No, I wouldn't want to make that case and nor would anyone nowadays, but that's not because an objective morality exists for all moral dilemmas, it's because an objective morality exists for this particular moral dilemma. — Isaac
Everyone agreeing on some moral imperative, by this definition, would still not make it objective because those same people would still all agree that the only place that imperative could possibly be was within the minds of each individual, and if it arrives, or varies with culture, then it cannot be an innate property of those minds as objects (brains). — Isaac
This looks a little circular. How do we determine what is an "innate property" of minds other than by observing overwhelming intersubjective agreement? — ChrisH
If our goal is human flourishing, we must defend individual liberty, but not past the point where it threatens human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
To uphold that claim we would need a falsifiable scientific theory about the correct relative values and a controlled trial to test that hypothesis. — Isaac
How do you define human flourishing? — praxis
I said in an earlier post that the simplest definition of "to flourish" I could find in online dictionaries is "to grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way."
It is hard to argue that what America is currently experiencing can in any way be described as "flourishing". Growth has taken a historic step backwards and as to health... — Thomas Quine
Certainly Amazon is flourishing, but even if we take standard measures of business success, such as GDP or average corporate profits, the U.S. has taken a massive hit, like all countries but on many measures by far the worst of any developed country. This is in part because of a pervasive fetishization of individual liberty which makes containing the pandemic that much harder. — Thomas Quine
Strange that you equate GDP growth with flourishing. Climate change, the mass extinction of species, and other environmental degradations aren't usually considered conducive to human flourishing. — praxis
Pinker argues that Enlightenment values lead to flourishing. I imagine that you would agree with that. This centers on values, however, and how can anyone be the judge of cultural values, much less force our own onto others? — praxis
Hasnt science already settled the matter for human flourishing, in terms of eugenics and population control? — Pussycat
I will argue that some of our moral instincts are the result of evolutionary adaptation, such as the mothering instinct, and I will argue that the grounding of all morality - the motivation to go forth in the world and flourish - is the result of evolutionary adaptation, is instinctual, and is embedded in the code of life. — Thomas Quine
Only humans can weigh things up, make choices, act better or worse.
— Wayfarer
Have you never owned a dog?
6 days ago — Thomas Quine
I think you’re conflating evolutionary biology with ethical philosophy. — Wayfarer
dogs cannot speak or reason or weigh up courses of action, except in the most rudimentary way. They can fret about being neglected or hungry or in pain, but they can’t fret about whether they really are ‘a good boy’ or what that actually means. — Wayfarer
My critique of traditional ethical theory is that it has little or no objective grounding. For the most part it is "I think we should do things THIS way," accompanied by some made-up story like God wants us to do it this way. O — Thomas Quine
Philosophers and humanists are interested in what has been called, in 20th-century continental philosophy, the human condition, that is, a sense of uneasiness that human beings may feel about their own existence and the reality that confronts them (as in the case of modernity with all its changes in the proximate environment of humans and corresponding changes in their modes of existence). Scientists are more interested in human nature. If they discover that human nature doesn’t exist and human beings are, like cells, merely parts of a bigger aggregate, to whose survival they contribute, and all they feel and think is just a matter of illusion (a sort of Matrix scenario), then, as far as science is concerned, that’s it, and science should go on investigating humans by considering this new fact about their nature. I think that Pinker makes a “slip of the tongue” in his article when he writes: “This is an extraordinary time for the understanding of the human condition”. He clearly means human nature and he moves back and forth between these two expressions in his article when they should be kept distinct.
Sorry about your dog! — Thomas Quine
We therefore have a much greater capacity and resources to draw upon when trying to answer the question, "What best serves our own flourishing and the flourishing of our species?"
But the grounding is the same. — Thomas Quine
No, Eugenics assumes we know which human qualities best serve human flourishing, and it turns out, who could have guessed, the people who want to make these sorts of decisions tend to conclude their own qualities, even their own race, are the best. But for sure there is a lot of promise in gene therapies. — Thomas Quine
There's a lot of disagreement about population control, I tend to think we need to leave these decisions to the individual, and as it turns out countries with an adequate social safety net, so people don't have to rely on the support of children in their old age, show a falling birth rate. — Thomas Quine
If humanity vanished, the universe would still exist. Would we say that morality disappears with them? — Philosophim
I think you are right to see a pattern, to see human morality as just one expression of a deeper logic at work in the universe. — Thomas Quine
Only the "pattern" of conceivable (by human mind) possibility and consequence reified. Not in itself worth a whole lot. — tim wood
this means that humanity did not invent morality out of the air, and this means morality arises out of the logic of the universe. — Thomas Quine
and this means morality arises out of the logic of the universe. — Thomas Quine
So, substance has a poetry but poetry has no substance? What is or has substance for you? — Janus
I am assuming here that "logic of the universe" is not the same thing as that messily evolving work-in-progress called morality. — tim wood
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