I think the categorical goal implies, or constrains, every hypothetical means. To wit: reducing 'suffering' by any means which does not increase or exacerbate 'suffering'; increasing 'well-being' by any means which does not descrease or impair 'well-being'. "MACS" is possibly one such "means" in either case depending on, I think, how it is practiced with respect to 'minimizing suffering' or 'maximizing well-being'.Two simple forms of consequentialism are [ ... ] They are silent about the ‘means’ by which well-being is to be increased or suffering minimized. — Mark S
Could MACS and either form of consequentialism be contradictory? I have not yet seen how they could be, but this looks like new, unplowed ground to me. There may be many surprises out there. — Mark S
First, bare consequentialism has an implied over-demandingness feature: that it is moral for one person to suffer a huge penalty, of either increased suffering or reduced well-being, so many can gain a tiny benefit. The new consequentialist/cooperation morality requires moral behaviors to be parts of cooperation strategies and “cooperation” implies a lack of coercion. The absence of coercion in moral behavior implies that the over-demandingness as so-called ‘moral’ behavior has been eliminated. Moral principles without over-demandingness are more likely to be judged morally normative as “what all well-informed, rational people would advocate as moral regarding interactions between people”. — Mark S
Second, bare consequentialism can lack innate motivational power because it is an intellectual construct. But the moral ‘means’ of the new consequentialist/cooperation moral principles are innately harmonious with our moral sense because these cooperation strategies are what shaped our moral sense. This innate harmony provides motivating power to incline us to act morally even when we have reasons not to. — Mark S
The more important moral norms are, in my view, pretty much universal for merely pragmatic reasons and this ties in with Kant's deontology (which is a kind of non-particular consequentialism writ large). Any society that condoned lying, theft, rape and murder could not survive, let alone thrive. — Janus
This is true for how the in group is treated in different societies. But many societies that thrived had no problem murdering, stealing and raping their outsiders. — PhilosophyRunner
Here is an excerpt from wikipedia about a society that was very successful, and yet murdered their children: — PhilosophyRunner
To wit: reducing 'suffering' by any means which does not increase or exacerbate 'suffering'; increasing 'well-being' by any means which does not descrease or impair 'well-being'. "MACS" is possibly one such "means" in either case depending on, I think, how it is practiced. — 180 Proof
I don't think MACS achieves what you claim it achieves. MACS is just as susceptible to the problem you outline. MACS would show human coorporation often has an out group that is excluded. It does not rule out causing massive harm to a few in order for the many to coorporate - this has been pointed out to you in the previous thread I think. — PhilosophyRunner
I don't think this holds. In fact my observations of "what is" recently, suggests that MACS would motivate those already motivated, and not motivate those already not motivated. Try to motivate an anti-vaccine person by bringing out more scientific studies. I think you will fail more often than succeed. And that failure would be because the motivation is values driven rather than technocratic. — PhilosophyRunner
Janus
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The more important moral norms are, in my view, pretty much universal for merely pragmatic reasons and this ties in with Kant's deontology (which is a kind of non-particular consequentialism writ large). Any society that condoned lying, theft, rape and murder could not survive, let alone thrive — Janus
the problems that MACS solves are as innate to our universe as the simple mathematics that define them. Everywhere those mathematics hold in our universe, from the beginning of time to the end of time, intelligent beings must solve the same problems in order to form highly cooperation societies. MACS’ feature of cross-species universality and application could be intellectually satisfying and attractive for rational people. — Mark S
they would not have thought of it as murder — Janus
It's the definition of the word - 'those killings which we prohibit' — Isaac
I believe that broadly speaking all societies would prohibit acts that they interpreted to be of those four kinds because broadly speaking no one wants to be raped, murdered, stolen from or lied to. — Janus
The killings which will be prohibited are the ones that will cause social disharmony or at least unmanageable social disharmony — Janus
I can see I need to do a better job of explaining how that evolution happens. Thanks for pointing that out. — Mark S
But that's what the example of the Incas disproves. No one wants to be left on a hillside to die. Yet it was not proscribed. — Isaac
On what grounds do you claim this. It could just as easily be that the killings which are prohibited will be those which most harm the powerful. — Isaac
Two simple forms of consequentialism are “Behaviors that increase well-being are moral” and “Behaviors that minimize suffering are moral.” — Mark S
Only 4 out of 613 "Commandments" concern morality, which are not unique to any 'peoples' at any time, so this statement doesn't make much sense.It seems like we'd be better off with the ten commandments because they are less ambiguous. — Andrew4Handel
The ten commandments are inadequate — Tom Storm
Life is extremely complex and I don't believe most of it could be subject to moral type calculations. — Andrew4Handel
Are people saying there are things we should feel compelled to do? Are people saying there are objectively good and bad phenomena? I don't know what people are saying anymore. — Andrew4Handel
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