I suppose there can be logic in the universe. But I have no idea what the "logic of the universe" is. If by such you mean physics, I at least do not find morality therein. So. I have to ask you to make it clearer to me than it is as I find it.logic of the universe. — Thomas Quine
I believe you are charitable. And indeed you must be if you think of the universe as a sociable kind of place, Eddington's description of its strangeness in mind. . — tim wood
I suppose there can be logic in the universe. But I have no idea what the "logic of the universe" is. If by such you mean physics, I at least do not find morality therein. So. I have to ask you to make it clearer to me than it is as I find it. — tim wood
Now why I would argue that the evolution of morality is an expression of the logic of the universe is that moral precepts arise like any other entity or lifeform, and if they are adaptive and serve their purpose they tend to survive, and if they are maladaptive or harmful to human flourishing, such as human sacrifice to the Gods, they tend to die out.
We should not view moral information as very different from genetic information. A universal moral code is not fundamentally different from DNA. Both are forms of information that will survive across generations if they help the organism to flourish, and will be discarded if they don't. This was Dawkins' insight when he came up with the concept of the "meme". — Thomas Quine
Hi András - this is an original approach of mine inspired by Aristotle and Darwin. It has no resemblance to utilitarianism apart from being consequentialist. — Thomas Quine
Framing utilitarianism as an imperative to promote human flourishing is actually quite common. — SophistiCat
Social Darwinism followed the same justificatory logic. — SophistiCat
One can undermine this argument by raising valid objections to either 1, 2, or 3. It would be very helpful to me if someone could do so. — Thomas Quine
Framing utilitarianism as an imperative to promote human flourishing is actually quite common. — SophistiCat
I've been looking around to find anyone making the same arguments I am making here. If you can direct me to a source you are familiar with I'd be grateful. — Thomas Quine
What kind of ethics do we get, if we begin with a conception of human flourishing and attempt to derive the rest of ethics from that conception? A number of writers have expressed sympathy for such an approach to ethics, although they disagree about details: Henry Veatch, Robert Nozick, Alasdair Maclntyre, John Finnis, David Norton, Philippa Foot, Tibor Machan, Elizabeth Anscombe, Ayn Rand, and Abraham Maslow. — Gilbert Harman
A second feature of this approach to ethics [after relativism - SC] is that it tends toward utilitarianism or consequentialism. The basic value is human flourishing. Actions, character traits, laws, and so on are to be assessed with reference to their contribution to human flourishing.
The verb "to flourish" is defined in the Oxford Dictionary online as "To grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way." — Thomas Quine
It seems from the latest post though, that Thomas Quine is equating 'flourishing' with nothing more than long-term population numbers. — Isaac
Is false. Living species do not all seek to flourish, they seek to propagate genetic material. — Isaac
Harman critically assesses various approaches to ethics that fit this criterion, utilitarianism being one of them: — SophistiCat
The strategy every living species uses to propagate genetic material is to flourish. — Thomas Quine
there are endless examples from the natural world where evolution privileges the flourishing of the species over the mindless propagation of genetic material. — Thomas Quine
the only common objective is to have as many offspring as possible which are fit enough to themselves have as many offspring as possible. Some niches will result in a complex, co-operative or even altruistic solution to this problem, others will not. — Isaac
1. Is false. Living species do not all seek to flourish, they seek to propagate genetic material. If you want to use this pseudo-Darwinian approach to moral objectives then the only common objective is to have as many offspring as possible which are fit enough to themselves have as many offspring as possible. Some niches will result in a complex, co-operative or even altruistic solution to this problem, other will not. As for this flourishing constituting 'the good', I've not read a single reference to it in any ethical text, nor any common conversation. He's a really good man doesn't mean he had as many children as possible, nor that he caused the survival of as many children as possible.
2. Is also false. Divine Command Theorists do not determine their principles of the basis of human flourishing either here or in a mythical afterlife. They believe that God's commands
should be obeyed because they are God's commands -regardless of their consequence on humanity in any way shape or form. Studies in the neuroscience of moral decision-making show conclusively that we do not always (or even commonly) consult any moral system dealing with consequences before acting morally. Babies can act morally - are you suggesting they calculate the effect of their actions on human flourishing?
3. Is only true if you undermine your definition at (2), you can't have both. If you're going to include people's beliefs in a mythical afterlife as demonstrating that all moral theories are about human flourishing, then it cannot also be the case that science can tell us how to achieve it. For those that believe in an afterlife, science has no information to provide on the matter. Notwithstanding that, science actually has very little to tell us about human flourishing that could really help in any real-world moral decision. In almost all cases of complex systems there are disagreements among scientists as to the long term consequences and the vast majority of human systems (economics, social dynamics, ecosystem interactions...) are sufficiently complex to be chaotic in the long term and so beyond accurate predictability. Science might be able to tell us what is flat out wrong, but it certainly cannot tell us what is right.
Any community of human beings who have collectively agreed that such-and-such an act or course of actions is moral, have done so in the final analysis because they believed these actions to be in the service of human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
Similarly, any community that has agreed that certain actions are immoral, have done so in the conviction that these actions harm or hinder the project of human flourishing. — Thomas Quine
Too much credit to humans, we do not think in terms of flourishing or species consciousness, don't get me wrong, we should!, but we don't. — JerseyFlight
So how would we know the success of any given strategy other than by measuring the extent to which it has successfully lead to propagation of genetic material? — Isaac
Is it asking to much to expect people to care about the whole of humanity, much less the whole of future humanity? — Janus
Hence, if you want to make a better world, humans must first learn how to provide, more specifically, intelligently organize, better social conditions for their progeny. — JerseyFlight
Of course some people are able to at least genuinely care about their progeny. If everyone has progeny and everyone cares about them and everyone has a grasp of the actual situation we face, then there would be universal motivation to organize for a better future for those progeny, which if comprehensively thought out, would ensure a better future for the whole biome. — Janus
And that said, what about caring about the future of the earth itself and all the species that make up the biome per se (and not merely insofar as it it affects us)? — Janus
Is such broad-based care possible, emotionally speaking, to people who are not motivated by ideas (that is, most people)? — Janus
Or do even intellectually motivated carers genuinely care enough emotionally, if their comfort or lifestyles are threatened or if they are called upon to sacrifice much? Looking around, I see a lot of talk, but not much genuine sacrifice. — Janus
"Most philosophers have merely analyzed the world, but the point is to change it." — JerseyFlight
not all of us are called to vigorous action in this regard. If we are involved with ideas and engage with others in this involvement, either by writing, speaking or teaching then we are certainly playing a part in the move to get as many people as possible to start thinking for themselves, — Janus
I have found it is not that easy to find a satisfactory group or institution to align oneself with. — Janus
)Or coming at the question from the other side, Gilbert Harman asks in "Human Flourishing, Ethics, and Liberty" (1983 — SophistiCat
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