Habit. Substitute maintain homeostasis for "do good" and healthy for "ethical" and the question need not be asked.The question of this thread is that if we don't live with a rationale or volition to do good, then how does ethical behavior arise in our lives? — Shawn
Of course not. Consider fairness and caretaking in nonhuman animals or human toddlers ...Is it necessary to have a prescriptive ethical doctrine in place to behave or have ethical behavior emerge from ones thinking process?
Substitute maintain homeostasis for "do good" and healthy for "ethical" and the question need not be asked. — 180 Proof
You must believe we are not an eusocial species and that antisocial sociopathy is the norm rather than a pathology afflicting less than a twentieth of the general popularion.So, you're assuming that we are by nature ethical. I find this argument in lacking in the real world. — Shawn
... and therefore we're on an extinction path as we destroy more and more of the base of the food chain. Maybe we'll develop AGI before we're done. Maybe viable space habitats (for genemodded exo-humans). But probably not.... let's face the facts - we're at the top of the food chain — Agent Smith
the history of ethics is about recording the pangs and stresses of human interaction and prescribing a means to soothe them. For reasons of health a man must account for his passions as he navigates his inevitable and awkward proximity to others. — NOS4A2
homo sapiens has done well even without conceptual frameworks allowing a person to make decisions based off of the ethical framework. Yet, modern day man finds it easier to function with a set determinate way of behaving according to law and order. Just my two cents. — Shawn
180 Proof kinda explained it. But, yes, we're all taxed on what's the most efficient outcome and seem to believe that rational self interest is possibly representative of our true selves. — Shawn
The ‘most efficient outcome’ from what perspective? — Possibility
In general I do find the generall view of ‘ethics’ to be garbage. I am more about meta ethics as there is undeniably (as far as I can see?) a pretty strong case to state that ‘ethics’ is more of a political tool than a real investigation into the human conidition. — I like sushi
The ‘most efficient outcome’ from what perspective?
— Possibility
I think efficiency in decision making is called utility or intelligence.
It's hard to classify someone as intelligent nowadays without metrics swarming around you with advertisements and pixel tracking on a phone. Does that make sense? — Shawn
Statements of law and order alone cannot accurately determine ethical ways of behaving without reducing our perception of human capacity, and yet we continue to reformulate and enforce them as if they could. — Possibility
And in doing so, we judge others’ utility by their disobedience rather than their diverse situational capacities for reasoning. Because it’s easier. — Possibility
Just a thought: what if we strived for ‘efficiency’ in terms of ‘more accurate’ instead of ‘easier’? — Possibility
When it comes to ethical debate the real work is internal and excruciating… we are never willing to truly expose ourselves to ourselves let alone anyone else. Ergo, ‘ethical’ claims are far beyond the reality of the individual. — I like sushi
Meta ethics approaches these problems where ethics does nothing as it is never under investigation of itself as a concept. — I like sushi
I would answer that question put to Bertrand Russell more or less the same way he does but with slight variations: (1) intellectually trust nothing but publicly accessible evidence and sound reasoning; (2) morally practice Hillel the Elder's principle: "What you find hateful (or harmful), do not do to anyone." — 180 Proof
would answer that question put to Bertrand Russell more or less the same way he does but with slight variations: (1) intellectually trust nothing but publicly accessible evidence and sound reasoning; (2) morally practice Hillel the Elder's principle: "What you find hateful (or harmful), do not do to anyone." — 180 Proof
It rare for me to do this but I hope in faith that Hanover would like to address this. What I would say from my side would be something like, we work with an imperfect model and we do the best we can with it. It sounds pragmatic, to say so, but we aren't all behind a veil of ignorance to asses these issues, only judges are. — Shawn
Well, are you talking about society or the application of law itself? Please clarify. — Shawn
It seems that pragmatically we address the issue in terms of the benefit conferred to the total, that is society. We can only be as intelligent as the conduct that is expected of us. — Shawn
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