But in the ethical problem, there is this unknown X, call it, in the spirit of Kant. As is, and this is a big point, I believe, speaking of Kant: where did Kant ever get that idea of noumena? He grudgingly had to postulate it, but why? — Astrophel
Aesthetics and ethics Wittgenstein puts in the same bin. — Astrophel
This doesn't just tell us what the subject of ethics is, but states a thesis about what ethics is (emphasis in the original). — SophistiCat
Odd here: You speak of innate moral intuitions, then deride ethical Realism with a capital R — Astrophel
What follows is so far from obvious as to be incomprehensible.In fact, the idea is so obvious than I cannot even imagine seriously dismissing — Astrophel
You are thrown into a world of givens. Choice intervenes, but choices are only among what is given to choose; and so many are now beyond choice: I can't choose to hate chocolate or adore traffic noise. — Astrophel
But the truth is that these unselfish acts invariably protect not the self, true, but the tribe, the family, the nation, the species. In other words, the derivatives of one's own DNA. And the beneficiary is invariably is also a protector of the person who sacrifices for the community.
This is sort of a scenario that plays out this way: "I pay a sacrifice to the community to help the community survive, so then they can protect me and help me survive too." — god must be atheist
I think I'm trying to say that we experience the ethical as absolute, as something beyond our opinions, not up to us, something in a way external.**
There is a word for this experience: 'conscience'. Maybe it's more phenomenologically sound to start with conscience than with The Good, which looks a little theorized already.
** There’s a nice bit of writing in “The Train Job” (Firefly, episode 2) that captures a difference I’m interested in:
“Sheriff: When a man finds out more about a situation like ours, well, then he faces a choice.
Mal: I don’t believe he does.”
What the Sheriff says is nice, spotlights individual responsibility — things don’t just happen, people do them. Acknowledge your part. That’s a solid starting point, certainly. Mal’s not disagreeing with that, but shifting the locus of responsibility away from the choice. If you know what is right, the real question is whether you will do it. It’s not a matter of choice but of character.
You see that sort of thing all through Confucius, as well: there are no moral dilemmas, there’s only degrees of courage and fortitude in doing what everyone acknowledges is right. — Srap Tasmaner
Where does greatness lie? My thought: it lies in sacrifice, unsung, often as it goes. — Astrophel
didn't Hitler think he was doing the right thing? — Astrophel
I think the jury is still out on whether phenomenology is doomed to failure here. — Srap Tasmaner
Human flourishing simply begs the question: why should humans flourish? Something more basic is required. Something that cannot be analyzed because it issues from t he world itself. — Astrophel
mysterious — Joshs
transcendent or magical — Tom Storm
Isn't there something a little mysterious about moral courage? — Srap Tasmaner
Isn't there something a little mysterious about moral courage? What's so awful about acknowledging that? — Srap Tasmaner
Anda theory that explains anything is of no use. — Banno
but that's your main argument against it... appeal to authority. — god must be atheist
I just don’t know what moral courage is — Joshs
the self is some sort of fortress that has to be breached by force of will in order to want to do things for others — Joshs
Two arguments:
1. It has the structure of an all-and-some doctrine; for any behaviour there is some evolutionary advantage. Hence it provides and explanation for any behaviour, and it's negation.It is of no use.— Banno
2. It fails to answer the question of what we ought to do, so does not address ethics. — Banno
It made perfect sense in the context. But I still had to make it sure. — god must be atheist
yet the final result (if such a thing exists... "final") or the intended final result is the most precisely and accurately formed best way to achieve with a seemingly unreasonable act. — god must be atheist
But it’s quite specifically not a question of whether you want to do the right thing, but whether you can muster the courage to do so. Are we wrong to admire that sort of thing? — Srap Tasmaner
So affectivity cannot be presuppositionless. Rather, it produces the frame of presuppositions( a way of comporting ourselves) that interpretation develops further in our everyday dealings with others. But the frame is always being reframed. — Joshs
Well its strange, there are people who find the phenomenological perspective intuitively appealing, and others just don't understand why. Perhaps there is a phenomenological explanation for that, but it's beyond me. lol. — ernest
For me this is as real as it gets. But capital R types usually want more, as you did in the previous post. You want to justify these intuitions, not realizing that any possible justification must take place within the framework of these intuitions.
In fact, the idea is so obvious than I cannot even imagine seriously dismissing
— Astrophel
What follows is so far from obvious as to be incomprehensible. — hypericin
One's misery may bound existentially to ready to hand environments, and the temporal structure of this carries misery into a future creation of a "displacing" future, but misery exceeds utility, it is, again with Levinas, something in the "ideatum" of misery that exceeds the ready to hand. It is a presence at hand that "speaks" the injunction not to do X if X makes misery. — Astrophel
... since there are no limits to the ways that we can re-organize how we make sense of things. Our feelings will tell us which channels of construing make the world a more creatively anticipatable place and which channels lead to the incoherence of negative moods. — Joshs
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