But I think that's Moore's contention: good can't be defined by or analyzed in terms of any other properties, good is a simple, sort of an atomic unit or fundamental building block of moral language and reasoning. — busycuttingcrap
Whether Moore is right about this is, of course, a different story. — busycuttingcrap
Well, for starters, whatever it is, "good" is categorically preferred in ethics to "bad".So, what's the consensus of the good in ethics? — Shawn
I "agree" much more with his younger contemporary Karl Popper's (sketchy) negative utilitarianism but even more so with the moral philosophers I referenced above in my first post on this thread. A succinct expression of my ethical outlook on "good" is expressed in this wiki articleMoore proposed a form of consequentialism in terms of the good. Do you agree with him?
What do you think about whether it's right or wrong and why? — Shawn
But I think that's Moore's contention: good can't be defined by or analyzed in terms of any other properties, good is a simple, sort of an atomic unit or fundamental building block of moral language and reasoning. Whether Moore is right about this is, of course, a different story. — busycuttingcrap
"Good" is an adjective denoting that a thing that is good is a thing that is advantageous and pleasant and helpful and accommodating OR at least three at the same time and in the same respect of the aforementioned qualifiers.
I invite examples that debunk this definition.
Please don't juxtapose something that is good now but will be not good later, or something that is good for Mr. X but not good for Ms. Y. Those violate the rule in the definition, "at the same time and in the same respect." — god must be atheist
"Good" is an adjective denoting that a thing that is good is a thing that is advantageous and pleasant and helpful and accommodating OR at least three at the same time and in the same respect of the aforementioned qualifiers.
I invite examples that debunk this definition. — god must be atheist
That is, one can consistently conceive of someone willing what is not good. — Banno
So we have two theories here, do we? Would you like to unify these and say that the good is pleasure and anything that helps us get there is instrumentally good? — bert1
Pleasure, as Hume observed, seems to be an end in itself. — bert1
...a thing that is advantageous and pleasant and helpful and accommodating OR at least three at the same time and in the same respect of the aforementioned qualifiers. — god must be atheist
So if the good is defined by happiness, we can ask "But is happiness really good?" -- does that question make sense to you?
If we double down and say, yes, happiness really is the good, then the question falls flat.
But if you agree that the question makes sense, rather than it being a tautology, then there must be a distinction between happiness and goodness such that we can ask the question and make sense of it — Moliere
What a mess. So far every contribution to this thread has used circular terms to ‘define’ the good. — Joshs
Even fairness implies a moral notion of equivalence or balance. Fair refers to a ‘good’ sort of balance. Justice may not be pleasant but it is ‘good’. Hmm, so there is no ‘pleasantness’ associated with aim of justice? What’s needed is a definition of good , pleasant , happy , absence of suffering, that breaks out of the circle and shatters Moore’s contention. We have a number of options to choose from here. We could look at biologically-based thinking that grounds affective valuation in the organizational principles of living systems.
Even if there are natural, ethical facts -- people choose against proper functioning and call it good. — Moliere
You lost me. How exactly are you understanding ‘proper functioning’ and what does it have to do with the normatively oriented organizational dynamics of living systems? — Joshs
I have a feeling you are conflating ‘proper’ with a specific qualitative content of meaning, which places you squarely back within the circular defining of ‘good’( my qualitative meaning of good differs from your qualitative meaning of it). — Joshs
I'm a meta-ethical nihilist of the error-theory variety. I don't think there's really a way to define good in some natural or factual way. I think the argument from difference is what persuades me of this, in the end -- people simply do disagree over what is most important and make choices between goods, and in those cases people have good reasons in spite of contradicting one another in a matter of choice, so to say one is good or the other is good is to make a similar choice. I think we make choices between competing goods, and "goods" is itself something which we define for ourselves — Moliere
Assuming bert1 is a Kantian, does it follow that which is willed, is the good? — Shawn
From a rapist's point of view, raping someone is fab, if a bit sweaty. — bert1
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