But they exist. And to my of thinking it's worth trying to figure out why they exist or what makes them "just plain" right or wrong.There are very, very few, Right and Wrongs which are "plain wrong" or "plain right". — Book273
The inherent flaw in your reasoning.Following Kant — tim wood
Simply the heightened risk of being killed or catastrophically injured in an otherwise minor accident of the sort motorcycles are subject to, at a cost the victim cannot himself bear. That is, he, usually a he, hurts everyone, and some greatly. There can be no such freedom to either cause or unreasonably risk such harm. — tim wood
Entirely? Are you sure? At law, one supposes, but in terms of consequences? And is there any judgment involved? Or are you relieved of that too? The example becomes trivial, but not the principle. If the proportion of risk and responsibility is irreconciliable to the potential cost, then you're putting at risk at least other people's money. Please account for how you have that right.I'm free to ride a motorbike with no helmet, gloves or glasses, on my own piece of land. — Edy
That's not Kant. If it were your objection would be right. The idea is twofold: if you allow yourself, you should be also be willing others the same, and, whatever you do shouldn't at the same time destroy the grounds for what you're doing. That is, if you allow yourself to make promises without the intention of keeping them, a fortiori allowing others to do the same, then the idea of promising goes away. Or stealing, and then the idea of property goes away. Or if you want others to pay your debts, then financial security is at risk. And so forth. So you have it a little bit upside down. Kant usually makes sense, not always easy to follow; but if you think he isn't making sense, probably that's you.from a Kantian perspective, it would seem that you shouldn't, as you shouldn't will that everyone else do the same — thewonder
Life is risk and then you die. There's no avoiding either. So it's not about risk; instead it's about being stupid on OPM (other people's money) - the money being both a substantive and representative issue. Kant would say it's about about being stupid, period, but he had greater faith and hope than I have. .the supposed right to put yourself at risk does, to varying degrees, exist, — thewonder
No, It doesn't. It calls for, however, first an understanding of the circumstance, then an application of reason to determine whatever a right course of action might be. Understanding, reason. Sometimes there might be conflicting duties under different imperatives. In that case you choose the best and go with it. And observe, not word about what you want or do not want, or feel.The categorical imperative, however, deprives Ethics of circumstance. — thewonder
Really? Are they just all above average?Kant provides some of the world's best moral framework, without realizing that no such thing can exist. — thewonder
The people who pay the bills. And this is simply meant to run a partial parallel course with Kant. Debate abstract "freedoms" all day long. But tell the freedom lover he'll have to pay, and his family, and just maybe he might get the idea that his indulgence, his "freedom," just might not be as free as he thought it was.So then the question I ask, is who gets to define the amount of mitigation required for safety gear. — Edy
These have nothing (well, almost nothing) to do with Kantian thinking. There is a tough barrier of subjective unreason that has to be got through in beginning to understand what he's about - and history full of examples of such "thinking" run amok on large scale, the worst the very tropes illustrating the failures of such thinking.I don't ask.... Nor do I want.... — Edy
To the first part of this, not squandering if it achieves its purpose. But with the second, manifestly it has not. And not giving a f**k just the unanswerable, execrable and cowardly critique by the ignorant. And not arising even to the level of stupid, because that would imply you have knowledge to be stupid about.Responding to your question as to whether or not I am squandering your tax money with my federal student loans, the answer is yes, and it is because I don't give a flying fuck about how you feel about your money. — thewonder
Under interrogation by the Gestapo, Kant is effectively suggesting that you do not have a right to lie to them as you are bound by duty to uphold a moral law that everyone ought to abide by, namely that people shouldn't lie. — thewonder
"Again I may make a false statement when my purpose is to hide from another what is in my mind and when the latter can assume that such is my purpose, his own purpose being to make a wrong use of the truth. (...) and my untruth is not a lie because the thief knows full well that I will not, if I can help it, tell him the truth and that he has no right to demand it of me. But, [suppose I tell him], that I will tell him the truth, and I do not, am I then a liar?...to him [the thief] as an individual, I have done no injustice and he cannot complain; but I am nonetheless a liar in that my conduct is an infringement of the rights of humanity" (Kant, Lectures on Ethics, (2011) p. 227).. — tim wood
So your argument is that because wearing a helmet won't save you in a head-on with a truck, there is no point in wearing one? Truth is it might. But also irrelevant to the point. If we lived in a world where you truly were on your own, then I say be as risky, even stupid, as you like. Kant on the other hand argues you have a duty of care even to yourself. And I am unaware of Kant's ever telling anyone what to do; but he does tell us how to think about what to do and why. My objection is that the helmetless rider, himself and as representative of many others, has his hand on my wallet insisting that's his right. Now I am asking again - not aware of receiving an answer - how do you defend that claim of right? And this same presumption is at work almost everywhere at every level. In short people think they rights they do not have, and supposing themselves to have that right, they turn off their brains.As it pertains to the topic, if you were to say, wearing this safety gear will save your life, then you are lying. Or if you say, it will reduce the risk of accident, or it will reduce injury, then you are also lying. Yet when safety gear is advocated as a necessity, the previous assumption are portrayed as true. The only truth is that, safety gear has a potential to reduce risk/injury as is proven by statistics. Wearing a helmet won't save you in a head to head with a truck. — Edy
Before you exercise, you ought to have at least a good idea of what it is you're exercising.My argument, is that I have a duty, to exercise my inherited freedom. — Edy
Really? C'mon. Is that the best you can do?Freedom, means making up your own mind. — Edy
Seems reasonable to me, but why, exactly, wear one on the road? And if you can require yourself to wear one to reduce the risk of terrible injury to yourself, why cannot your greater community require the same thing to reduce the risk of terrible injury to itself? And if there is any duty at all to others, then how not a duty to self?I'd wear a helmet on the road. I wouldn't wear one on a hilly, grassy farm. — Edy
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