But it isn't. The default is what you can find in a dictionary, not your favoured normative stance in ethics.
That's not an opinion, it's a factual claim.
Everything is made of consciousness
— Marzipanmaddox
That's not an opinion, it's a factual claim. — Terrapin Station
And there's nothing set in stone to say that the flourishing of a community is good and the languishing of it is bad, by the way. — S
I'm saying the default, objective, impartial, and empirical definition... — Marzipanmaddox
I say Definition 3 of Turtle is "a bag of 7 rocks", then I say, "a turtle (definition 3), contains 7 rocks". You then argue "That's false, a turtle is an animal." According to the contextual definition, this turtle is a bag of rocks, despite the fact that the most commonly accepted definition of the word turtle is an animal. I'm not talking about the animal, I'm talking about the bag of rocks. — Marzipanmaddox
No one wants to languish, everyone wants to flourish. That is a fact of human nature. — Janus
It is beyond human nature. It is the nature of life, it is the entire purpose of being alive, the sole definition of life itself is to flourish competitively. — Marzipanmaddox
No one wants to languish, everyone wants to flourish. That is a fact of human nature. From that fact it follows that whatever individual and collective acts contribute to a community flourishing (in the sense of general emotional well-being) is moral and whatever individual and collective acts contribute to a community languishing (in the sense of general emotional dissatisfaction and suffering) is immoral. — Janus
As an example, gambling is immoral on account of the suffering and social problems it causes. Murder, rape, theft, assault etc. are obviously immoral for the same reason. — Janus
I agree with you that it goes beyond human nature, but I would say that the definition of life is to flourish cooperatively, not competitively.
It is beyond human nature. It is the nature of life, it is the entire purpose of being alive, the sole definition of life itself is to flourish competitively.
— Marzipanmaddox
I agree with you that it goes beyond human nature, but I would say that the definition of life is to flourish cooperatively, not competitively. That's the basis of ecology. If a predator over-consumes resources, they may appear to flourish for a short while, but they will quickly die out when resources are over-utilized. So that would not be real flourishing at all. Same goes for the plutocrats. — Janus
Apparently the definition of life is whatever you want it to be! — S
You can't seem to follow my argument, that is why you are bored. — Marzipanmaddox
You are essentially the one who is arguing that the turtle is a bag of rocks here, you are the one using the inapplicable definition as evidence to justify your argument. — Marzipanmaddox
Janus is pretty much correct on this topic. — Marzipanmaddox
Justify your point, defend your stance, rebut his argument with more than a simple attack on his character. — Marzipanmaddox
The only reason I repeat things is because you fail to acknowledge my point. — Marzipanmaddox
You fail to understand my point, so I attempt to explain it again. — Marzipanmaddox
As for my points not qualifying as philosophy, this is debatable. My points are about an opinionated interpretation of morality, which is so opinionated that you go so far as to call it biased. This is by definition philosophy, regardless of the fact that I defend my argument using empirical and objective reasoning. Surely, within philosophy, empirical reasoning is equally as valid in philosophy as subjective, empathetic, or ethereal reasoning. — Marzipanmaddox
The standard for philosophy is so low that it is nearly impossible for an argument about any related subject to fail to qualify as philosophy. The standard of philosophy is basically "What do you think about X?", and these are my thoughts, with relation to X. X in this case being morality. — Marzipanmaddox
From that fact it follows that whatever individual and collective acts contribute to a community flourishing (in the sense of general emotional well-being) are moral and whatever individual and collective acts contribute to a community languishing (in the sense of general emotional dissatisfaction and suffering) are immoral. — Janus
No one wants to languish, everyone wants to flourish. — Janus
Everything within this universe, everything within the planet earth, is inherently numerical... — Marzipanmaddox
The intention is to suggest that there is an unintelligible infinite variance of color which can never be adequately described. — thewonder
If there was no objective benefit to morality, than moral societies would not exist. They would be no more capable or powerful than amoral societies, and due to the excess effort it takes to maintain a moral society, morality would have fallen out of favor.
It would be seen as needless and pointless explicitly because morality produced no objective benefit, because a moral society was no better off than an amoral one. It would be like drinking snake oil every day, and reasonable people would quickly realize that drinking the snake oil does nothing and then subsequently stop doing that. — Marzipanmaddox
If philosophy were legitimate it would be a science, you would be able to veritably and unquestionably prove your philosophical assertions via the scientific method. — Marzipanmaddox
I am just arguing that philosophy is inferior to science with regards to actually having an argument. Meaning a philosophical point would always lose to a scientific point. I'm saying that worshiping philosophy, arguing that philosophy is somehow above, or even equal to science is delusion. Clearly it is not, if it were, then it would be proven by the scientific method, and thus become science, and at that point it would no longer be philosophy. — Marzipanmaddox
Really? You're arguing that a rock is a conscious entity? — Marzipanmaddox
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