wants to drown or not. My morality tells to do a moral act, in that case and the moral act is the entire act in that case. In our example here (helping someone put a box together lets say) only the decision to act, or more closely, that I act is the moral element. The actual instruction could've just been handing a sheet of paper over and walking away in disgust at how inept old mate is. — AmadeusD
Well, maybe, but you've got this the wrong way around: that is a result, not an act on my part. I don't actually care whether the person listens to me to be honest. My decision was simply to help. If that's rejected or misunderstood, I don't care a lick. — AmadeusD
Because in making the decision, i am weighing explicitly where it sits ion my internal spectrum of right ad wrong. — AmadeusD
Violating others rights (although, that then begs the question of what rights I consider moral and not... that notwithstanding...) makes me feel shit. So I do my best not to. It doesn't actually matter too much what effect it has on the other person unless I've done it unintentionally. Then, their reaction is what makes me feel shit because it was unintended. If i intended to do something I knew would violate a right that i feel is immoral, why would I care about them being hurt? — AmadeusD
No. The law is not a moral institution. It may appear that way, because collective moralities over time have shaped it - but in a pluralistic society it is a practical guide to disputes of morality in most cases. — AmadeusD
Law emerges from morality, as such, but is not itself a moral arbiter. It's just as best we can get to a "middle way" to decide issues for which people have strong moral beliefs. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Okay, but I think you need to actually revise your rhetoric — Leontiskos
So are you saying that when you were sociopathic you helped people without thinking that helping people was right, and now you help people because you think helping people is right? It's the "because it is right" that changed, and made the non-moral act a moral act. Is that right? — Leontiskos
If you really think what you are saying is obvious, then it should be easy to express clearly and lucidly. — Leontiskos
I still don't understand what you are saying. So in your example of helping someone put a box together, you say that your decision to help them is the moral element. Or else "that I act" is the moral element. But those are two different things. Is it the decision or is it the "that I act," and what does "that I act" mean? Everything we do can be construed as an act. A decision is an act. Box-building is an act. Helping is a form of acting. So "that I act" is very vague given how broad the term 'act' is. — Leontiskos
If you "didn't care a lick" then you wouldn't have tried to help in the first place. — Leontiskos
If you speak to someone then you already desire that they listen. If you have no desire that they listen to your words, then you will not speak. — Leontiskos
Okay, and I am glad to see that you're acknowledging that you have an internal spectrum of right and wrong, that you engage in moral activities and decisions, etc. That is different from conversations we have had in the past. — Leontiskos
But I think you do care what effect it has on the other person. The whole concept of "violating another's rights" has this built-in. Someone who cares about violating another's rights eo ipso cares about the effects of their actions on other people. It is not possible to recognize another's rights without caring about the effects of one's actions on others. — Leontiskos
I certainly disagree, and yet it's not even clear that what you say here is coherent. "The law is not a moral institution; it is a practical guide to adjudicating disputes of morality." Does that make any sense? I think it makes more sense to say that an institution that adjudicates disputes of morality is necessarily a moral institution. I'm not sure how one would adjudicate moral disputes while remaining non-moral. — Leontiskos
...But we don't need to get too deep into the nature of law, as it might make the conversation too long and unwieldy. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
I would say yes (phrased this way because I can't view myself from the outside with my own set of beliefs etc..). I can recall a couple of occasions on which I went to help someone, mucked it because I didn't know what I was doing and walked away laughing because it entertained me as best I could be entertained. One of these occasions was to leave a child without a parent at an event at which they were bound to get lost and likely hurt. I am not proud of this period of my life in any way, to be clear. — AmadeusD
But it seems clear to me that a thought, or a decision to cross the road is not an act in, at the very least, the same sense as crossing the road. Could that be agreed? — AmadeusD
They (tend to)follow one another and are of different kinds "That I have decided to act" is probably better put for this discussion, but I see a clear and meaningful distinction between "acting or not acting" on the one hand, and what the act is on the other. An example might be the trolley problem. Doing nothing gives us one impression - and either of the choices gives us a separate, slightly askance impression. Dovetailing, to be sure and so I was wrong to be quite so stark about and thank you for that. Is "killing a child" immoral? Well, imo yes. Is "deciding to kill a child" immoral? Well, also probably yes but if then you are prevented from doing so, we're talking about different things as the 'act' (in my use) hasn't actually occurred. — AmadeusD
If you "didn't care a lick" then you wouldn't have tried to help in the first place. — Leontiskos
You are confusing whether i care to help, or whether i care to succeed. Remember, my form of morality is essentially narcissistic. I care that I tried. I don't care much about the success. I understand and don't fault you for not believing this. But I can tell you it's true as many times as you like. — AmadeusD
If you speak to someone then you already desire that they listen. If you have no desire that they listen to your words, then you will not speak. — Leontiskos
As with above, no, I care that I spoke. It's pretty self-interested. That's, as I see it, the discomfort with emotivist. It is by definition self-interested and not concerned much with outcomes other than insofar as they make one feel a type of way. I understand why people don't like it. — AmadeusD
Is it? I don't quite think so. If that's what you've gotten, I have far more work to do about the semantic issue. — AmadeusD
If "right" and "wrong" are to inform moral systems [...] then that supposed fact is contradicted by the obvious fact that 'right' and 'wrong' give us nothing which could inform the system as they are too ambiguous and essentially self-referential. — AmadeusD
I guess the novel aspect of my position is that once I've begun to act, the morality isn't involved until something changes in the context — AmadeusD
Some rights I couldn't give a flying F about. — AmadeusD
So I can recognise that someone has right x, understand they enjoy that right at Law, and still not give a shit. — AmadeusD
Moral systems have, over the centuries, existed and exerted certain power over people. Those systems are essentially incompatible (Catholic, Islamic, Secular, NAP, what have you..). So a system must be put in place to adjudicate between them. I do not think it a moral exercise to essentially mathematically work out (although, this is a little bit misleading, I do think it amounts to a calculation-over-centuries) what the most people would assent to and agree with. — AmadeusD
Given huge numbers of people disagree with laws and in fact, often violate them for specifically moral reasons, tells me that laws are not moral creatures — AmadeusD
Essentially, what I think is that a law of the land operates as a neutral arbiter between competing social interests. — AmadeusD
So law just goes "Well, mathematically, that's a small group so we wont take that into account - we've observed that most people prefer x outcome" — AmadeusD
Now, I may be overselling this - I can see good arguments for your point of view - they don't move me much as laws are not there for the purpose of making people feel good. They're there to maintain a mathematically(non-moral) deduced middle ground that most people will be ok with (moral). It is a very, very fine line and it's possible I am incapable of wording things correctly 'on paper'. I cop to that. The people are moral, the law is not. As I see it. — AmadeusD
Fuck. I should have read this first.. .LOL. Thanks man. Enjoying this one a lot. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
If this is right, then your principle only holds in certain cases, namely the principle, "That I act is moral, but what my action is is not moral." That's not inconsistent, as you did follow it with, "...in this case — Leontiskos
Still, the problem is that if someone gives a principle and then follows it with, "...in this case," or, "...sometimes," then they have effectively nullified the principle. It is one thing to say, "Decisions to act are moral but physical action is not." — Leontiskos
You're telling me that you try to do things without trying to succeed at the things you do. I'm sure you understand why I don't believe you, given how strange your claim is? — Leontiskos
No one speaks to someone without wanting that person to listen to them. — Leontiskos
The problem is that teeter-totters make no sense without a counterweight. — Leontiskos
Well, would you agree that all along you are running the "background process" of "helping," and that this "background process" is moral? — Leontiskos
If you stopped running that "background process" then you would also stop building the box. — Leontiskos
And I am obviously not speaking to those. — Leontiskos
Well you've literally claimed in this thread that there are certain rights of others that you would not transgress, so obviously there are some rights you give a shit about — Leontiskos
Given that you are averse to transgressing some rights, you surely care what effect your actions have on other people (who possesses those rights). — Leontiskos
If someone says, "This moral disagreement will be resolved by a majority vote," their method of adjudication is itself moral. There are other ways to resolve moral disagreements than a majority vote, or a mathematical assessment. — Leontiskos
That's an invalid argument. "This law can be broken, therefore it is not moral." — Leontiskos
Indeed, when someone breaks a law for moral reasons they are presupposing that the law itself is immoral — Leontiskos
How do you figure it's neutral? We literally argue over laws. How does the outcome of that vociferous argument become "neutral"? — Leontiskos
Again, you are appealing to a kind of majoritarianism, which is clearly a moral position. "We ought to do whatever most people want," is a moral claim. — Leontiskos
Classically liberal societies assume that all societies function via a "mathematical" notion of law. — Leontiskos
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