Here is the question: "Is there a universal grounding for morality?"
I look at the things that most people consider immoral:
Theft; murder; sexual abuse; pedophilia; breaking contracts; lying; corruption; slavery; you name it.
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
Of course people disagree about what best serves human flourishing, and therefore different cultures and subcultures have different moral standards. Some cultures and subcultures have believed or do believe things like racism, human sacrifice, killing infidels, acts of terror against innocent civilians, praying to your favorite God, etc are moral because they are in the best interests of human flourishing.
How can we tell who is right? Consult the available science. — Thomas Quine
Who says this? — Isaac
If we say happiness (in terms of flourishing or well-being) is "good," then science can certainly help us discern "right" from "wrong." — Xtrix
Islam is the main proponent of Divine Command Theory. — 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
Right. Now do that without the morality. Science can tell us what produces happiness (I don't really agree with this, but for the sake of argument...). If we want happiness we can consult science to find out how to get it.
Why have we gone through the additional stage of equating happiness with "good", what purpose did that bit serve? — Isaac
...aren't we just back to square one with irresolvable disputes over all the really complicated questions? — Isaac
In your view, if flourishing has to be the intention of a moral action, then how should moral intentionality be determined? — sime
If we say happiness (in terms of flourishing or well-being) is "good," then — Xtrix
Which is more effective, religion or science? — Thomas Quine
This indicates that the foundation of morality is ‘selfish genes’ and the intuitions and moral frameworks that arise from them, and not human flourishing. — praxis
I'm asking why we would do that 'if'. To say 'if' implies we have a choice (ie we might not make that association), I just don't understand why you think we would choose to make that association, what does it gain us? — Isaac
Science. What's that got to do with morality? — Isaac
So when you approve of a moral precept, you count it as evidence for your thesis (never mind how you figured out that it does in fact promote human flourishing). — SophistiCat
Selfish genes seek to reproduce into the next generation. — Thomas Quine
They do this by helping to create species that flourish.
In your view, if flourishing has to be the intention of a moral action, then how should moral intentionality be determined?
— sime
Hi sime, sorry, did not understand the question, can you restate in a different form? Thanks! — Thomas Quine
If one wants to be healthy, then you do xyz. If one wants to be happy (depending on what we mean by this), you do xyz.
— Xtrix
Right. Why do we need any more than this? Why associate either of those things with a universal concept, they work perfectly well as modalities. — Isaac
So why take that perspective? That's what I'm asking. What is it that appeals to you about it, or are you just offering it as an option? — Isaac
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
Closer to home and therefore more likely to share genes. This indicates that the foundation of morality is ‘selfish genes’ and the intuitions and moral frameworks that arise from them, and not human flourishing.
The fact that we must learn and practice well-being, and that it requires discipline, also indicates that it’s rather against the grain of our base nature. — praxis
What is your position regarding moral intention, moral freedom, moral responsibility and moral competency? How are these things definable and measurable? — sime
I can't see the point of bringing genes into it. All we need to flourish is a healthy state of mind and body. That is taken away from many, even most, of us by modern life, beginning with the advent of agriculture and private ownership. We only require discipline to reacquire what would naturally be ours, but for the dire state of the environment, overcrowded cities and pervasive neurosis and addictive behavior of most of those of us who are "prosperous" in the modern world. — Janus
I don’t believe that it’s human flourishing because if it were then why aren’t we all flourishing? — praxis
You say that “we only require discipline to reacquire what would naturally be ours“ but is that true? — praxis
Would a hunter-gatherer society have the knowledge and discipline to flourish if an abundance of alcohol or high fructose corn syrup were made plentiful to them? — praxis
"Good" and "bad" aren't magic words, we use them all the time in everyday activity as a shorthand for evaluating our actions, and whether or not those actions take us towards or away from our goals, ideals, objectives, ends, etc — Xtrix
The difference is, as I said, between the ideas of eternal flourishing and temporal flourishing. So all moral systems are concerned with flourishing, but the two conceptions of what constitutes flourishing are very different from one another. — Janus
he can get around this by saying that science, although it obviously cannot determine the nature of eternal flourishing, can determine that the notion of eternal flourishing has no grounds and is hence not a valid model. — Janus
Those who argue that to mandate mask-wearing is immoral believe that individual liberty and personal choice is more important to human flourishing.
Science can tell us who is right. — Thomas Quine
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