It's wrong to say that vegetarianism can only be arrived at by romantic thinking. — darthbarracuda
My criticism of your approach is that it is essentially from the romantic perpspective and not from the enlightenment or rational humanistic perspective.
So you are always seeking purity or perfection. You reify suffering as pure qualia for instance. And the slightest imperfections of existence become intolerable for you as a result. — apokrisis
it's because suffering absolutely sucks and I recognize this. — darthbarracuda
So mild suffering sucks only relatively and not - per your original statement - absolutely? — apokrisis
And thus if this permits prioritisation, then you have no issue with a little bit of suffering being balanced against a greater amount of pleasure? — apokrisis
Or even a fleeting amount of suffering being outweighed by long periods of fairly neutral affect - no strong feelings at all? — apokrisis
A pragmatist understands a calculus of risk and reward. No pain, no gain, the say. But you have been taking a purist line which seems fundamentally intolerance of chance or "imperfection". — apokrisis
How do you define 'ways that work'. Can you give an example?It makes sense that we are biologically evolved to value the world in ways that work. And pleasure, pain and empathy are all biologically evolved "intuitions" in that regard.
So from what I understand you'd say our innate impulses, when sufficiently constrained, can be considered our moral intuitions? Or rather, our impulses are generated out of some innate understanding of what is good (*for us*) ?But the example of chocolate and sugar illustrates the fact that moral judgements have to be complex. What's good in the short-term as instant gratification of an impulse may be very bad as a long-term habit.
And humans bring on this particular moral dilemma for themselves. It is because we are smart enough to refine food that we can produce all the sugar and alcohol we like. The "intuitive" responses we might have due to a lengthy evolutionary history become mal-adaptive after we've removed the constraints on our ability to satisfy our urges.
If we were thinking morally, we would have to identify then what is actually "the good" that nature had in mind originally, and how we can then re-introduce the constraints so as to arrive back at that "better" balance.
So as you say, what is pleasurable ain't always reliably good. And it becomes a cruel kind of empathy to share your sugar and alcohol with your children or pets.
But we can - by taking this naturalistic approach - start to see how "the good" was defined for us through historical evolutionary forces. Pleasure, pain and empathy all existed as intuitive evaluations of something. And that something is mostly the obvious thing of meeting the goals of life - ie: to grow, to reproduce, to flourish.
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