As you care for, broadly speaking, the health of others, you should do for yourself too. Is there anything wrong with that? — TheMadFool
You just did my argument for me. You based your ethical statement on the health of others. Hence, ethics enters into our thinking only when we encounter others. — Banno
On your argument, whatever he chooses to do will be ethical.
It does nothing. — Banno
wellbeing is just another name for ethics. — TheMadFool
OK, let's suppose that it is (it isn't).
Then what is welfare? Is it living long? Is it living happily - not the same thing. Is it living with the maximum pleasure? is it eating as much cheese as possible?
What ever is chosen, will be for the individuals welfare, because there is no other criteria for that welfare. — Banno
Not sure what to make of that post.
Are you now agreeing with me? — Banno
Do you see others mentioned in these moral rules? — TheMadFool
One could even say that as a lone individual, say living as an anchorite, I can live without rules/principles. — TheMadFool
Do you see the relation to the Private Language argument? — Banno
Do you see the relation to the Private Language argument?
Following a rule is essentially a social activity. Following a rule while alone is a back-construction from following a rule in a community.
That's why each of your examples starts with a social situation. — Banno
You are 'others' too — I like sushi
I have been thinking lately that what we want for ourselves is often projected onto others and that this is due the above — I like sushi
Would you agree that whatever is real exists, and that whatever is not real does not exist, and that, similarly, anything that exists is real, and anything that does not exist is not real? — Leghorn
But senses are still subjective and consciousness is solipsistic. This is where philosophy comes in and turns into spirituality. — Miller
The things you choose to do that do not involve others are simply a question of your preference. Do as you choose. The things you choose to do that do involve others are of a different kind. It is these considerations that are the topic of ethics. — Banno
I would disagree solely on the point that assumes that anything that exists is "real", per say. For example, knowing that dragons don't exist, I create an image of a dragon in my mind. That image exists; so would the dragon exist? — john27
Do you say then that the image of something is the same thing as what it is an image of? In your example, is the image of the dragon the same thing as the dragon itself? — Leghorn
anything that exists is real, — Leghorn
So for example, though it is scarcely conceivable that anyone could ever journey to the center of the earth, or even send a probe there, we know that its center exists, and is detectable, even though we cannot detect it. — Leghorn
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