Perhaps the intersection of concrete and abstract. You are attuning yourself to hear the concrete. Which is impossible because neither concrete nor abstract exist purely in themselves but must be somehow a mixture.
We both see the same tree - or so we're persuaded. But never ever do we perceive the same tree. Only in the abstract and by agreement can we come to that conclusion. Even pain, it would seem, requires an I to say, "I hurt."
But there seems no reasonable argument against the proposition that it's the same tree we're both admiring, on which we agree. And so it seems there are equally well-founded ethical imperatives. But they would seem to require at least that same level agreement. Thus never anything quite pure in itself, and subject to those who will not or cannot agree. The argument can go on from here. — tim wood
It's not possible to justify moral realism while being a consequent moral realist. — baker
The issue, then, goes to what it is that runs the argument, "it shouldn't be like that." Why not? The answer then goes to an experience that is perceived in some way to be uncomfortable, distasteful, horrible, and the rest. Here, we have arrived: no need to argue about whether this can be universalized. It already is, for we should not ask if the matter is relativized to one, single agency of suffering, just wht the matter IS upon analysis. We are not here concerned with how one should behave as a matter of rule and principle, for such things are entangled with morally arbitrary conditions, facts.All I have to say about metaethics, something that's close to my heart, is the feeling, ,something's wrong! - nature, life, people are like this but they should be like that! You get the idea. — TheMadFool
My position is that in ethics, there is an injunction to do or not to do that precedes language: that spear in my kidney tells me, "this hurts. Don't bring this into the world." — Constance
All I have to say about metaethics, something that's close to my heart, is the feeling, ,something's wrong! - nature, life, people are like this but they should be like that! You get the idea.
— TheMadFool
The issue, then, goes to what it is that runs the argument, "it shouldn't be like that." Why not? The answer then goes to an experience that is perceived in some way to be uncomfortable, distasteful, horrible, and the rest. Here, we have arrived: no need to argue about whether this can be universalized. It already is, for we should not ask if the matter is relativized to one, single agency of suffering, just wht the matter IS upon analysis. We are not here concerned with how one should behave as a matter of rule and principle, for such things are entangled with morally arbitrary conditions, facts.
We are only concerned with a phenomenological analysis of the pain there, at hand, occurrent. What IS that? is the question. It is not constructed, like a concept that fits ONTO the world; it IS the world doing, if you will, this to me: this thirst, hunger, this misery, joy, thrill, adn so on. — Constance
I don't mind agreeing that folks don't want to be stabbed in the kidney with a spear. How does that then arise to anything ethical? — tim wood
Pain & suffering, their antipodes, joy & happiness, are the core elements of some moral theories. They constitute the grounds, I now realize, for the feeling/thought that something's wrong! (with the world) - either the mere fact that there's suffering or the disproportionate amount of suffering prompts us to feel/think that way. It ought to be different - this single sentence encapsulates the moral universe! — TheMadFool
I don't really disagree. Rather I think yours is incomplete. Lacking is an account of judgment. The nervous system may itself recoil, but it recoils from the experience itself. And even if judgment judges an experience, that alone doesn't qualify future action.Good at this level of analysis is Good simpliciter. A bad is bad simpliciter. — Constance
I don't really disagree. Rather I think yours is incomplete. Lacking is an account of judgment. The nervous system may itself recoil, but it recoils from the experience itself. And even if judgment judges an experience, that alone doesn't qualify future action.
It's as if you had discovered reaction. But ethics is about choices of action. How do you bridge the two? — tim wood
I agree with the implications. There would technically never be a case of doing the right thing when no one is watching and instant karma might have some basis.I think I am right on this qualified ethical realism thesis. The consequences are staggering, for if this is true, then there IS something absolute about ethics, and this means ethics carries the gravitas of a God. — Constance
It's not possible to justify moral realism while being a consequent moral realist.
— baker
Enigmatic thing to say. — Constance
No. Moral realism, for it to be consequent moral realism, needs to be held a priori, in an axiomatic manner. The moment one ventures into finding justifications, one has left the zone of certainty. — baker
I agree with the implications. There would technically never be a case of doing the right thing when no one is watching and instant karma might have some basis. — Cheshire
I completely support that notion. Without any rational basis we are dealing with myths or poetry. It is derived from the modern concept of integrated information theory. What Russell would have called panpsychism. But, I agree it is speculation that nears irrationalism.Instant karma? Someone watching? These are metaphysical I cannot support because I don't understand where they get their basis for belief. — Constance
Another poster came to a similar conclusion. We have a moral system that attempts to correctly identify morality accurately, but is subject to influence. If it's a consensus of sorts then a new thread separating what is impermissible from what is imaginary may be in order.Alas, given the embeddedness of ethics in ethically arbitrary conditions, our acts will never be perfectly right, whatever that means. But we are bound, as Mill put it, to do no harm and to pursue the good of others, notwithstanding the difficulty in conceiving what this is. — Constance
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