I appeal to rational principles to over rule the feelings, and decide what I ought and ought not do, based on these principles. — Metaphysician Undercover
I cannot say that I ought to do what the feeling inclines me to do, as you seem to imply. — Metaphysician Undercover
But there is also the feeling that what I am doing is wrong, which may happen in a direct or non-reflective way, as you yourself will later acknowledge. — David Mo
When did I say such a thing? The conciousness of something does not need to be reflexive. Although it often is. I'm aware that I'm being watched, without having to reflect on it. — David Mo
I think this is special pleading. Take a simple conflict. I like ice-cream, but it makes me fat. Which is rational, liking ice-cream or not liking fat? I say neither. — unenlightened
You don't realize that I'm not in the field of morals or ethics. I'm not recommending anything. I'm explaining what moral emotions are and how they work. I mean, psychology. — David Mo
Both believed that morality is based on reason, but without moral emotion there can be no impulse to do good. — David Mo
I might get an uneasy feeling, an uncomfortable feeling, and associate this feeling with the judgement that the action is wrong, but I do not believe I've ever really had a feeling that what I am doing is wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
And anytime we use a word to describe a particular situation, this requires a conscious judgement that the situation fulfills the requirements of using that word. So when I say "that's a house", "that's a car", "the colour of that thing is red", or "that action is wrong" — Metaphysician Undercover
If morality is truly based on reason, then it is contradictory to say that it is emotion which gives us the impulse to do good. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think you don't have differentiated feelings. When a feeling is associated with some characteristics (of fear or guilt) - as you said - it is because they are in the very same feeling. You don't need to say "I had a panic attack" to have had a panic attack. You can rest assured: you don't need a specialist. You just need to think better about what you're saying. — David Mo
don't see any contradiction. It's one thing to know and another to want. The person who says "I know very well that I shouldn't eat chocolate, but I can't resist" is expressing that difference. — David Mo
Don't give me platonisms. Plato was very intelligent and wrote very well, but his idea of the Ideal Good seems to me to be pure illusion. — David Mo
You have a feeling of shame or guilt. This is the psychological fact. After that you can think about what you've had and categorize it as shame or guilt. What you called "knowing" is the latter. Obviously you need to think about it to know what it is. But to be X and to think what X can be are different actions.We know that it's pain, or that it's pleasure simply from the feeling, — Metaphysician Undercover
I have already answered this. There are two bases of morality: reason and emotion. I used the metaphor of a tandem.The contradiction is in saying that morality is based in reason, yet emotion gives us the impulse to do good. If emotion gave us the impulse to do good, then we would not need reason for morality, we could just follow our emotions, and therefore do good. Morality would not be based in reason it would be based in emotions. — Metaphysician Undercover
According the Fathers of the Church, intellect is a servant of faith. We're not getting into theologies now, I hope.Christian ethics, which tell us to be guided by eternal truths of the intellect, — Metaphysician Undercover
You have a feeling of shame or guilt. This is the psychological fact. After that you can think about what you've had and categorize it as shame or guilt. What you called "knowing" is the latter. Obviously you need to think about it to know what it is. But to be X and to think what X can be are different actions. — David Mo
There are two bases of morality: reason and emotion. — David Mo
You can disagree but you can't say that this is a contradictory theory. — David Mo
I didn't say that feeling includes a judgment. Feeling is the perception of have injured someone. Just as empathy does not include the judgment of feeling what another feels. But it is felt. You see the color red before you are thinking that this color is different from blue. The same is true for moral emotions. May or may not be accompanied for judgments about them.But your supposed feeling of "guilt" already has that judgement built into i — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see why. My understanding of what is good can be supported by the feeling of empathy and result in an action that my reason recognizes as good. Where do you see contradiction? On the contrary, it is obvious that some feelings and reason may coincide. It has been said since Socrates, if not before.This is unacceptable. Having two distinct bases, as you propose would lead to inconsistency and contradiction of principles, — Metaphysician Undercover
Feeling is the perception of have injured someone. — David Mo
I don't see why. My understanding of what is good can be supported by the feeling of empathy and result in an action that my reason recognizes as good. Where do you see contradiction? — David Mo
That's better called a memory. — Metaphysician Undercover
the person might choose either good or bad actions in relation to the feeling — Metaphysician Undercover
Reason alone can be directed in the wrong direction. Selfishness, for example. Moral emotion alone can be stupidly applied. — David Mo
am not speaking of the past, but present. Red perception is not a memory. — David Mo
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