2. All morality is an attempt to answer the question, "What best serves human flourishing?" What kinds of rules can we come up with that will help us to all get along and prosper? — Thomas Quine
all" is a gigantic ask, and I'm not quite sure this is accurate. There are animal rights activists who favor the rights of non-human animals in their morality not from the perspective of human flourishing, but rather for the sake of the animals themselves. — InPitzotl
"Flourishing" is the constant, not the variable. — Thomas Quine
Then you should be able to substitute it for a synonymous sentence in all cases. So in all cases of moral systems what is a sentence we can use in place of the constant 'flourishing'? — Isaac
Not sure why you believe this, Isaac — Thomas Quine
Trying to link morality to human well-being, in the same sense as "health" in medicine, thus being able to open up a field in which we can study it scientifically. All interesting stuff. — Xtrix
Why would we need to link morality to human well-being in order to open up a field in which we can study it scientifically? Why don't we just study human well-being? — Isaac
By "it" I was there referring to morality. The argument is that there is no fact/value or is/ought distinction, and that morality can be based in science if we simply accept a concept of "well-being" as we accept "health" in medicine. — Xtrix
Divine command theory is a moral system.
Divine command theory aims at obedience to God's will.
Science cannot tell us about God's will.
Therefore some element if your claim is wrong. — Isaac
We can already study human well-being and carry out any activities that such a study might reveal as benefitting human well-being. What's the advantage in equating such behaviours with 'morality'? — Isaac
Well-being usually refers to a brain state and thus is a subjective measure and a measure of how well an individual is doing. — Thomas Quine
The modern urban lifestyle is typically regarded as being high stress, incidentally, which would be odd if the foundation of morality were human flourishing, or it’s an indication that the modern lifestyle is generally immoral? — praxis
Well-being usually refers to a brain state and thus is a subjective measure and a measure of how well an individual is doing. Morality operates at a societal scale and is concerned with not only what is good for the individual but for society and for all humanity. — Thomas Quine
The problem with your argument here is that it fails to recognize that the Christian notion of flourishing is an eternalist, not a temporalist, one. Obviously science can tell us nothing about that. — Janus
That's exactly what I just said. I don't understand how that's a problem with my argument, it sounds like just a repeat of it. — Isaac
the two Xs, different ideas of flourishing, are not the same. — Janus
all moral thought is concerned with flourishing. — Janus
Rather, if you force others in the grand old pursuit of the game of flourishing, and in doing so, force unnecessary harm and challenges on another person because you deem this worthy, or you would feel pain if you did not force this situation on another, that may be immoral. — schopenhauer1
My argument is that Divine Command Theory is one of many moral theories that attempt to lay down sets of rules that the proponents believe will help humanity to flourish. — Thomas Quine
Those who promote Divine Command Theory say explicitly, over and over, that if we only follow God's law, humanity will flourish — Thomas Quine
Divine Command Theory is a moral theory that aims at obedience to God's Will, and is an attempt to answer the question, "What best serves human flourishing?" — Thomas Quine
The way to defeat this argument is not by changing my constant into a variable. It would be by proving that the intention of Divine Command Theory is not actually to serve human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
I then argue that if this is what we actually are seeking to do, then science can help us find the best way. — Thomas Quine
... morally speaking we should all accept a diminution of our prosperity if that would afford equal prosperity to all others. But we are not sufficiently morally motivated. I would say most of us only care about what affects, or would be likely to significantly affect, themselves and those they may be more or less intimately involved with. — Janus
Yes, I understood that, I was wondering why you'd want to do that. We can already study human well-being and carry out any activities that such a study might reveal as benefitting human well-being. What's the advantage in equating such behaviours with 'morality'? — Isaac
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