There is an ethical problem with freedom as construed in liberal thought. If freedom is founded on sovereignty, then my freedom can only be won at the cost of your sovereignty. This is an approach that sets each individual against all the others. We see the result in the dissolution of the common wealth in those nations that claim a liberal heritage.
Better, then to see freedom as a building of the capacity to achieve, to become more than one already is, both individually and as part of that common wealth. We achieve freedom so considered by building the capacity of those around us to be free.
Arendt doesn’t describe freedom as a building of the capacity to achieve, but as a capacity to begin. — NOS4A2
Every act, seen from the perspective not of the agent but of the process in whose framework it occurs and whose automatism it interrupts, is a "miracle" that is, something which could not be expected. If it is true that action and beginning are essentially the same, it follows that a capacity for performing miracles must like- wise be within the range of human faculties.
You say moral acts are algorithmic at the start of your post only to say at the end that there is no such algorithm. — Banno
I don't think I ever said that moral acts are algorithmic processes, but now that you say that, I believe they are. — god must be atheist
Thus, it is not some sort of moral ethical decision tree or moral ethical algorithm that I invoked that would be developed to guide man in every different ethical dilemma or challenge — god must be atheist
The basic reason for rejecting a place for sociobiology in ethics remains: even if our genes demand that we act in a certain way, it remains open for us to do otherwise. — Banno
So... we agree that moral issues are to be solved heuristically, not algorithmically?
Then I stand by the thrust of the post, that virtue ethics better suits ethical problem solving. — Banno
DO you need an explanation of the difference between an algorithm and an heuristic? Or of virtue ethics? — Banno
I was referring to the article you cited for Tobias, here; ↪god must be atheist — Banno
you referenced something without telling me what you were talking about; — god must be atheist
I linked directly to the article to which I was referring. Look: https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/652160 — Banno
god must be atheist's article might give one pause when considering — Banno
I had published one article here as a thread. Since you referred to the article as mine, I thought you meant the one I had created. There was no reason for me to check my own article. — god must be atheist
No. I meant the article I linked to in the sentence in which I mentioned it. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.