But I wouldn't say the same thing necessarily for evolution. I understand trial and error as intentional activity, and doesn't evolution seem to be a form of trial and error? The reason why trial and error is intentional, is because there has to be some sort of motivation for success, behind the trial — Metaphysician Undercover
What could be more question begging than saying the material world acts a certain way because it is the law? — apokrisis
So what's the thing with the intention? What's the thing with motivation? God? Mother Nature? Unless you're arguing for some Higher Power or, again, panpsychism, it doesn't make sense to suggest that there's intention or motivation or purpose in these non-human (or other intelligent being) events. — Michael
It is associated with eco-philosophy in my mind, which I suppose fits fairly well with your systems approach. — unenlightened
I'm just stating the reality as I've observed it. So the point in suggesting that there is intention, motivation, or purpose, in these non-human, yet living events, is just to provide an accurate description of what is the case, according to my observations. Whether these observations might lead someone to believe in panpsychism, or a Higher Power, is another thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you and I can't agree whether something is or is not an instance of intention, how could we ever agree on "the good"? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not that it acts a certain way because it is the law. It's just that it acts a certain way. It's not a matter of intention or purpose or any other conscious drive. A ball on hill will roll down it. Opposite charges attract. And so on. — Michael
You're smart enough to know how weak that is.
You object to my imputing intention or purpose to a physically simple level of being. And yet you happily use the notion of "lawful" without apparent definitional discomfort. — apokrisis
Then when challenged on this, you change tack to say, well, things "just act in certain ways" - when the point of even invoking laws is that things are found to act in fundamentally general ways. — apokrisis
So the normal language of physicalism is far more question-begging than the jargon of systems science.
Well it would be quite odd to think of entropy as an intentional act. It seems like the opposite of intentional to me, what happens when intention doesn't intervene. — Metaphysician Undercover
Doesn't it follow that 'what is good', is whatever works, whatever is instrumentally effective? There's no real good in the redemptive sense. So the good basically it is still the same kind of 'good' that animals seek. Although animals aren't burdened with the knowledge of their own identity, so it's a bit easier for them. — Wayfarer
There are a number of different ways in which "good" is used, related but not the same. — Metaphysician Undercover
A physical law is just a proposed description of how things have behaved (and presumably will continue to behave). — Michael
And once again I have to explain to you how I am a moral anti-realist. There is no "Good", there are only goods spread out across a population and abstracted as a "Good" in virtue of the basic triad. — darthbarracuda
And so ethics involves the systematic distribution of care across a population. — darthbarracuda
Apo said he recognized pleasure as a mug of beer - but this is a shallow misrepresentation of what pleasure is. — darthbarracuda
So like I said, the only thing that makes chocolate and sugar a long-time bad habit is that it will diminish the welfare of the individual. That is invariably what ethics is about: person welfare. Any other conception leads the train off the rails. — darthbarracuda
So why do inanimate things now "behave". Why do you find yourself continually using psychological terms to describe what you appear to believe are non-psychological causes? When do we get down to your bare naked description of physical causality in such a way we are explaining and not just "describing by psychic analogies we believe to be fundamentally wrong/fundamentally question-begging"? — apokrisis
"Behave" isn't a psychological term, so I don't understand this. — Michael
behave
bɪˈheɪv/Submit
verb
1. act or conduct oneself in a specified way, especially towards others.
"he always behaved like a gentleman"
synonyms: conduct oneself, act, acquit oneself, bear oneself, carry oneself; More
2. conduct oneself in accordance with the accepted norms of a society or group.
"‘Just behave, Tom,’ he said"
synonyms: act correctly, act properly, conduct oneself well, act in a polite way, show good manners, mind one's manners, mind one's Ps and Qs;
My argument is that all regularity is the product of constraints. So for entropification to "keep happening" there has to be a global prevailing state of constraint. — apokrisis
But when humans reach a certain developmental level, they're able to perceive kinds of goods which their forbears could not. — Wayfarer
This enables them to discover some idea of real or ultimate purpose, which has formed the basis of the various cultures. — Wayfarer
Another explanation (from Google's define:behaviour) includes "the way in which a machine or natural phenomenon works or functions.". — Michael
How would this "ideal or ultimate purpose" be defined? — Metaphysician Undiscovered
But is entropification a real regularity, or is it just a function of the way that human beings interpret the properties of a given object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yet you are committing the "naturalistic fallacy" in claiming that because pleasure is what is, then pleasure is an ought. — apokrisis
Or a sarcastic one. — apokrisis
Ethics is about the flourishing of the social group. It is about caring about others in ways that creates reciprocal benefits. And that is a tricky balancing act because - as game theory can spell out mathematically - the "right balance" has to involve the possibility of selfishness too. — apokrisis
We can care about the suffering of others, but then reality has to come into play - rational principles like proximity which you so strenuously want to deny. — apokrisis
So on the one hand, you accept that ethics is about enlightened self-interest - the mutuality and reciprocality that is the definition of social organisation. But on the other, you transmute these rational goods - the secrets of successful organisation - into transcendent goods. — apokrisis
You talk dualistically about biologically-evolved feelings, such as pleasure, pain and empathy, as if they were Platonic abstracta. You treat the qualia as things in themselves - ineffable properties of sentience - rather than biological signals with pragmatic meaning. And in doing this, you ignore all the spatiotemporal complexity of the real world in which social organisation must operate to instead impose a scaleless notion of suffering that floats Platonically above the world we have to describe. — apokrisis
I agree with apo's eco-outlook but from a different base altogether. I think naturalism as a basis for ethics is a metaphor/analogy which has a sort of virtue theory lurking in it; that naturalism in itself implies nothing in the way of the good, because nature did not originally have anything in mind. — mcdoodle
So you are denying that the primary definition is about intentional action within a social context context?
The fact that you complain when I use psychological-sounding concepts, then use them yourself without even admitting that is what you are doing, shows you really aren't willing to think this through.
Get back to me when you can account for physical events without talking about the forces that particles feel, or the laws they obey. Demonstrate that there is a fully un-psychological language available to us. — apokrisis
The main point I was making is that just as a ball's propensity to roll down a hill can't tell us what's good for the ball, why would our propensity with respect to entropy tell us what's good for us? — Michael
When you follow the story of thermodynamics through to the level of complexity represented by a social system, you can see that its fundamental dissipative dynamic can best be described in terms of competition and cooperation. And thus you can see why a basic moral precept, like "do unto others as you would have them do unto you", makes natural sense. It encodes a natural organising balance.
So we are back to creating gods, Platonic goods, or whatever. — Apokrisis
I wouldn't get too hung up on what entropy "actually is". Like the notions of force or energy before it, the more we can construct a useful system of measuring reality, the further away from any concrete notion of reality we are going to get. In modelling, our analytic signs of reality replace the reality we thought we believed in - our synthetic intuitions due to psychological "direct experience". — apokrisis
No, I'm not, because pleasure is inherently valuable to whoever is experiencing it. Like I said in the OP, humans are value machines. They create value. — darthbarracuda
But we must make sure that we focus on the constituents of the social group, not the social group as an object itself. — darthbarracuda
No, it is not enlightened self-interest. I don't help people because they will help me. I help people because that's what they need. — darthbarracuda
The "Platinum Rule" - i.e. do not harm others and do not manipulate others. — darthbarracuda
And in doing this you ignore that pleasure, pain, and empathy are immediately accessible - you reduce them away and pretend they don't exist. — darthbarracuda
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