This belief system says that morals/ethics don't exist at all, except as arrangements of neurons.
Rather than making decisions based on a moral code, this philosophy encourages people to focus on outcomes. Instead of asking "What should I do?", ask "What do I want to see happen?", and then to work toward that goal.
ask "What do I want to see happen?", and then to work toward that goal. — Avery
prescriptions are to be judged by different criteria than descriptions, by appeal to our appetites rather than our senses, but to all of our appetites equally, just like when describing reality we have to account for all of our sensory observations equally. — Pfhorrest
That would be impossible to do, because both our sensory observations and our "appetites" are much too numerous to be all accounted for equally. — Olivier5
What do I want to see happen?", and then to work toward that goal.
— Avery
Which seems to put it squarely as a form of egotism. — Pfhorrest
We've yet to be graced with any details on this 'accounting' process, which sounds suspiciously like providing some post hoc rationalisation to one's personal 'appetites' to lend them an air of objective authority. — Isaac
It's based on the idea that morality and ethics are purely human inventions, which only exist as thoughts in our heads. — Avery
The human condition is about making choices -- including choices about what is relevant to consider in a given context, and what is irrelevant.
These choices are always made with insufficient information, e.g. no one knows how things are really going to pan out if one does A rather than B. — Olivier5
So not only are the future outcomes of our choices unpredictable.....
The future is inaccessible to knowledge in any domain, so has no business being a legislative consideration for what effectively is a vast array of personal choice possibilities.
......even our motives (our "appetites") are not totally transparent to ourselves.....
If not totally, it must be the case they are transparent, that is, present to our attention, enough to know what they are, such that there is some ground for whatever choices we do end up making. Otherwise, it becomes possible to never make a motive-based choice at all.
.......Hence the need to get counsel from others, and for some rule-based ethics. — Olivier5
I think what you're describing is closer to constructivism or nihilism. — Grre
Constructivism highlights that most things are human inventions-that is that they are socially constructed within social groups (customs, morals, religion, ect.) This does not mean they are not real per say, they are very much real, but more that it means that they are real intersubjectively, meaning within the particular social group that they were created. — Grre
I think utilitarianism is what you are trying to describe here. — Grre
Which seems to put it squarely as a form of egotism. “The good is whatever I want”. — Pfhorrest
...Which is almost (next to only nihilism) the least defensible position on morality there can be. — Pfhorrest
The usual popular alternatives are varieties of non-cognitivism, which say that moral claims aren’t even trying to say things the likes of which can be true or false. — Pfhorrest
But a very few philosophers, including myself, aim instead for a non-descriptivism, while retaining cognitivism. — Pfhorrest
On such an account, moral claims are not descriptions of the world at all, they’re not purporting to describe some kind of moral objects, neither natural nor non-natural, nor are they about people’s views, so they aren’t made true or false by anyone’s agreement or disagreement. But they are nevertheless capable of being objectively, universally, unbiasedly correct. They are just correct prescriptions, rather than correct descriptions; and prescriptions are to be judged by different criteria than descriptions, by appeal to our appetites rather than our senses, but to all of our appetites equally, just like when describing reality we have to account for all of our sensory observations equally. — Pfhorrest
Well then they do exist, don't they? — Isaac
Exactly. We've yet to be graced with any details on this 'accounting' process, which sounds suspiciously like providing some post hoc rationalisation to one's personal 'appetites' to lend them an air of objective authority. — Isaac
When i wrote "morals" what I should have said was "objective moral facts". People so often refer to their thoughts about morality by the same word "morals", that the two meanings can often by confused, or conflated. — Avery
You know, I'm not sure if this was actually a response to my OP, or to what Pfhorrest wrote. — Avery
"What do I really want out of this situation? What do I really want to see happen?" — Avery
That may be the case sometimes, but it's a mistake to assume neurological measures of 'happiness' like dopamine correlate exactly with what we talk about as 'happiness'. It's considerably more complicated neurologically... — Isaac
and sometimes when we make moral-type decisions areas of the brain responsible for things like dopamine response are not even involved. — Isaac
Things which we talk about as 'moral' decisions are very unlikely to be resolved using any one method. — Isaac
Which tends to make the right/wrong dichotomy regarding choices, an improper perspective. — Mww
So where is the line drawn — Mww
There’s no doubt we sometimes.....often.....rationalize conditions to suit our own best interests, so perhaps that is a better example of what the human condition is about, rather than the choices which follow. — Mww
But I appreciate your sentiment. The human species seems to have fallen into at least partial disgrace, and we may have even evolved ourselves right out of the capacity to rectify it. The ingredients are still within us, nonetheless, if for no other reason than we are still human, with all its fundamental entailment included. — Mww
Citation needed. — Avery
Hard to know what you mean to say here. Would you mind rephrasing this in other words? — Avery
It's confusions like this that have caused me to stop using the word "moral" altogether in most speech — Avery
Pfhorrest seems to trust our capacity for exhaustive and honest accouting a little too much. — Olivier5
senses and appetites are the criteria by which to sort through things that might be true or might be good. That sorting process is a whole thing unto itself — when concerning reality, we call it epistemology — and that’s where the handling of ambiguities and weighing of different imperfect solutions against each other happens. All I’ve said so far here is what the aim of such a process is, how to gauge whether a proposed solution is the perfect one or not, and if not, why not. — Pfhorrest
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