Not just "metaphysical" but "Metaphysical". — darthbarracuda
Care to elucidate or do you prefer to keep dishing out these empty criticisms? — darthbarracuda
that seems a fair implication. — apokrisis
For the 1001st time you will be pleased to hear that I generalise the notion of mind to the metaphysics of sign. So - pansemiotically - the Cosmos has telos or values, even if of the most attenuated kind from our point of view. — apokrisis
What smells very fishy is the claim to ground value in the "being of human" and then to start equivocating when you are asked do you mean "human experience". — apokrisis
Values - truth, love, beauty, whatever, are the ground of (human) being, and the ground of reason, not the fruit. — unenlightened
Pragmatism is the process view, and so it grounds being in acts of evaluation. — apokrisis
Glad we agree. — unenlightened
Hah. Already I am returning to the point of how unmoored from scientific measurement most moral thinking is in fact. We still do want to apply all or nothing judgements on issues like sentience even when there is a gradient that more careful world modelling would reveal. — apokrisis
I ground being in value. — unenlightened
it grounds being in acts of evaluation — apokrisis
So you're a dick. Got it. — darthbarracuda
So I offer the natural philosophy alternative where the Cosmos is granted all four Aristotelian causes. Existence is organic, not mechanical. The Universe in a sense has a mind and a purpose in that it is organised by "reasonable" principles and has generalised habits or tendencies. — apokrisis
And the alternative isn't just 'hand-waving', either. It is the recognition of that sense of 'final purpose', or the reason that things occur, in some larger sense than the simply naturalistic, because all natural creatures do is consume, procreate, and die, in the end. — Wayfarer
Why do you assume morality must be like science? — darthbarracuda
What does your ethics fundamentally look like in the every-day, and how does this differ from more popular ethical theories? — darthbarracuda
Ethics, as far as I am concerned, is always going to be un-moored from the rest of the world, as it's inherently tied to the individual and the individual's freedom of choice, which includes the phenomenology of transcendence beyond the immanent. — darthbarracuda
What you are presenting here is, as far as I know, something not particularly similar to any of the mainstream ethical views or any ones in the history of ethics and so you'll have to pardon me when I say I am highly skeptical of your ambitious claims. If you're trying to start a Nietzschean re-evaluation of value, which it seems like you are, you will need to provide more than just a blueprint hypothesis. — darthbarracuda
I think it's very difficult to produce epistemologically sound moral principles without determining the proper ontological status of things like final cause, intention, and will. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the only difference is that my triadic approach explains its dichotomous underpinnings as being natural, and not unnatural. It is meant to be a case of competition AND cooperation, constraint AND freedom. It is not a case of having to reduce nature to one or the other as the good, or the foundational, or whatever the heck else a reductionist feels to be the imperative when "caught on the horns of a dilemma". — apokrisis
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