Perhaps morality needs a combination of logic and emotion in order for it to be balanced. Logic or rationality is needed to assess the best course of action, juggling possible effects. However, there may also be need for emotional aspects as a motivating factor to aid an approach which involves empathy or compassion too. — Jack Cummins
Morality seems more pain/suffering-oriented (negative utilitarianism) — TheMadFool
Laugh, and the world laughs with you;
Weep, and you weep alone; — Ella Wheeler Wilcox (Solitude)
Empathy, does it exist?
David Chalmer's hard problem of consciousness and, more generally, theory vs praxis (Mary's room argument). Why does a discussion on morality end up becoming one on consciousness? Is this some kind of a package deal? — TheMadFool
Yes, yes. :100:Living in the now is beyond both logic and morality. Logic and morality are distractions; leisure time activities. — James Riley
And we can spend our leisure time reflectively rehearsing (like practicing (habitualizing) martial arts) "logic and morality" in order to optimize "living in the now" which otherwise would be sub/less optimal. — 180 Proof
No, I haven't left for good and just finished doing house clearance yesterday...It was such a big job and I had to take about 100 teddy bears to charity shops, taking them on buses. So, I am exhausted and finding it hard to concentrate on philosophy but I hope to be able to do so in the next few days — Jack Cummins
Animals live in a state of super-consciousness which might also be considered a lack of self-awareness. — James Riley
There’s a force in the universe that makes things happen. And all you have to do is get in touch with it, stop thinking, let things happen, and be the ball. — Ty Webb (Caddyshack 1980)
There’s a force in the universe that makes things happen. And all you have to do is get in touch with it, stop thinking, let things happen, and be the ball. — Ty Webb (Caddyshack 1980)
I imagine that's the end-in-itself goal of philosophy: contemplation (i.e. reflective praxis, lucid dreaming, Csikszentmihalyi's Flow) in contrast to e.g. mysticism which via meditation seeks to being via stillness, silence and not thinking (i.e. 'pure awareness'). I fail miserably at the latter and reach the former only by chance it seems when I least expect to. Ain't no "polymath", my man; just a jack(ass)-of-all-trades (and masturbator of none). :smirk:I would imagine that a polymath might be a person who could be in the now whilst thinking. — James Riley
lucid dreaming — 180 Proof
keep on waiting and let the waiting itself become ecstatic. — 180 Proof
Those ephemerae are the most sublime of all. "Ecstasies" I call them. I stopped chasing them (via drugs, etc) decades ago when I'd finally realized that all I have to do is, like Beckett's hobos, wait lucidly (i.e. philosophically, aesthetically, erotically ...) and keep on waiting and let the waiting itself become ecstatic. Anyway, for me at least, waiting is still thirsty work. :smirk: — 180 Proof
I appreciate your words though you misunderstand me. I didn't say we "don't need logic", dimo, rather logic comes before/after living in the moment and not during, that is, logical judgment ought to be like muscle memory, habitualized, e.g. in the way practiced stances and movements are habitualized in martial arts before/after sparring or realtime conflicts. Same with morality. My understanding is that we are our habits (Aristotle) and not the mere "sum of our actions" (Sartre).Though I disagree that you don't need logic for living in the present. — dimosthenis9
dimo, rather logic comes before/after living in the moment and not during, that is, logical judgment ought to be like muscle memory, habitualized — 180 Proof
Same with morality. My understanding is that we are our habits (Aristotle) and not the mere "sum of our actions" (Sartre) — 180 Proof
Intrinsically actions are habits' way of reinforcing old habits or creating new habits. — 180 Proof
That may well be but in the process, you are engaging others in mutual caring, of which is vital in forming a community. No identification, no compassion, no community. The individual is stronger in a community than in the wilderness. Think community and collective organism. — boagie
Very close in context of nature. — boagie
logic and emotion — Jack Cummins
effects — Jack Cummins
emotional aspects as a motivating factor — Jack Cummins
empathy or compassion — Jack Cummins
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