As Thrasymachus pointed out, what is just is what the powerful say. To even have an opinion on the matter, one must first be powerful. — Moliere
I am sorry, 180 Proof, that you expect the impossible.I'm sympatico with
I don't see that your definition [of good] is of much help in working out what we ought do, which is, after all, the point of ethics.
— Banno — 180 Proof
Suppose someone comes up with an example that they claim debunks your definition. How can we tell whether their claim is true? — Herg
↪180 Proof I was asking for your views on Moore's argument ...
— Agent Smith
I think it's irrelevant to ethics (re: "goodness"). — 180 Proof
There are absolutes in this world, and there are relatives. "Good" is a relative. Only ethicists on the Kantian (?) vein of thought (or maybe in other veins as well) think that there is some ideal, everlasting, and perfect "good" out there — god must be atheist
What a mess. So far every contribution to this thread has used circular terms to ‘define’ the good.
— Joshs
No, no, no. Read the previous page. Read my definition of "good". It is not circular. — god must be atheist
180 never takes responsibility for the clarity of his own posts. — bert1
Did you somewhere indicate how good is more or other than just what benefits an individual relative to their needs? — Joshs
The allusion to Thrasymachus was just to draw an analogy that what you're saying is similar to what he said in The Republic -- not exactly so, but given the above scenario, can you see the parallels? — Moliere
The difficulty with “good”, I think, is that it describes someone desiring certain qualities or properties in another thing, but is not itself a quality or property, and so is unavailable for any analysis that excludes good objects and the people who say they are good. — NOS4A2
"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. — god must be atheist
OP is asking if good can be defined, and is therefore, by implication, asking for a definition of 'good'. I think that what you have provided is a list of reasons why we might want to call something 'good' — that it's advantageous, or pleasant, or helpful, or accommodating — which is not the same thing as a definition.Caveat: the definition I gave has been amended properly by Bert1, which states that pleasure is good, and a final means by itself (as per Hume), and the other thing that is good is a process, tool, action, opinion, that promotes the eventuality of a pleasure to happen. — god must be atheist
I think this is pretty nearly right. The only thing I would want to do (apart from removing the words 'intrinsic' and intrinsically', because we can say that something is good because it is instrumentally good, not just because it is intrinsically good) is to replace 'approval' with something more general, in keeping with the fact that god-must-be-an-atheist's list has four items in it that aspire to cover a range of different responses. As I see it, if I say 'Sally is good', while it may indeed be the case that I approve of Sally and think that she is likeable, what I'm actually saying (because 'good' serves only to connect an object with positivity, and not with anything as specific as approval or liking) is that Sally deserves or merits or warrants some kind of positive attitude or response — which might indeed be approval or liking — but without pointing directly at any one of these responses, merely waving a hand vaguely at the entire class of positive responses, from mild approval through degrees of liking to active seeking out, without telling you which of them is my actual response or attitude. (I think of this as the 'Monty Python and the Holy Grail' theory of the meaning of 'good': John Cleese on the castle wall saying, with a comic French accent, 'I fart in your general direction.')When a speaker declares x is good, they are marking their approval of x. Moreover, they are asserting that this approval springs from something intrinsic to x itself. If I say "Sally is good", I don't merely like Sally, according to me Sally is so constituted as to be intrinsically liked. — hypericin
Definitions are circular within a finite frame. The circular series of terms for ‘good’ used in this thread that I referred to are mutually defined according to a common or interwoven sense, in which the ‘meaning of the ‘good ‘ is contingent, either relative to the individual or culture, but arbitrary in its basis. My circular frame of definitions for the ‘good’ are interwoven via a different sense. In my circle, the arbitrariness of the good is only an apparent arbitrariness. That it is only apparent makes it neither true nor false, but a certain useful way of understanding the good. My definition is useful in a different way , which leaves the previous definition intact ( if one only sees the good as arbitrary then that is valid, as far as it goes). I invite others to see my definition as enriching the arbitrary definition, by saying what others are unable to say about the good besides the fact that it is arbitrary. This would be like inviting others to see that the relation between an electric current and a magnetic field is not arbitrary but interlocked. I don’t need to say that what I show them is true, only that it allows me to do things that connect the two concepts in more ways than what they were able to do. — Joshs
Is this a disagreement with
the idea that goodness is synonymous with "preserving stable ongoing self-consistency of interaction with an environment under changing conditions"? — Joshs
But then he was puzzled by the idea that ethics is about what we ought to do...The same thing can be both good an not good depending on the point of view. — bert1
Of course. One presumably ought to will what is good.If so, it has always seemed to me to be a misguided pursuit. Suppose I work out, by a consideration of ethics, what I ought to do. What happens then? Why would I do it? My will has to somehow be engaged, no? — bert1
Perhaps instead most folk are able to distinguish between what they want and what is good, and choose not to rape or invade even if it would be pleasurable or convenient.As I see the general problem in the reception of the definition is that people fail to distinguish between what THEY, the readers think is good, and what the actual point of view of of the actor in an action deems is good. — god must be atheist
True, but this problem can be circumvented by giving parametric conditions or assigning parametric properties to the quality of "good".
Your argument's fault will become clear to you once you establish to yourself and get comfortable that "good" is not an absolute term — god must be atheist
The World Knower (i.e. Buddha) has said:
Gain and loss, pleasure and pain,
Pleasant words and unpleasant words, praise and blame—
These are the eight worldly concerns.
Do not allow these concerns occupy your mind;
Regard them with equanimity.
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