The Masters is actually in Ethics but it’s still a branch of philosophy so totally counts — Mark Dennis
I always thought that ethics was not defined and it is undefineable. Because it is societal indoctrination, which does not even stick with everyone, and it can hugely differ from society to society, as it is culture-dependent. So how do you prepare to defend a thesis about something undefinable and undefendable? — god must be atheist
And anywhere in the world you find the same underlying principles to ethics: don't cause unnecessary suffering, for example. — Artemis
the majorities of most countries would agree with at the very least, not having unnecessary suffering inflicted upon themselves individually, as a community, as a country. — Mark Dennis
you have in previous threads claimed to outright reject any overarching princples in ethics. — Artemis
The answer to the problem of different cultural ethical norms is simply that different cultures are (or were at some point in history) wrong about different things.
And anywhere in the world you find the same underlying principles to ethics: don't cause unnecessary suffering, for example. — Artemis
I always thought that ethics was not defined and it is undefineable. Because it is societal indoctrination, which does not even stick with everyone, and it can hugely differ from society to society, as it is culture-dependent. So how do you prepare to defend a thesis about something undefinable and undefendable?
— god must be atheist
Most people who do defend and define ethics just outright don't buy your initial premises.
Something is only then indoctrination when critical thinking is not allowed.
The answer to the problem of different cultural ethical norms is simply that different cultures are (or were at some point in history) wrong about different things.
And anywhere in the world you find the same underlying principles to ethics: don't cause unnecessary suffering, for example. — Artemis
I always thought that ethics was not defined and it is undefineable. — god must be atheist
Moral claims are not descriptive, they're prescriptive... — Pfhorrest
If there are reasons that could persuade someone to prefer something, with the likes of which you could conduct such a debate as above, then working out what all of those reasons taken together say we should prefer just is figuring out what is objectively moral. — Pfhorrest
If there are no such reasons, then such debate is doomed to failure regardless, and we're doomed to a world where everyone does whatever they want and can't be persuaded to do otherwise — Pfhorrest
There just need to be something in common to our experiences that we can point to and say "because of that" as a reason to reject the supposed morality of something, and so begin narrowing in on what the remaining possibly-moral options are, in the same way that we point at disagreement with empirical experiences as reasons to reject descriptive claims and narrow in on the truth. — Pfhorrest
we demonstrate the falsehood of descriptive claims by saying in effect "stand here and look that way and you'll see that that's false", and we can likewise demonstrate the badness (analogous to falsehood) of prescriptive claims by saying in effect "stand here and feel this and you'll feel that it's bad". — Pfhorrest
But it seems fundamental that there are not 'resaons' why we prefer things. — Isaac
We can persuade people not to do what they want by all sorts of means. — Isaac
I’m not talking about floofy gut feelings about what circumstances we instrumentally prefer, but about the experiences that lead us to prefer them. It’s like I’m talking about comparing empirical observations and you think I’m talking about comparing people’s beliefs. Beliefs and desires don’t matter, they are subjective interpretations of experience; it is the experiences we have in common that matter.Yes, we can point to some things in our common experience, we're all humans and biologically we have some pretty similar gut feelings about stuff, but they're just that - vague gut feelings. — Isaac
Ideally we would not shoot soldiers in wars. That is bad. But if something else bad will happen if we don’t, if we’re forced to choose between two bad options because we can’t find an all good one, then we choose the least bad of course. You say nothing here that shows that it is not possible to compare options to see which is less bad.How would it help getting someone to imagine themselves to be a 'rank-and-file' soldier in the German army 1940. "would you like to be in his position, would you like to be shot at?", "No", "Well then you shouldn't shoot German Soldiers in World War Two". Where would that have got us? A lot of innocent people were killed in World War Two. They were killed because many people thought the long-term good outweighed the bad. — Isaac
There are raw experiential feelings of “preferring”, hedonic experiences of something just seeming good or bad, that are not had for reasons; but then there are also things that we instrumentally prefer for reasons grounded in exactly those experiences. — Pfhorrest
If we are the ones in power and so can create circumstances that they’ll consider reasons to behave like we want (like “I’ll hurt you if you don’t“), sure. If they are the ones in power then we’re fucked. That’s why in absence of any way to persuade anyone, might supplants right. — Pfhorrest
It’s like I’m talking about comparing empirical observations and you think I’m talking about comparing people’s beliefs. Beliefs and desires don’t matter, they are subjective interpretations of experience; it is the experiences we have in common that matter. — Pfhorrest
if something else bad will happen if we don’t, if we’re forced to choose between two bad options because we can’t find an all good one, then we choose the least bad of course. — Pfhorrest
But if we resort to persuasion, aren't the ones with the most persuasive rhetoric in power? — Isaac
It’s like I’m talking about comparing empirical observations and you think I’m talking about comparing people’s beliefs. Beliefs and desires don’t matter, they are subjective interpretations of experience; it is the experiences we have in common that matter. — Pfhorrest
I don't understand what you're saying here, could you try and explain it again? — Isaac
No, it's not about the least bad, it's about what will or will not come to pass. The issue with the Second World War was not "which is worse, killing some innocent Germans or being taken over by Hitler?", it was "is killing some innocent Germans a necessary act in preventing us from being taken over by Hitler?". That question is not resolvable by empathy. — Isaac
as far as I'm concerned, "needs" as I would construe them technically cannot conflict, in the same way that observations of the world technically cannot conflict. They can suggest interpretations about what is or ought to be that conflict, but what actually is must account for all observations, even if it's a really difficult creative task to figure out how to do that, and what actually ought to be must account for all needs, even if it's a really difficult creative task to figure out how to do that.
(Consider the parable of the blind men and the elephant. Each one feels a different thing and interprets that as meaning there's a different object, and while all three of those interpretations cannot be simultaneously true, the actual reality is nevertheless compatible with the different things each of them feels to prompt those interpretations. Analogously, people's different feelings may prompt them to want different states of affairs, and those states of affairs may be incompatible, but what's actually a moral state of affairs will nevertheless account for everyone's different feelings, even if it means nobody gets any of the states of affairs that those feelings prompted them to want). — me in another thread
But I don’t think it comes down to ‘DON’T’ statements, to be honest. — Possibility
What makes a claim moral in kind? — creativesoul
Its prescriptivity, which can be elaborated upon in terms of direction of fit. A descriptive claim is like a detective's list of the things a man he's investigating bought at the grocery store; a prescriptive claim is like the shopping list the man's wife gave him. The lists might be exactly the same, but they are for different purposes: if the things the man bought disagree with the detective's list, the detective's list is wrong, but if the things the man bought disagree with his wife's list, the things the man bought are wrong instead. — Pfhorrest
Something is only then indoctrination when critical thinking is not allowed. — Artemis
They think that they are doing logic, but they have absolutely no clue about systems of logic. Why don't they try to reason within or about e.g. Hilbert-Ackermann calculi, if logic is so important to them? — alcontali
Why don't they try to reason within or about e.g. Hilbert-Ackermann calculi, if logic is so important to them?
logic is so important to them?
to them?
?
my point was to distinguish between reason and all of those other non-rational influences, — Pfhorrest
To know whether we ought to kill some innocent Germans, we both need to answer the descriptive question of whether that is necessary (or even sufficient) to prevent us from being taken over by Hitler, and the prescriptive question of whether some innocent Germans being killed is better or worse than us being taken over by Hitler. — Pfhorrest
Demanding evidence within a system for system-wide axioms is not the same as critical thinking. On the contrary, it is just stupid, infinite regress. — alcontali
We can't even take in the basic empirical data without bias, it's ingrained in our entire thinking systems. — Isaac
Is that about right? — Isaac
it's a task we can undertake, however fallibly, in both cases. — Pfhorrest
More or less, though I expect some important technical details will probably need clarification in further conversation. — Pfhorrest
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