Since ethics concerns itself at least in part with daily decisions and behavior, should a criteria of an ethical system be that it is simple and easy-to-understand? Should we expect an ethical system to provide not just a theoretical but also a pragmatic guide to life? — darthbarracuda
Antisocial, free-riders are outnumbered over 8-to-1 by eusocial, cooperators; otherwise, h sapiens would not have achieved any viable social arrangements larger than hunter-gather familial clans. Easily understood and lived by most – just not all – of us for at least a hundred millennia. — 180 Proof
Yet the antisocials and the freeriders can do extremely well in life. How do you explain that?Antisocial, free-riders are outnumbered over 8-to-1 by eusocial, cooperators; otherwise, h sapiens would not have achieved any viable social arrangements larger than hunter-gather familial clans. — 180 Proof
Since ethics concerns itself at least in part with daily decisions and behavior, should a criteria of an ethical system be that it is simple and easy-to-understand? — darthbarracuda
The Real World Is Messy
Should we expect an ethical system to provide not just a theoretical but also a pragmatic guide to life? — darthbarracuda
The Real World Is Messy
Since ethics concerns itself at least in part with daily decisions and behavior, should a criteria of an ethical system be that it is simple and easy-to-understand? — darthbarracuda
Should we expect an ethical system to provide not just a theoretical but also a pragmatic guide to life? — darthbarracuda
”That which is hateful to you, do not do to anyone."
~Hillel the Elder — 180 Proof
Point out the "hole" in the golden rule below, I can't find one.But as pragmatic as these principles can be, there are holes in them. — darthbarracuda
I like your point about the illusion of complexity. Very interesting. — darthbarracuda
We can only apply Hillel's / Confucius' golden rule as much as we're practically able or as prudence allows; no viable ethics is a suicide-pact. — 180 Proof
I'm an aretaic-negative consequentialist myself which, I suppose, has some affinities; I understand that 'the highest good is the prevention or reduction of both harm and injustice' (but not the elimination, or suspension, of ethical praxis itself (pace Kierkegaard)). I'm also antinatalist by conscience, not normatively by policy.There is an Argentine philosopher I have studied on-and-off, Julio Cabrera. He is developing a "negative ethics" that keeps in mind the structural problems of life, and advocates antinatalism. — darthbarracuda
Yeah, just like epistemology which describes only approximate truths and fallibilistic knowledge. Such is the relation of maps to the territory. By "radical" in this context, all Cabrera can mean is "formal" (or ideal), that is, like Kant's 'categorical imperative', inapplicable to actual, messy, living situations. His complaint is, to my mind, silly. Academic skeptics in the Hellenistic era had claimed knowledge was impossible because "knowledge is never conpletely certain" – same nonsense as Cabrera's "ethical behavior ... is normally not radical enough". So what? Ethics is sufficiently adaptive, or flexible, in many of its pragmatic expressions (i.e. moral norms) such as Hillel's / Confucius' golden rule, etc.He believes that ethics is normally not radical enough. Cabrera would argue that people, simply by being alive, are disqualified from nearly all real ethical behavior. The situations in which we find ourselves in, and the constitution of our bodies are such that we can only ever approximate ethical behavior.
No doubt, for some it was better. Normatively viable? Of course not. Thus my recommendation of Nussbaum's (work on stoic) 'moral luck'. How does it make sense, ceteris paribus, for failure itself – even vice – to precipitate suicide (i.e. a permanent solution to temporary problem)? Seems nearly pathological to me, like religious martyrdom, which no doubt is one of the reasons why the Catholic Church looked favorably upon the Stoics (adapting selectively e.g. "Serenity Prayer") and simultaneously condemned Epicureans as heretics (e.g. "tetrapharmakos") as almost from its beginning.Then there are some of the Stoics, who thought it better to commit suicide than to lose ones virtue.
More than that I believe Human life [natality + eusociality + fatality] is the Ur-ethical concern insofar as sentient living presupposes valuing; this ancient insight into our existential condition (re: ethos, or habitat & ethikos, or of habits – the latter for adequately sustaining the former) very much still holds true.Do you believe ethics and life are congruent?
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