Terrapin Station         
         This kind of dualistic view is difficult for me to appreciate. It feels artificial and not particularly useful. — praxis
Terrapin Station         
         Still unclear how you mean this. A non-mental phenomenon can directly cause mental phenomenon, creating sensory data for example. In the same way an outside source, ie words from a book, can in-still values into our minds. That doesnt have to mean the value exists outside or minds, just that the source does. — DingoJones
Terrapin Station         
         Concepts are abstractions from what I've appropriated in my immediate existence, which are communicated via referential signifiers, not necessarily words. — Merkwurdichliebe
S         
         
praxis         
         
Terrapin Station         
         The source of morals cannot be found in human biology, therefore the belief that it can is rubbish. — praxis
Terrapin Station         
         It was just a side note, expressing a feeling and not an ontology. — praxis
Terrapin Station         
         The tyranny of the bleeding obvious! — Janus
S         
         Re S's question re the analogy, I'd have to read back through a number of posts. In longer threads like this, where people are posting a lot of long replies, I don't read most of what people are writing--on purpose, because I think that it's problematic that we type so much and gloss over so many issues so quickly. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Sure, so you're prescribing a shared normative protocol? — Janus
Terrapin Station         
         So, you're not suggesting that it or they should be of any significance to me? — Janus
S         
         Aren't there a number of people participating in threads here? — Terrapin Station
Janus         
         I'm not sure I understand this comment, — Terrapin Station
Morals are only found in biology, because it's a phenomenon that doesn't occur outside of brain activity. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Moral behavior is not brain activity, and does not merely involve brain activity, although brain activity may be considered to play a part. — Janus
S         
         You could offer evidence otherwise if you want to argue that. Offer evidence that the judgment whether any behavior is moral (or alternately the conceptual application of some behavior having to do with morality rather than something else) can occur outside of brains. I'll look at the evidence in question if you want to suggest something. — Terrapin Station
Merkwurdichliebe         
         As Schopenhauer tells us, the aesthetic response is to what is of no practical significance to us. It is what transports and transforms our consciousness. — Janus
I agree with much of what you said there, though, and often apparently contradictory ideas just reflect the existence of different possible ways of interpreting concepts such as <reason>, < emotion>, <interest>, <responsibility> and so on, and the different ways in which they can be related together to produce diverse and perhaps apparently incompatible perspectives on our common human experience. — Janus
Janus         
         Whether any behavior is moral or not is a phenomenon--a type of judgment--that only occurs in brains. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         All human interpersonal behavior is morally significant, — Janus
Janus         
         It was not merely restricted to works of art, but all human artifice. — Merkwurdichliebe
I, personally, derive much edification from this perspective, but I understand it to be only one perspective amongst infinite perspectives, some better than others, but all are mere approximations at best. — Merkwurdichliebe
Janus         
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