This theory runs into the problem of having to find the first authority. Let's call him/her x. — TheMadFool
Absolutely, I'm merely pointing out (in an admittedly slightly facetious manner) that it is very easy to derive a set of seemingly determined behaviour by quite random propogation of errors in copying, especially if there is some system constraining options. So, I think it makes far more sense to say that our propensity to empathise is a tool which proved useful in carrying out our moral behaviour rather than the cause of it. — Isaac
It still doesn't mean that morality is because of empathy. — Isaac
What is morality based on? — TheMadFool
How would one know if someone is happy or sad without empathy which is defined as ''understanding of another's feelings''? — TheMadFool
This theory runs into the problem of having to find the first authority.
I think morality and, therefore, conscience, arose from empathy and that's, usually, a shared human trait. The majority have to agree that something is bad and they do this through emapthetic ability. Subesequently, conscience is born.
I don't think anybody has to have an authority figure. So, in the event that there is no conscience without taboo, and no taboo without authority, then I think that anybody who lacks an authority figure would simply lack a conscience — Billy
Not at all. Imagine a game with three players. The rule is only that each player must only copy the others, no other actions are permitted. The game will proceed in complete stillness for some time as none of the players are permitted to move. But very soon one will twitch, sniff or cough involuntarily. The others will now follow suit. In theory, this will then lead to an endless stream of coughing as each copies the other, but one of them is going to get it slightly wrong, perhaps put a hand to their mouth by instinct. The other players can now copy this. Scale up to 7 billion players over a million years, add in a system of natural selection which weeds out behaviours which are excessively self-defeating and you have modern society. — Isaac
Yet, the picture wouldn't make sense if one lacks empathy. — TheMadFool
there's no personal value involved. — TheMadFool
the ubiquitous Golden rule, do unto others as you would like others to do unto you, adequately supports this — TheMadFool
Not at all, the 'golden rule' proves the exact opposite. That without having the faintest idea what other people are feeling, one can exhibit moral-like behaviour simply by determining one's actions using one's own feelings. The golden rule shows that we only need predict how we would feel about an action to determine if it is moral or not (according to that particular code). No empathy required — Isaac
What sort of definition of "authority" is that? — Terrapin Station
It isn't one. The proposition I was responding to was that the theory (of following authority) runs into the problem of having to find the first authority. I was just pointing out that this is only the case if 'the authority' is a single, universally known source. Where 'the authority' is your neighbour (and you are theirs) there's no need to find a first. Random variation takes care of that. — Isaac
In other words, if you're not saying that any random thing that anyone does counts as "authority," then you weren't really addressing the point he made. — Terrapin Station
That would be a very unusual definition of "authority" then. That term usually has connotations other than any random thing that someone does counting as authority. — Terrapin Station
In any event, so how would someone start the ball rolling re disapproving of action x without that person feeling that action x is wrong? — Terrapin Station
Someone only need erroneously to interpret completely innocuous action as being 'disapproving' — Isaac
Okay, but what does that have to do with someone disapproving action x without them feeling that action x is wrong? — Terrapin Station
If they disapprove action x, they feel that it's wrong. It's basically two ways to say the same thing. — Terrapin Station
I don't see the link to empathy — Isaac
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