Do things have value because they make us happy or do they make us happy because they have value? — TheMadFool
Everything we experience has value. We are sense-making creatures so what we experience matters to us in some way, whether it is boring or interesting, pleasant or unpleasant. I think the hedonic aspect of our valuations are a function of the relative assimilative coherence of what we experience in relation to our ongoing aims and goals. Hedonism isn’t some arbitrary mechanism shaped by evolution to tell us what we should like or not like, as if we would have no motivation without this ‘mechanism’. The ways in which we make sense of our world are inherently affective and hedonic — Joshs
happiness isn't some kind of ultimate goal we should all be striving for but is simply a reward evolution has put in place — TheMadFool
I think it’s a mistake to attribute agency to evolution, and also to try and orient philosophical questions with respect to purported evolutionary advantage. — Wayfarer
I'm not, in any way, trying to suggest that evolution is an agency unto itself — TheMadFool
Despite the fact that you are, actually. The OP is entirely based on evolutionary ethics. — Wayfarer
evolutionary ethics. — Wayfarer
Despite the fact that you are, actually. The OP is entirely based on evolutionary ethics. — Wayfarer
What nirvana is then a scathing criticism of evolution - it's in desperate need of a thorough overhaul. Are we the ones evolution has chosen to carry out this daunting task? Maybe/maybe not but in our own small way we've at least made the first move in the right direction - recognizing there's a problem in the first place. — TheMadFool
the very purpose of evolution is the generation and perpetuation of life — TheMadFool
I think that to pursue an answer to this question will necessarily lead to an unsatisfactory result, because both happiness and value need to come with a sense of being apriori or else they lose their lustre.The Hedonic Question: Do things have value because they make us happy or do they make us happy because they have value? — TheMadFool
Buddhism would be less challenged by the modern theory of evolution than some interpretations of Christianity — Wayfarer
Actually an interesting fact is that the reason Thomas Rhys-Davids used the word 'enlightenment' to translate the Buddhist term 'bodhi', is that it suggested a compatibility between Buddhism and Enlightenment values, which was very much in vogue in the late 19th c. — Wayfarer
The problem is that religions provide a value system - they're not a scientific theory at all. — Wayfarer
somehow humans sense something beyond even that. — Wayfarer
I think most scientists would object to the assertion that evolution has any purpose whatever — Wayfarer
I think that to pursue an answer to this question will necessarily lead to an unsatisfactory result, because both happiness and value need to come with a sense of being apriori or else they lose their lustre. — baker
, if I say we ought to kill because killing is part of nature, that would be an is/ought fallacy. — TheMadFool
The whole point of morality, its roots, lies in what I like to refer to as dissatisfaction with how things are. Think of it, if we were happy the way nature is, morality would have no purpose, it would be redundant. — TheMadFool
The animal world is a world of pure being, a world of immediacy and immanence. The animal soul is like “water in water,” seamlessly connected to all that surrounds it, so that there is no sense of self or other, of time, of space, of being or not being. This utopian (to human sensibility, which has such alienating notions) Shangri-La or Eden actually isn’t that because it is characterized at all points by what we’d call violence. Animals, that is, eat and are eaten. For them killing and being killed is the norm; and there isn’t any meaning to such a thing, or anything that we would call fear; there’s no concept of killing or being killed. There’s only being, immediacy, “isness.” Animals don’t have any need for religion; they already are that, already transcend life and death, being and nonbeing, self and other, in their very living, which is utterly pure.
Bataille sees human consciousness beginning with the making of the first tool, the first “thing” that isn’t a pure being, intrinsic in its value and inseparable from all of being. A tool is a separable, useful, intentionally made thing; it can be possessed, and it serves a purpose. It can be altered to suit that purpose. It is instrumental, defined by its use. The tool is the first instance of the “not-I,” and with its advent there is now the beginning of a world of objects, a “thing” world. Little by little out of this comes a way of thinking and acting within thingness (language), and then once this plane of thingness is established, more and more gets placed upon it—other objects , plants, animals, other people, one’s self, a world. Now there is self and other—and then, paradoxically, self becomes other to itself, alienated not only from the rest of the projected world of things, but from itself, which it must perceive as a thing, a possession. This constellation of an alienated self is a double-edged sword: seeing the self as a thing, the self can for the first time know itself and so find a closeness to itself; prior to this, there isn’t any self so there is nothing to be known or not known. But the creation of my me, though it gives me for the first time myself as a friend, also rips me out of the world and puts me out on a limb on my own.
Interestingly, and quite logically, this development of human consciousness coincides with a deepening of the human relationship to the animal world, which opens up to the human mind now as a depth, a mystery. Humans are that depth, because humans are animals, know this and feel it to be so, and yet also not so; humans long for union with the animal world of immediacy, yet know they are separate from it. Also they are terrified of it, for to reenter that world would be a loss of the self; it would literally be the end of me as I know me.
In the midst of this essential human loneliness and perplexity, which is almost unbearable, religion appears. It intuits and imagines the ancient world of oneness, of which there is still a powerful primordial memory, and calls it 'the sacred'. This is the invisible world, world of spirit, world of the gods, or of God. It is inexorably opposed to, defined as the opposite of, the world of things, the profane world of the body, of instrumentality, a world of separation, the fallen world. Religion’s purpose then is to bring us back to the lost world of intimacy, and all its rites, rituals, and activities are created to this end. We want this, and need it, as sure as we need food and shelter; and yet it is also terrifying. All religions have known and been based squarely on this sense of terrible necessity. 1 — Norman Fischer
No, that would be the naturalistic fallacy - that because something is natural, it's therefore good. A lot of what goes under 'evolutionary ethics' would fall under that. — Wayfarer
'How things are' is, however, a very vague and sweeping description. I think, from the viewpoint of many forms of classical philosophy and religion, there is intrinsic suffering in existence, because existence itself is inherently imperfect. 'COMPARED TO WHAT?' I hear you ask. And there's the big question. — Wayfarer
Whereas humans have, not only a sense of self, but also a sense of possessions, of 'me and mine', my family, tribe, and so on - realistically something which evolved over hundreds of thousands of years. — Wayfarer
It's got something to do with notions of "simple ideas" and "complex ideas" which, to my reckoning, are ideas that can't be analyzed into simpler ideas and those that can respectively. — TheMadFool
I wonder if it wouldn't be better for us to stop searching for explanations in re our "sinful state" and get to work trying to make things better. — TheMadFool
a brain capable of becoming self aware — TheMadFool
Right - the point being, ‘good’ is a simple idea - it can’t be explained in other terms, for instance, in terms of adaptive fitness. Being a ‘simple idea’ means not being reducible or explainable in other terms. You will note the constantly recurring theme that what society and culture considers to be good, is likely a result of natural selection. This calls that into question. — Wayfarer
Brains are never self-aware. Beings are self-aware. — Wayfarer
My question is why did Moore think good is a simple idea? Does he provide some reasons? What grounded his insight that good can't be expressed in terms of other concepts/ideas? — TheMadFool
Because it's simple. Whatever is simple can't be explained in other terms. — Wayfarer
In classical philosophy, the ability to know 'what is', was itself a virtue - the virtue of sagacity. — Wayfarer
Whereas Hume is at the onset of the Enlightenment, 'what truly is' is 'what can be measured' - only what can be quantified is to be considered, the remainder is private or subjective — Wayfarer
Your dog examples and 'being beaten' examples are irrelevant to the question — Wayfarer
Whereas Hume is at the onset of the Enlightenment, 'what truly is' is 'what can be measured' - only what can be quantified is to be considered, the remainder is private or subjective — Wayfarer
I think that to pursue an answer to this question will necessarily lead to an unsatisfactory result, because both happiness and value need to come with a sense of being apriori or else they lose their lustre.
— baker
Kindly expand and elaborate. — TheMadFool
To sum it all up, quantifying seems to be an innate aspect of our nature, probably because reality itself is, either in part or wholly, quantity, and thus Hume's view that 'what is' is 'what can be measured' was inevitable, appropriate, and, most importantly, truthful. — TheMadFool
It originates with the techniques used in Galileo's physics and Cartesian algebraic geometery. It's very effective at whatever can be objectivised and quantized. 'But', said Einstein, 'not everything can be counted, and not everything that can be counted, counts'. — Wayfarer
To sum it all up, quantifying seems to be an innate aspect of our nature, probably because reality itself is, either in part or wholly, quantity, and thus Hume's view that 'what is' is 'what can be measured' was inevitable, appropriate, and, most importantly, truthful. — TheMadFool
As far as it goes. But it doesn't extend to value, which is, after all, the name of the OP. — Wayfarer
Google definition of "value": the numerical amount denoted by an algebraic term; a magnitude, quantity, or number. "the mean value of x" — TheMadFool
Value: noun
1. the regard that something is held to deserve; the importance, worth, or usefulness of something.
"your support is of great value"
2.principles or standards of behaviour; one's judgement of what is important in life.
"they internalize their parents' rules and values"
Consider completing the following sentences:
"My happiness is based on ..."
"What I value is based on ..."
Can you complete the sentences in a way that doesn't feel like something is lacking or remiss? — baker
Google definition of "value": the numerical amount denoted by an algebraic term; a magnitude, quantity, or number. "the mean value of x"
— TheMadFool
:grimace:
Value: noun
1. the regard that something is held to deserve; the importance, worth, or usefulness of something.
"your support is of great value"
2.principles or standards of behaviour; one's judgement of what is important in life.
"they internalize their parents' rules and values"
Quantify that! — Wayfarer
You’re not even articulating the issue, let alone solving it - simply making stuff up. — Wayfarer
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