Cutting into a slope and risking a landslide.You've yet to explain what they are actually doing. What are they doing? — Outlander
Not at all. It's these new neighbors who are on good terms only with one other neighbors (the ones who sold them the land), and their relatives who also live in the neighborhood.Are you an introvert who's disinclined to be "neighborly" with your other neighbors?
I don't understand that. What do you mean?Like was said before there's strength in numbers. If they decrease your property value, they decrease not only their own but others around them. Which removes the "morality for the sake of morality" dynamic.
Do you think Donnie writes into his gratitude journal every day? Exactly.So neither you nor anyone can dismiss them out-of-hand without at the same time dismissing your own humanity. — tim wood
Why ignore the obvious?But for you they seem to be a burden. I submit that what burdens you is not any issue of EM, but in part perhaps lawless neighbors and what to do about them - no trivial problem at all.
Why should the way things actually are IRL play no part in a theory of EM?
Given, for example, that bullies usually win, shouldn't that be taken to mean that bullying is morally good?
Has it never occurred to you that being honest, fair, considerate, law-abiding actually makes you a loser and an untermensch? — baker
How can something that leads to success in the world be morally wrong?No, it hasn't. Are you thinking maybe you need to be dishonest, unfair, inconsiderate, law-breaking? — tim wood
That's assuming that rules apply equally to all people, regardless of their status and power.Next. They don't obey the rules. Immediately two possibilities: they really are not obeying the rules, or they actually are and you just don't yourself understand the rules. First step, do you actually know the rules? Now by cases. 1) They are actually not obeying the rules. If so, they have conferred on you a good bit of power. You have access to your own voice and being in the right, your community, your church, the law, the police, your local government. And sometimes that's what you have to do, because there are bad and stupid people out there and proximity to them can be bad for one's health. That is, EM is shoulds and oughts but themselves without force until and unless enforced - and sometimes you the engine that gets them enforced.
Because of confusion and ignorance on what "success" means and is.How can something that leads to success in the world be morally wrong? — baker
My heavens! You're expecting the world itself to be an EM place? Possibly so that relieved of the burden and responsibility you do not have to be?That's not how the world works. — baker
The assumption that there is such a thing as objective morality (which would have the same type of function as the rules in chess) tends to lurk in the back of discussions about morality.Do you know how to play chess? Some people do not. Do you conclude from that, that you are allowed to - or that it is good to - move your rook diagonally? And if you do, what happens to the game of chess? And what happens to people who make illegal moves on a chessboard? — tim wood
You're going to argue that, say, becoming the president of the most powerful country in the world is not success?Because of confusion and ignorance on what "success" means and is.
No, I'm expecting to deduce what EM is, based on known facts about the world.My heavens! You're expecting the world itself to be an EM place?
The world generally sides with whoever is better off, and this can be either the mugger or the muggee.There is a system of words: good, better, best, bad, worse, worst. What do you imagine they mean or refer to? At the moment, it appears you're arguing that whether a mugging is good or bad depends on whether you're the mugger or the muggee. And that's not how the world works.
The assumption that there is such a thing as objective morality (which would have the same type of function as the rules in chess) tends to lurk in the back of discussions about morality. — baker
So they always win.
Similar examples are common all over the globe and history.
Given this state of facts, the only conclusion is that morality is overrated and evolutionarily disadvantageous.
Why bother about other people, their lives and their property, when you can get away with endangering and damaging it.
I dare you to prove this wrong. — baker
If you have a group of people who behave morally (what is, in some traditional sense considered "moral"), and then comes one who doesn't behave morally, chances are he'll get away with it, because the "good guys", being the "good guys" that they are, won't be able to do anything against him. That is, unless they give up on their goodness.Seems like cherry-picking to me - you've got few instances in which being moral would likely be a fatal error but you're ignoring what must be instances where the only sensible choice is to be moral. — TheMadFool
I'd like to believe that, very much so.Too, if you haven't noticed (I have), morality makes so much sense that some, if not all, people have come to believe in "good for the sake of good". It is/has become a reason unto itself - it needs no argument to hold it in place, it's self-justifiying.
Inertia, fear of conflict, minding one's own business, physical exhaustion due to overwork and stress.How exactly do you think the world runs its cities? How is the peace maintained in towns, cities, megacities? The police force is, by my reckoning, just too small, in some cases poorly trained, ill-equipped, evn corrupt - surely some other factor is in play here? What, in your view, is that? — TheMadFool
It's not up to me to decide how much 2 and 2 is.Do you "buy" the rule of non-contradiction in logic, that 2+2=4, that down is down and up is up? Now prove any of them. And of course you cannot. So why are they true? I leave that to you. But EM is the same. — tim wood
*tempted to do a feminist pun*It you aspire to the ethics and morals of a squirrel or a lizard, you can do that, or try. But it's not human. So what is being human? That to you as well. And you get to choose, but your choice is yours and no one else's. Until you make it, you're not a man; and when you make it, then you're either a good or a bad man. The verdict of history is that good is substantive and it is better to be the good man.
Inertia, fear of conflict, minding one's own business, physical exhaustion due to overwork and stress.
I'm not convinced that people set out to try to "maintain peace". For that, they would actually have to know what brings about peace. Rather, I think peace is one of those states that are essentially byproducts of other things. — baker
get away with endangering and damaging it (property/lives). — baker
Like I said:Really, fear? Fear of what? — TheMadFool
fear of conflict — baker
But who are the good people? You want to argue that, say, Blondie Orange is not a good person?I don't think you're giving good people due credit. — TheMadFool
You give me too much credit. Aristotle thought that you could tell the good from the bad man - on his understanding of good - and that the good man doesn't do bad things. And the same from Socrates via Plato, that the bad man ultimately acts against his own self-interest.By your logic above, can a good man do bad things? — baker
And this is where imo you're confused. It is, and you do. Do the stones care? They do not. But people do and that's your ground. Even 2+2=4 is up to you to live in accord with in terms of your actions and expectations.If there is objective morality, it cannot be up to me to decide what it is. — baker
No, that's one and the same solidity.It seems to me you look for something, perhaps a kind of solidity that you would like morality to have, that it doesn't - and most people know it doesn't. But you then deny the possibility of a different kind of solidity which it does have. Let's call it here the imperative of the well-grounded ought. — tim wood
I said:Well, I don't think fear alone, as you seem to be suggesting, — TheMadFool
Inertia, fear of conflict, minding one's own business, physical exhaustion due to overwork and stress. — baker
I said:However, there are two sides to this coin. As I mentioned earlier, the opportunities to engage in criminal activity and then being able to, in your words, "...get away with it..." are aplenty given the citizen to police ratio is huge in most places around the world and yet peace and calm are more the norm than the exception.
The prospective conflict isn't just with the police, but primarily with owners who are willing to protect their property and their lives. — baker
In my original list, fear of conflict was just one of the items listed.I concede that fear does play a role, probably a huge one, in morality but I don't agree that it's the only reason that we're, society is, good.
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