If you recognize that you are not as good as you could have been, that only implies that you realize you have shortcomings not that you act contrary to your own perception of the good. — Congau
Thank you. I'm happy to hear that.Your response is helpful to me — Valentinus
That's right. I call that a shortcoming.In that case you are "acting contrary to your own perception of the good"; but, maybe you mean to include that among "shortcomings", and there's no real disagreement here. — Pfhorrest
A few scenarios. 1) Torture. By any rule I know of, torture is wrong, bad, indefensible, unconscionable, and useless and worse than useless. (If you're thinking to argue against this sentence, please read it again before you do.) Or, that is, it is immoral and unethical to torture (at least!). But in your custody is the man who planted a bomb that unless disarmed will kill lots of people. The argument here is easy to express: it may be both good and a good to torture him until he reveals its location to be disarmed.There’s no real reason to distinguish between the good man and the moral man. — Congau
Really? No rules? No "you should"? Then how do you secure the benefit that Utilitarianism is supposed to be all about?In utilitarian ethics there are no rules and no abstract “you should”. — Congau
Define crazy risk. And why take any risk? Why does the "crazy" matter if the risk itself is acceptable?There is no tightrope to walk. The good man never has to sacrifice good for safety, because a reasonable amount of safety would naturally be included in the good. It would be bad to take crazy risks. — Congau
Nope. That man is simply acting in accordance with Kant's rule, which gives his action moral worth. Kant is exhaustively (and exhaustingly) careful to define his terms and be clear about what he's saying. From what you wrote it appears you don't have a clear understanding of that.....that person, for Kant, is the ultimately good man. I find this idea repulsive. — Congau
Nope. The virtue of this man is achieving balance between extremes, including extremes of virtue! In any case, certainly he would not choose to make 100 enemies happy at the expense of even two of his compatriots - or do you think he would?The Aristotelian good man enjoys doing what is good, and he has trained himself to feel pleasure when seeing other people pleased. The more he loves mankind, the more he feels the urge to act righteously and make people happy. — Congau
You docked "good will" of its good. Probably a typo, but the revised idea seems to infect the rest of your post. It's not the will by itself, but the good will.The will is the ideal good, yes. Good without expectation of return. — Mww
There is an argument, or maybe just an interpretation, that if morality presupposes a will, and all wills are good, then every man who is a moral agent possesses a good will. If true, the good mark of a man can’t be that which is presupposed in him. — Mww
Sense, for sure, but not much to do with the predicates of pure moral philosophy. The statement “one who chooses....(x)....is good” in order to give “a meaning of good in each case” can only apply to empirical circumstance and responds to a hypothetical imperative for its precepts, for the presence of the very act of choice has already negated the mandatory obligation of law, which we know offers no choice at all. It is nonsense, on the other hand, to expect an imperative grounded in a mere precept, or inclination, to be the foundation of a moral constitution. — Mww
There is an argument, or maybe just an interpretation, that if morality presupposes a will, and all wills are good, then every man who is a moral agent possesses a good will. If true, the good mark of a man can’t be that which is presupposed in him.
— Mww
I don't understand. — tim wood
obligation under the law may well be mandatory, but determining that law may involve some art. — tim wood
You should act so that the outcome of the action is LIKELY to produce a good result (more good than bad). "Not likely" means that the risk is too high.Define crazy risk. And why take any risk? Why does the "crazy" matter if the risk itself is acceptable? — tim wood
The virtuous man achieves balance between extremes, not too much and not too little, as in courage being the balance between cowardice and foolhardiness. Since virtue IS the balance, there can be no exaggerated extreme of virtue itself.The virtue of this man is achieving balance between extremes, including extremes of virtue! In any case, certainly he would not choose to make 100 enemies happy at the expense of even two of his compatriots - or do you think he would? — tim wood
Torture might conceivably be defensible if it could save a lot of lives. But the ultimate judgment whether something is right or wrong, doesn’t rest on rules - just like in the torture example. — Congau
A good action can occur by accident and be performed by a villain - it just requires a good result. — Congau
Language being slippery.[If] intention and outcome... be almost identical. Then the action has moral worth. — Congau
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