In the same way that these are non sequitors
"I have the goal of eating"
"I (morally) should eat"/ "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral"
Neither of these follow. If you had meant should in the same sense that you use should in "You should turn on the stove to cook the stake" then it makes sense (I (instruction)should achieve stability because I want it) but then you're not making a normative claim — khaled
It seems like you do not understand subjective normative statements. — Qmeri
It is not a non sequitur. — Qmeri
even you acknowledged that any system that makes normative statements is a moral system no matter how unintuitive they sound. — Qmeri
I have a goal of eating.
Therefore according to that goal I should eat. — Qmeri
I have a goal of eating.
Therefore according to that goal I should eat. — Qmeri
If this follows then "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral" would also have to follow (since you say that normative statements automatically define a moral law). Do you really think "If I don't eat I would be doing something immoral" should follow from "I have a goal of eating"? — khaled
To me it just represents the systems we have created to evaluate our actions and choices as "desirable" or "undesirable" — Qmeri
since it does not need to be justified since it's a logical necessity and therefore not a choice. — Qmeri
It is true true that no logical necessity can ever give us any information about our world since they are true in every possible world. They are all trivialities. But since our intuition doesn't seem to understand all the logically necessary trivialities, they can still teach us new things we didn't realize before. (Like: I think, therefore I am.) Therefore proving things as logical necessities accomplishes useful things. In this case it demonstrates a trivial yet unintuitive goal that everyone in every possible world has. At least I didn't know that before I came up with this theory. A logically necessary triviality gave me new understanding, therefore logically necessary trivialities can give new understanding. — Qmeri
You say that the goal of every person is to achieve stability. But when we unpack this sentence, it turns out that by "stability" you mean nothing other than fulfillment of a goal. So once the obscure language is peeled away, it turns out that what you said was a simple tautology: your goal is your goal is your goal. Great! Thanks for making that clear. — SophistiCat
Stable state is simply a state of a system that doesn't try to change — Qmeri
I also showed how "going to stability" isn't a logical necessity either. "Unstable things try to change their state" =/= "Unstable things try to be stable" — khaled
So, a being that has achieved everything it tried to achieve and therefore does not have anything that makes it behave with intent since everything is already the way it desires, doesn't have goals? That would mean achieving a goal is losing a goal. — Qmeri
For me achieving everything I want and being in state I don't want to change has meant boredom not happiness. Happiness requires change. — ovdtogt
And being in a state you don't want to change doesn't mean that you are just lying in your bed doing nothing. — Qmeri
When having sex many people are in a state they don't want to change. — Qmeri
We are physically and mentally programmed to react to internal and external signals: hunger, pain, thirst, cold, fear, desire (internal)and light, sound, taste.. 5 senses (external).
These signals are stimuli. If we receive too little stimuli we get bored.
People in solitary confinement can go crazy through the lack of stimuli.
People can go crazy in super quiet rooms.
People go crazy if they don't get enough human contact. All these stimuli are necessary to stay sane. — ovdtogt
But since this is a moral system whose purpose is to show that there is a logically necessary goal (unstable systems are trying to achieve a change in their state) and that the optimal way of solving that problem of not having achieved ones logically necessary goals in any unstable state is achieving stability, all the conclusions stay the same. Although, I do agree that there is a nuance difference. — Qmeri
The conclusions don't change but I never agreed with the conclusion in the first place
Your argument as I understand it is:
1- People seek change until they achieve stability
2- Therefore people should seek change until they achieve stability (I think is a non sequitur)
3- Therefore we have a system of morality that bypasses Hume's law
You can't reach 3 if 2 is a non sequitur — khaled
To me your "moral should" is the same as "according to this objective goal so and so should". — Qmeri
Stability was defined precisely, although I do agree that the text has other things in it that are interpretable. Stable state is simply a state of a system that doesn't try to change aka doesn't change without outside influence. Instability is the opposite of that. And by those precise definitions an unstable system is trying to achieve change of its current state by logical necessity, which is a goal by most definitions and therefore a logically necessary one. Not just your goal is your goal.
At least for most people "your goal is your goal" does not give the same ideas as "trying to achieve a change in an unstable state is a logically necessary goal that isn't a choice". "Your goal is your goal" does not demonstrate any logically necessary goals for anyone, which is the main point of this theory. — Qmeri
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