In a nutshell, the Asymmetry is a population ethics intuition that we must make people happy, but not make happy people (i.e. giving birth to happy people), i.e. the world is made worse by the addition of a miserable person but is not made better by the addition of a happy person (as if the happy person is entirely irrelevant). — darthbarracuda
My philosophical obsession is what Jeff McMahan coined "the Asymmetry". In a nutshell, the Asymmetry is a population ethics intuition that we must make people happy, but not make happy people (i.e. giving birth to happy people), i.e. the world is made worse by the addition of a miserable person but is not made better by the addition of a happy person (as if the happy person is entirely irrelevant). It's an extremely compelling and intuitive principle that nevertheless is rather controversial because of the various consequences associated with accepting/rejecting it (such as Parfit's mere addition paradox). In my opinion, it is a superior dilemma than, say, the trolley problem, since it's actually real and happening right now, and it also seems to grab you by the collar and force you to make a decision, thus forcing you to evaluate and refine your own ethical views, which end up being quite complicated and more nuanced than you originally had thought. — darthbarracuda
So that's my general list of philosophical obsessions. What are yours? — darthbarracuda
The good life. Virtue and morality. Order. Love. How to help bring order in one's own soul, as well as in those who are surrounding me? How to become more virtuous and how to teach virtue? How to get more people interested in living a good life? These are the matters/questions I always come back to.I think we all tend to have one idea, a la Bergson, that we consistently keep on coming back to. The problem that we keep on thinking about when we're in bed and staring at the ceiling, or what keeps us entertained in the long transits between work and home. — darthbarracuda
Sounds like a rehash of Pragmatism :DWhy do we concern ourselves so much with (1) what cannot be known and (2) what makes no difference to how we or others live our lives? — Ciceronianus the White
Sounds like a rehash of Pragmatism :D — Agustino
Peirce did criticise Descartes's method of doubt involving the evil demon though. If that criticism applies to Descartes, it certainly applies to the brain in a vat hypothesis too.or do so regarding whether we're brains in a vat — Ciceronianus the White
Yes true. Peirce also had this concern about criticising the possibility/usefulness of Cartesian certainty.It's true, though, that Dewey felt that many philosophical problems and prejudices resulted from a misguided "quest for certainty" and that certain philosophers' proclivity to believe what is true or good has its basis in something transcendent was caused at least in part by a sort of aristocratic disdain towards or contempt for the world which encompasses such things as trade, manual labor, unwashed bodies and ugly, ignorant, inferior people, change and death. — Ciceronianus the White
"quest for certainty" and that certain philosophers' proclivity to believe what is true or good has its basis in something transcendent was caused at least in part by a sort of aristocratic disdain towards or contempt for the world which encompasses such things as trade, manual labor, unwashed bodies and ugly, ignorant, inferior people, change and death. — Ciceronianus the White
I think something different is involved, though. Maybe it's a kind of self-serving "quest for profound significance." — Ciceronianus the White
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