That's just manifestly not true. I think you would be hard-pressed to come up with more than a few and recent literary or documentary examples of such reasoning behind moral attitudes. No one thinks about "human flourishing" when they demonstrate a proper filial attitude towards their parents, for example - they do it because it's the right thing to do, period. — SophistiCat
Yes, genes propagate when the species that carry them flourish. — Thomas Quine
most people in most cultures, without being familiar with the philosophical arguments, know that it's the right thing to do, period, but the grounding for this claim is that love and respect for others is essential to human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
Genes propagate when the carriers survive, merely. — praxis
you could interpret just about any moral attitude to be a confirmation of your thesis. You could assert that human flourishing is the hidden motive, even when it is nowhere in evidence. (I think I see you already engaging in such creative interpretation in this discussion.) But then if anything fits your thesis, your thesis is vacuous. — SophistiCat
Don't worry, you are telegraphing the standard is-ought move loud and clear. — SophistiCat
Am I wrong? Can anyone provide an example of a moral precept held by any community past or present who did not come to that position on the belief that it served human flourishing? — Thomas Quine
Are you arguing that "it is nowhere in evidence" that human beings and the societies they create do not seek to flourish and prosper? As a human motivation, it hardly seems "hidden"... — Thomas Quine
Every community has its own understanding of what it means to flourish. The way to cut through relativism is through scientific analysis based on evidence. I can confidently argue that ISIS's project of a new Caliphate was wrong and immoral and contrary to human flourishing — Thomas Quine
Well as I explained, just because a community truly believes they are doing what they believe to be in the best interests of human flourishing, doesn't mean they are right... — Thomas Quine
Just as in the natural world, diversity means some paths lead to the flourishing of the species, and some lead to extinction. — Thomas Quine
My next point is that we can actually determine what best serves human flourishing through science and reason. This means if we can agree on the common goal, we have an objective starting point for ethical considerations. — Thomas Quine
Or indeed, we might ask how the bison herd contribute to the flourishing of Yellowstone as an ecosystem. But you seem to agree that it is right to ask about flourishing in that more generic biological context of life in general? — apokrisis
Genes propagate when the carriers survive, merely. — praxis
Or more precisely, when the carriers produce viable offspring. Quality of life, which is what we usually associate with "flourishing," does not enter the equation. — SophistiCat
Collective morality is formed by ongoing communal activity in a similar way to how a language is formed: No one controls it, and no one has any purpose that goes beyond the immediate act of communication. — Congau
Can anyone provide an example of a moral precept held by any community past or present who did not come to that position on the belief that it served human flourishing? — Thomas Quine
every species is full of individuals whose motivation is to stay safe, to find adequate sustenance, to find a hospitable environment, to reproduce, in short, to go forth and flourish. — Thomas Quine
I think an interesting question to ask ourselves here is whether this flourishing is more aimed towards the community (or mankind as a whole) or with the individual? — BitconnectCarlos
First, let's make a distinction between human beings and societies: the former are moral agents, the latter are not. — SophistiCat
I’m fine with using population as a metric to assess this, as you suggested, but by doing so you have to agree that intentionally reducing one’s population is not pursuing flourishing. — Pinprick
Yep. Morality is about caring for others.
What's surprising is that so many folk think otherwise. That it is about following universal rules or seeking happiness.
It's a bit of a puzzle. — Banno
So my thesis is that all moral systems are an attempt to answer the question, "What best serves human flourishing?" (I look forward eagerly to a refutation of this empirical observation.) And if it IS the case that humanity seeks to flourish as a species, then we OUGHT to use science to tell us how best to achieve that. There should be nothing controversial about this claim. — Thomas Quine
That behavior is hard-wired into the DNA not only of humanity but really of any species in which mothers care for their young. — Thomas Quine
it ought to be abundantly clear that humans are not necessarily instinctively moral (otherwise, why the need for a legal code or police?) — Wayfarer
it ought to be abundantly clear that humans are not necessarily instinctively moral (otherwise, why the need for a legal code or police?) — Wayfarer
and then there are those who think what is the case ought be the case. — Banno
Most mothers don't need the police or the law to tell them they should take care of their babies - they know to do so instinctively. — Thomas Quine
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