You're misreading, and in a way that's odd. The ought being derived is that which prescribes a path, the destination having been chosen. It says nothing about the choice of the destination.It's not true or false that you ought to achieve y if you want y. — Terrapin Station
You're misreading, and in a way that's odd. The ought being derived is that which prescribes a path, the destination having been chosen. It says nothing about the choice of the destination. — tim wood
Not when it comes to hurting people's feelings, because I don't think that's a moral issue.
— Terrapin Station
Interesting. Is there something that you think hurting people is, if not immoral? Perhaps you think it's nothing at all...? — tim wood
It's hurting people, for one. That's something, isn't it? — Terrapin Station
Hurting people is hurting people? Ok, granted. What is that something? — tim wood
That something is hurting people. — Terrapin Station
Anything wrong with hurting people? — tim wood
They have to be because you can't derive an ought from an is. You can't derive a value statement from a factual statement. — Terrapin Station
Hurting people is not categorically, morally wrong, no. — Terrapin Station
So why ought you pursue x if you want y, just in case x is a prerequisite for y? — Terrapin Station
You could fool yourself into think the reason you have an aversion to stealing is because you dislike the kind of world it might bring about, but actually it's just that you're scared of getting caught. — Isaac
Maybe X is something good. — tim wood
Why wrong? You've amputated from your thinking the usual answers most folks would give. If you had not done that, then those answers would probably suffice and this discussion would be too trivial to pursue. But in as much as you've taken yourself off that ground, the question arises as to just what your ground is.I didn't say that I don't consider any hurting of other people wrong. — Terrapin Station
How would that work where we avoid positing unconscious mental content? — Terrapin Station
Proposition K: If P is something you want, and to get P you have to do Q, then if you want P, you ought to do Q.What? That's a value judgment. Not an "is." — Terrapin Station
Why wrong? You've amputated from your thinking the usual answers most folks would give. If you had not done that, then those answers would probably suffice and this discussion would be too trivial to pursue. But in as much as you've taken yourself off that ground, the question arises as to just what your ground is. — tim wood
The evidence seems overwhelmingly to show that there is sub- or un- conscious mental content. What do you think was going on in the damaged part of the brain such that those for whom it was removed no longer showed a brand bias they were consciously unaware of? — Isaac
then if you want P, you ought to do Q. — tim wood
It's annoying that people don't understand that everyone's ground is simply their feelings about interpersonal behavior. — Terrapin Station
Wait--how would they have a brand bias that they're not aware of? You mean that people aren't aware that they're preferring one brand to another (when they know what the brand is)? — Terrapin Station
I want to break your arm. Probably you do not want me to break your arm. Of course your feelings are just your personal problem and you need to work on those. So I get to break your arm, and no third person gets to intervene for any reason - yes?
And how do you get from the fact that I want something to I ought to get it? — tim wood
It's just a matter of what we're able to enact or not. Factors include how much power each of us has, how common the views are, what our persuasive abilities are like, etc. — Terrapin Station
So they were wrong about preferring the taste of Coke, — Isaac
So there's nothing wrong with my breaking you arm? Or you mine, for that matter? — tim wood
You're reading this situation as "I prefer the taste of x" where packed into that is a claim about what x really is objectively, so that if one gets the objective identification wrong (per whatever metric), then one's statement re "I prefer the taste of x" can be wrong.
I'm saying that "I prefer the taste of x" is about the person's experience, qua their experience, qua their understanding, etc.--so that whatever is really the case objectively is irrelevant, — Terrapin Station
the point I was originally making was that it can be of value to a person to discus morality even though they are just likes/dislikes — Isaac
Basically, to re-iterate I think you can be wrong about whether a moral stance is foundational, — Isaac
Whereas I do not agree with this, because I don't believe that there is any good reason to buy the notion of unconscious mental content, and you've not presented any good reason to buy that idea yet. — Terrapin Station
I think you and I must have different definitions of unconscious mental states. I mean by it a state in which the brain can be which affect behaviour/decisions but which the subject, by self-reporting or location, is unaware of. There is literally direct a pretty incontrovertible evidence for this. — Isaac
For it to be an unconscious mental state, it can't be just any brain state. It has to be a mental state, just one that the subject is unaware of. It has to be akin to a thought, desire, idea, concept, etc.--anything mental.
Evidence for this is problematic (epistemically), because even third-person evidence of conscious mental states is problematic. — Terrapin Station
Seems odd to say that evidence for such states existing unconsciously is problematic epistemically but you seem fine with the existence of them conciously. Can you easily define a thought, desire, idea, concept in a way that there is clear evidence for the existence of such things? — Isaac
I can understand something like 'desire", for example, as a disposition to act toward a certain goal, — Isaac
And this seems like an odd comment when I had just said, and you just quoted "Evidence for this is problematic (epistemically), because even third-person evidence of conscious mental states is problematic."
The important difference for conscious mental states is that the bearer has clear epistemic evidence of them. But we don't have that for unconscious mental states. — Terrapin Station
That suggests defining it behavioristically and ignoring the conscious aspect when it's conscious. (It also doesn't capture conscious desires very well, because lots of people have desires that they never or almost never act on.) — Terrapin Station
The bottom line, though, is that if you believe there's good evidence of unconscious mental states, present it and I'll look at it. Otherwise I'm not about to think that's there's good evidence of unconscious mental states. — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.