We don't have a choice valuing well being. — Nickolasgaspar
That's not a criticism of his account alone; I think it a more general issue. No moral system can be complete. Morality, and human choice and action more generally, are not the sort of thing that can be systematised. This should not be surprising, since it is clear that as soon as a system is posited, our creativity will find issue with it. — Banno
Maybe there are better arguments for objective morality that avoid the above pitfall, but I am fairly new to the topic so have only just started reading about it. — PhilosophyRunner
Again as I told you many times,those biological metrics only verify to us that well being is an important principle for morality — Nickolasgaspar
We don't need to scan people in order to do a moral evaluation...lol
The only thing we need to do is study those metrics, understand why well being is linked to those metrics(why i.e. forcing the productions of glucocorticoids by putting people under stressful situations(immoral acts) is linked to documented pathodology) and use well being as principle for our moral judgments. — Nickolasgaspar
Well being is a state which encompasses many different elements like positive emotions, good physical health and social connections. We can list all the emotions and characteristics that promote such a state and trace them back to our basic drives and homeostatic configurations and see that we are biologically preconditioned to seek a state of well being.How do they do that? If those metrics are not themselves 'well-being', then you've got to somehow relate them to the concept of well-being you're using. You've still not actually defined well-being. — Isaac
Partly that's because what we call wellbeing is what we do indeed choose. There is at leat the threat of circularity in the notion of choosing wellbeing. — Banno
-Well being is a state while "choosing" what is good for our wellbeing is a different thing all together. This is where our role as agents is needed in order to evaluate what is good for our well being.Partly it's because "wellbeing" is close to a synonym for "the good". That is there is also the threat of a slide between "we choose what is good" and "we choose wellbeing". — Banno
Fairness is a value we see in moral acts. Fairness is a promoter of well being of a society.But it is not the whole of ethics. So for instance fairness enters into ethics as well. — Banno
-How is incomplete?Fairness is not a competing principle. Its an evaluation of specific moral acts that can promote our well being!So it's not that Sam Harris is wrong. It's just that his account is incomplete. — Banno
I can not agree or disagree with an absolute statement without putting in to the test all known systemsNo moral system can be complete. Morality, and human choice and action more generally, are not the sort of thing that can be systematised. This should not be surprising, since it is clear that as soon as a system is posited, our creativity will find issue with it. — Banno
-We need to remove absolute concepts from our reality. Absolute concepts are only there as beacons to help up strive toward a goal, but it would be irrational to think that we can finally arrive to an abstract or to abandon all efforts because we can't.Maths provides a close analogue. We know that any mathematical system complex enough to encompass addition will be incomplete; there will always be mathematical truths that are not provable from within that system. Why would we suppose that ethics would be any less perplexing? — Banno
-And again you return back to this deepity that has nothing to do with how our biology forces specific "oughts". Its not our choice to decide which acts promote our well being, that is already decided by our biology. Our job is to decide whether we care about well being and whether we bother to act accordingly.Any system that limits itself to how things are can never encompass how things ought to be. — Banno
The correct question is do we ought to seek morality? The question is simple. Since our biology forces us to value our well being ...THEN WE OUGHT TO SEEK MORALITY because our moral judgments essentially are the evaluation of acts that are either against or in favor our well being.If one were to posit that part of what we ought do is to seek wellbeing, I'd have no objection. But it is not the whole. — Banno
Well being is a state which encompasses many different elements like positive emotions, good physical health and social connections. We can list all the emotions and characteristics that promote such a state — Nickolasgaspar
we are biologically preconditioned to seek a state of well being. — Nickolasgaspar
none of you have admitted yet that you value well being as the main reason why we are positive towards moral acts and negative towards immoral acts. — Nickolasgaspar
Unfortunately in that list you are repeating things that I have pointed out as unnecessary. — Nickolasgaspar
we need those metrics to establish biological predisposition towards a state of well being. From the moment we do that we can accept well being as an objective criterion for moral judgments. — Nickolasgaspar
IF we agree with that last thing, then we can proceed on the temporal framework of our judgments since every act can affect differently our wellbeing as individuals and as a society. — Nickolasgaspar
Again Banno's question (is/ought) is irrelevant since we have already pointed out that biological predisposition to a specific state is not a matter of choice. We are the descendants of individuals with a genetic predisposition to seek happiness, physical health and avoid suffering. — Nickolasgaspar
Tautologous. If our well-being is constituted of those aspects which we are driven to maintain then it says nothing that we a biologically preconditions to seek them. You just defined them as those things we're biologically preconditioned to seek — Isaac
Do you understand why this isn't a tautology but it describes what our biology "values" (drives serving our well being) and how that informs what we value.(moral judgements). — Nickolasgaspar
Do you choose to enjoy a naked flame scorching your skin? Do you value the state you are after being burned? — Nickolasgaspar
Do you enjoy the emotions produced by an open wound, being starved, being humiliated etc etc etc etc etc etc. — Nickolasgaspar
all those emotions help you avoid states that do not contribute to your well being (feeling comfortable, happy, free of pain, being valued by your peers, physically healthy etc). — Nickolasgaspar
You've yet to demonstrate that. Comfortable and free of pain I'll grant as being self-evident since such emotions are directly about comfort or pain, but where's your evidence that following such emotions leads to happiness, physical health and being valued by ones peers? — Isaac
its not my job to explain to you why the pain of an open wound informs you for a crisis your physical health is experiencing and how it is connected to you being "well" and being able to ...continue to be. — Nickolasgaspar
ITs a fact that our biology "cares" about its well being and forces us to take actions by interpreting urgent issues with intense emotions. — Nickolasgaspar
It isn't facts that you should be enforcing -- although it is part of everyone's argument: Fact: you killed my dog. But now comes the measure of the immorality of that act. And so on. We can now get to the issue of morality. Discuss it.Is there a "fact of the matter" that we can strive to discover about this? Or is each correct for themselves? — PhilosophyRunner
What you're supposed to thinking of is to optimize the goodness (note I didn't say maximize). Optimize the goodness or the favorable outcome of moral acts. — L'éléphant
That's your job to figure out.And what is goodness?
What is a favourable outcome? — PhilosophyRunner
That's your job to figure out. — L'éléphant
Yes this is true. And this biology that "cares" about its well being and forces us to take actions results in friendships and murder, among many other things.
How do you go from that to prescriptive morality? By which I mean telling a murderer what they did was wrong, and people in that situation should not commit murder in the future.
If you are sticking to science, then seeing a murder should result in you update your theory of human behaviour to include murder as part of biology that "cares about well being.". Is that what you do, or do you say "murder is wrong"? — PhilosophyRunner
If you have painkillers in your drawer...then you know that I am not mistaken....I'm not asking you to explain it, I'm informing you that you're mistaken. — Isaac
Imperfectly analogous, (for an ethical naturalist (à la Foot, Parfit, Nussbaum, Spinoza, Epicurus, et al) like myself) ethics is like linguistics and thereby moralities are like languages and correspondingly 'moral beliefs' (local customs) and like 'dialects' (idioms, clichés). We are an eusocial and metacognitive natural (ecology-situated) species and ethics, it seems to me, concerns individuals-in-groups flourishing by adaptive (coordinating) conduct and (cooperative) relationships despite our natural constraints (i.e. species defects). So not "absolute" – rules without exceptions, or unconditional norms – but objective, or more-than-intersubjective. — 180 Proof
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