I'm saying, in the case of the masochist, what you are calling "bodily pain" does not involve "ethical pain." Their body might hurt, but they do not expeirnce the ethical pain (which is just as much of the physical) that many other people would. Rather, they feel ethical joy at being subjected to this "bodily pain." — TheWillowOfDarkness
But notice the binary you set up. I can understand the general claim that, under nihilism, nothing can matter except to the individual, but this need not entail that what matters to the individual is pain or pleasure. One can act out of self interest without acting in the interest of obtaining pleasure or avoiding pain, it seems to me. Then again, perhaps this is impossible. I'm not sure.
Maybe a good question to ask is whether egoism is the same as hedonism. — Thorongil
The hurt/joy we experience upon encountering a world which as it ought not/ought to be. — TheWillowOfDarkness
others just happen to feel pleasure at certain instances of pain — TheWillowOfDarkness
The idea I am proposing is that what matters to the individual on the most basic animal level is the avoidance of pain and the seeking of pleasure. Anything that is of interest to the individual beyond that is of interest either because it leads to a pleasurable feeling or avoids a painful feeling — John
But the salient point is that what makes those more elaborated pursuits and situations joyous or sorrowful must be the acceptance of values which embody some conception of what is beautiful, true or good, or on the other hand, what is ugly, false and evil; values which are well outside of the simplistic animal ambit of 'pleasure/pain'. — John
I suppose I get this. We're still talking about what the nihilist is committed to, right? — Thorongil
And this is a problem for the nihilist, as you see it, correct?
I might question what you mean by nihilism. Ethical nihilists deny meaning to moral terms. Someone who assigns meaning to moral terms, but does not consider there to be any such thing as intrinsic moral worth, need not be a nihilist. — Thorongil
So, if an ethical nihilist denies there is any meaning to moral terms, are they not merely denying that there is any objective meaning; and would this not be the same as to say that they are inconsistently denying there are any objective values? — John
That people objectively all value something isn't grounds to say that it is objectively valuable in any sense -- and even if it were, this would be a refutation of nihilism, since the existence of pleasure would make nihilism itself false. — The Great Whatever
In other words, pleasure is intrinsically valuable in the court of our experiences, but those experiences can always simply be denied as irrelevant, misguided or illusory. I don't think that's a smart position to take, but then, neither is nihilism. — The Great Whatever
I think that people all (or even almost universally) valuing something is precisely the only possible ground for claiming that something is objectively valuable. — John
Also, I think that the claim that there are no objective values other than the sensory pleasures of the individual would certainly qualify as one form of moral nihilism. — John
Yes, our experiences can be "denied as irrelevant, misguided or illusory", but any such denial presupposes objective values beyond pleasure/pain, and could never be a position coherently held by an avowed nihilist. — John
What other criteria could there be to decide that something is objectively morally right or wrong than the fact that everyone or very nearly everyone thinks that it is right or wrong? — John
In general, the inference scheme 'everyone thinks x' to 'x' is invalid. People having an opinion doesn't make the opinion so. If everyone believes the world is flat, it's still round. — The Great Whatever
I am just arguing for what I see as the only possible discursive or intersubjective justification of moral principles; that they are more or less universally believed. — John
The only possible discursive or intersubjective justification of an empirical belief is also that it is more or less universally believed. — John
Observation is obviously subject to a different set of conditions than intuition is. — John
What do you think the skeptics have shown us except that our beliefs cannot be deductively certain? The certainty of empirical beliefs can only be relative, because they are contingent on observation, The certainty of moral beliefs is only as good as the intuitions they are based upon. I am not arguing for deductive certainty, so the skeptics' findings are irrelevant here. — John
Can you give me any examples from history of cultures wherein the people unanimously agreed that, in general, murder, rape, child torture or sexual exploitation, or even theft, dishonesty, cowardice, disloyalty or refusal to work and contribute to the life of the community were OK practices within their own culture? — John
Generally people cannot be wrong about their consensual observations such as that the sun is shining, the leaves are beginning to fall, the snows have come, it is windy today and countless other such common observations. — John
But such things are ultimately determined by context; — John
what could it possibly mean to say that disapproval of murder, child torture, dishonesty, cowardice and so on could be "wrong-headed"? What alternative standards could you offer to support such a contention, and on the basis of what could you justify them? — John
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