Why should my definition of flourishing align with those of religious people, as you suggest? — Thomas Quine
If we agree that the problem morality is trying to solve is how best to flourish, my position is that learning from science is your best bet. — Thomas Quine
I dislike the current state of ethical theory and I want to kick over the whole gameboard. — Thomas Quine
But the implications are huge, because they mean science can tell us what is moral and what is not. — Thomas Quine
Because if it doesn't then your claim that "alk moral systems are about human flourishing" is flat out wrong. Some moral systems are clearly aimed at achieving something which you would not define as 'flourishing'. — Isaac
If we agree with your system, then your system is the best? OK. — Isaac
I don't think following the commands in the Holy Books written by an imaginary God is more conducive to human flourishing than following the advice of science. But lots of people do. — Thomas Quine
I can't see a difference between the injunction to do the right thing, the injunction to do your duty and the injunction to be virtuous. — Janus
I find myself moving away from duty and happiness, towards virtue. — Banno
I thought I made it pretty clear that there are many different, even contradictory views about what best serves human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
If you don't agree with my system, then I would love to hear why not. — Thomas Quine
So if we take 'flourishing' to be a variable x (some thing), then your statement "all moral systems aim at human flourishing" becomes "all moral systems aim at something", which seems just trivially true - hence the confusion. — Isaac
My argument is that there is a grounding to all these varieties; they all are attempts to solve the same problem. — Thomas Quine
Genes propagate when the carriers survive, merely. Our species is a significant line differentiation, but it’s only one layer out of many possible distinctions. We’re naturally more concerned with human flourishing than that of chimps, and then closer to home, we’re more concerned with national flourishing, then perhaps regional, religious, or political party flourishing, and then family. Does anyone regard all of humanity as they do their own family? Maybe some do ideologically but when push comes to shove genes always win favor. — praxis
That makes flourishing of a different character than any specific moral value or system then, no? — fdrake
You are kind of all over the place in terms of posing the question, which is the single most important thing in philosophy. — SophistiCat
I ask, "What do all these have in common?" My answer is, they all are detrimental to human flourishing. Who am I to say? How do I know this? I consult the evidence from the available science. — Thomas Quine
Again, this can be attributed to violating a negative ethics of non-harm and non-force. — schopenhauer1
Don't know much about negative ethics, but at first glance it appears to be more of a thought experiment than a moral system that any culture has embraced. — Thomas Quine
There is a reason most people think suicide is immoral: our DNA tells us we should be instead trying to survive and flourish. — Thomas Quine
I think it's common, but only with the caveat I introduced earlier (that we're talking about complex moral decisions, not whether to beat a child). — Isaac
There is a reason most people think suicide is immoral: our DNA tells us we should be instead trying to survive and flourish. — Thomas Quine
I’m pretty sure that science informs us that processed food, refined sugars, fat, overeating, drinking, lack of exercise, smoking, drugs, etc etc, isn’t conducive to humans flourishing, and yet we indulge ourselves anyway. — praxis
This whole thread has a bit of a smell to me. Throughout this thread, this has been your general proposal. To some particular challenges to morality you have defended your general proposal by explaining how some particular moral precept which does not actually seem to serve human flourishing is, in fact, an attempt to answer the question of flourishing.all moral precepts are an attempt to answer the question, “What best serves human flourishing?” — Thomas Quine
The test of the thesis being useful is that there is such a hypothetical violation but we find in practice it's never (or maybe even rarely) violated. — InPitzotl
I'm more after meaning than science. Yes, this looks similar to falsifiability, but the basic idea is that if the thesis can explain everything, then it explains nothing.And it would not be the basic logic of moral thinking if there were exceptions, so your attempted critique seems to fail here. — Janus
I don't see a difference. "X is what is basically going on" is the explanation. I'm suspecting the potential for illusory meaning... what exactly are you objecting to?It's not so much meant to explain anything as it is merely to clarify what's basically going on. — Janus
^^- FTR I made no mention of that.You might take issue with the OP's thesis that this basic logic of moral thinking is evolved — Janus
Sure, but it is one.Sure you can call it an explanation, but it is not really much of a one. — Janus
Okay, so it's not a "proper explanation". Let's call it a clarification. But this clarification of morality proposes that moral precepts are attempts to answer the question about what best serves human flourishing. If all moral precepts, even hypothetical, even contradictory, could be argued in some convoluted sense to still be an attempt to answer the question about what best served human flourishing, then what value does this clarification actually have... what exactly is it clarifying?A proper explanation would not merely to identify what is going on,
But this clarification of morality proposes that moral precepts are attempts to answer the question about what best serves human flourishing. — InPitzotl
the basic idea is that if the thesis can explain everything, then it explains nothing. — InPitzotl
Not quite yet; it gets a lot muddier in the details. But we need not go there... one would have to agree that we're after human flourishing in particular to start down this road (i.e., agree with 2).If all that is true, and I await a cogent refutation, we have an objective basis for morality and right conduct. — Thomas Quine
I'm not quite sure this proposal is needed to analyze faults in some of these areas (see e.g. this thread).If true, the thesis poses a moral challenge to religion, to policy-making, to the way business is done, to ideologies such as American exceptionalism and constitutional originalism, to law, justice, political regimes, etc. — Thomas Quine
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