There has to be. Or else everyone would respond to all situations like a toddler.
I'm not saying intuition doesn't play a role. But there are other elements to decision making. — Artemis
Hence the word ultimately. That wasn't just there for decoration. — Terrapin Station
But then you said there's nothing else available. — Artemis
Nothing else available for what morality ultimately depends on than subjective dispositions. — Terrapin Station
But why? What's the point? — Artemis
In my experience, most atheists in regards to Ethics are either Relativists or Pragmatists. You should check out Pragmatic ethics, I think you’d really like that. Moral ecology and Piercean Real. — Mark Dennis
If I can't help how I feel, how can I purposefully change it through introspection? — Artemis
The question (one that I think virtue ethics tackles) is whether the flaws in these calculatory systems are not so massive as to render them less useful than intuition. — Isaac
1. I don't see the benefit in asserting that the moral 'good' is satisfactory hedonic experiences. So many people would disagree and you get mired in an argument that can't be supported. Why not just say if you want to maximise satisfactory hedonic experience, then it seems empirically indicated that you should do X. Turning it into an if/then statement removes all the mess of the is/ought problem and, if you're right about most people's desires, would still resonate with the vast majority of people. — Isaac
I'm not sure what you mean here, you'll need to elaborate.2. I don't see anything there about judging hyperbolic discounting (future possible hedonic gains are worth less than current definate ones). — Isaac
How does the direction of fit play a part(apply) in "One ought not literally beat oneself up over their failures"? — creativesoul
I don't really understand why something like "don't drown kittens in a burlap sack" would be either inaccurate or motivated by fear.
And an ethics where all maxims/codes/whatever you want to call them are inaccurate is not really an ethics per se. I'm not saying it's an indefensible position on that basis, just that it doesn't count as an ethics. Like atheism is not a form of theism. — Artemis
Now we arrive at moral ecology which is the view that we have to manage our collective moral views as we would an ecosystem. There is some disagreement on moral ecology though, some think all views need to be represented and maintained while others (myself included) feel certain maladaptive and destructive moral views will always contribute to a negative moral judgement on humanity as a whole and don’t contribute to our survival, stability, security or moral progress. — Mark Dennis
That’s a specific statement about very specific behaviour, that doesn’t even come close to an ethical principle. — Possibility
Why is it bad to drown kittens in a burlap sack? Does that make it okay to drown kittens in a plastic bag instead? What if I just put the kittens in the sack and give it someone else - I’m not doing anything wrong then, am I?
This is what I mean by inaccurate. If that statement is an ethical principle, then it’s a highly inaccurate account of the principle, isn’t it? Is there a statement of ethical principle, either positive or negative, that doesn’t require further explanation in terms of what is or is not acceptable? — Possibility
Reverence for life demands Biocentrism. It would be foolish to ignore the value of the non human parts of the biosphere in our own and their survival. Whether that is an Earth biosphere, the solar systems, galaxy or universe. Symbiosis with nature is a far safer state of affairs than behaving parasitically toward it. — Mark Dennis
A few simple, common sense, defensible, and easily teachable ones...
What would happen if everyone acted like that?
Be helpful.
Do what's good for goodness sake. — creativesoul
I think your definition of inaccurate is inaccurate. The wrongness of burlap sack drowning does not preclude the wrongness of plastic bag drowning. The wrongness of drowning does not preclude the rightness of giving them to a better home (though, please, don't carry kittens around in any kind of sack, even if you're giving them to a good home---that's still mean :( — Artemis
Simply put: most good deeds are bad in one way or another. — god must be atheist
inaccurate, due to its incompleteness. — Possibility
Yet if it came down to choosing between a human life and, say, a shark, then under what circumstances might the shark be the priority? — Possibility
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
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