Speculation is not philosophy
— Pfhorrest
I didn't claim or imply that it is. — 180 Proof
philosophical speculation — 180 Proof
... more or less, critical rationalism, i.e. letting any possibility float until it can be ruled out, rather than rejecting all possibilities until they can be proven the unique correct one.
— Pfhorrest
Non sequitur. — 180 Proof
I've made that point already. You claim answers to "how"-questions were also subject to infinite regresses which may be true in philosophy but not true in science because "how"-answers (i.e. theoretical explanations) are testable-eliminable.You could ask an infinite regress of “why is it that...” — Pfhorrest
Yeah. But here you're confusing what I said about science ("how") with philosophy ("why"). Thus, your non sequitur.There is equal potential for infinite regress in the “how does” question, and the solution to both is the same: more or less, critical rationalism — Pfhorrest
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speculative_reason aka "metaphysics".Then I don’t know what you meant by
"philosophical speculation"
— 180 Proof
I've made that point already. — 180 Proof
You claim answers to "how"-questions were also subject to infinite regresses which may be true in philosophy but not true in science because "how"-answers (i.e. theoretic explanations) are testable-eliminable. — 180 Proof
*sigh*This sounds like you're lashing out at me suggesting you being scared of non-binary people is a psychological problem of yours, not a social problem of theirs. — Pfhorrest
Okay. This is where I get off the crazy train. I'm neither utopian enough nor scientistic enough for where you're going, Pfhorrest. 'Normative ethics' is, for me, the heart of moral philosophy because judgment & conduct are always already situated in conflicted commons, with 'metaethics' & 'applied ethics' derivative and supplimentary. As sketched on several threads last year, my position is this:... we also investigate what should be the case ... and normative ethics doesn't really fit into there anywhere ... — Pfhorrest
So you see, my friend, one of us is putting the cart before the horse or planting our tree-roots in the sky. :sweat:• metaethics – Eudaimonic Naturalism (re: agency-centric) "why" > informed by ontological-existential commitments^
• normative ethics – Negative Utilitarianism (re: harm) "how"-social > informed by prescriptive sciences^^
• applied ethics – Negative Consequentialism (re: injustice) "how"-political > informed by historical sciences^^^
^agency must care for – optimize – agency (à la Spinozist conatus), otherwise performative self-inconsistency ensues; thus, no infinite regress ...
^^always already the case: facticity of natality, or ecology-bound embodied participation in conflicted commons (esp. with strangers) ...
^^^the socioeconomic situation (i.e. status quo, regime, hegemon, etc)
Empathy and moral objectivism are mutually exclusive. — baker
the crazy train — 180 Proof
Normative ethics' is, for me, the heart of moral philosophy because judgment & conduct are always already situated in conflicted commons, with 'metaethics' & 'applied ethics' derivative and supplimentary. — 180 Proof
Pfhorrest, I don't always agree with you, but your posts are very nicely written and clear. — bert1
If that's what you gather from my postings all these months, all I can say is you've profoundly misread me. Please show where I've proposed "innate" or "a priori" assumptions. No humean "Ought from Is" problem on my part, Pfhorrest – unless, for you, ethical naturalism & hypothetical imperatives rest on an "Ought from Is" fallacy – which is why I refer to prescriptive sciences (e.g. human ecology, medical science) as paradigms, or analogues – not scientistic replacements – for reasoning about ethics. And I'm also diametrically opposed to attempts like Harris' and yours to supplant moral philosophy with an "ethical science".You likewise are are (or seem to be) advocating that good and bad ends are just pre-known or assumed and can’t be investigated any further than those assumptions, and the only thing to investigate is what causes those pre-assumed good ends. — Pfhorrest
If that's what you gather from my postings all these months, all I can say is you've profoundly misread me. Please show where I've proposed "innate" or "a priori" assumptions — 180 Proof
No humean "Ought from Is" problem on my part, Pfhorrest – unless, for you, ethical naturalism & hypothetical imperatives rest on an "Ought from Is" fallacy — 180 Proof
analogues – not scientistic replacements – for reasoning about ethics. And I'm also diametrically opposed to attempts like Harris' and yours to supplant moral philosophy with an "ethical science". — 180 Proof
You're mistaken. "If X is natural, then X is good" is a naturalistic fallacy. My agency-centered (meta)ethics, which I claim is naturalistic because agency is accessible to natural science, is not.Ethical naturalism absolutely conflates "is" with "ought"; that's the whole point of the naturalistic fallacy. — Pfhorrest
And so I begin: (On pain of performative self-contradiction to do otherwise) If agency ought to optimize agency, then an agent ought to do ... This "antecedent ought" has a subject which reflexively is also its (only) object, and thus precludes any other non-natural considerations since agency is naturalistic (as stipulated above).Hypothetical imperatives don't, because they use "ought"s in their antecedents: "if you ought to do X then you ought to do Y" ...
Again, misreading me. My objection to your objection wasMy first objection to you in this thread was that you were putting forth some things that aredescriptive (natural, physical) sciences, that give "how does" answers, as though they were prescriptive (moral, ethical) fields that gave "why should" answers.
'Medical science', 'human ecology' & 'moral pathology' describe AND explain AND THEN prescribe 'If X, If X loses Y, then do Z to restore X or mitigate Y'. Any of them can function as an analogue for reasoning about ethics. Only philosophical reflection, however, can address WHY ethics (at all) in the first instance; science cannot ask WHY (this or any other) science.I disagree. The sciences I've mentioned also explain optimal functioning of its subjects (agents) and therefore prescribe in situ strategies for avoiding or correcting suboptimization (e.g. ill-health/morbidity; unsustainable commons/negative sum conflicts; and maladaptive vices/pathologies, respectively). — 180 Proof
science is not in the WHY (this rather than that) business — 180 Proof
This is why moral philosophy, which is in the WHY business, can't be replaced by an "ethical science" – it can't even answer WHY it is "good, and better than" moral philosophy – because science is N O T self-reflexive, or reflective, in the way philosophy is inherently. The philosopher herself is always subsumed by doing philosophy, that is, by implicitly asking WHY do philosophy? with every philosophical inquiry & dialectic. — 180 Proof
What I'm advocating here is that philosophy focus entirely (in its ethical endeavors) on answering those kinds of questions, the general and fundamental kinds of questions about how to tell what is or isn't good, what it even means for something to be good, etc. Moral epistemology, moral ontology, moral semantics, etc. — Pfhorrest
I read your brief critique of Sam Harris' wellbeing frame and it seems like you are wanting to redirect this with additional analytic mechanisms - maybe I have that wrong. — Tom Storm
In order to change things, you need to start with how they actually are. — baker
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