Well, is there not a paradigmatic value system that makes such vocabulary intelligible? Is not each fact flowing out of this system of thought framed with expectations and anticipations? Is not each assertative empirical statement a form of question put to experience, an expectation that subsequent events will validate rather than invalidate it?
— Joshs
Can you tie this more robustly to is/ought for me? — Tom Storm
... committing the naturalistic fallacy (which is close to the is/ought fallacy). — Tom Storm
"Relevance for us" (i.e. a natural species.) :100: :up:I don't necessarily subscribe to the 'you cannot get an ought from an is' [ ... ] I believe that implicit within facts are values. From this paradigm, there is no gap between fact and value. We do not merely percieve a fact. Even in our most unlearned state, we filter that fact through biological and mental apparatus that we have inherited from millions of years of evolution, and that fact holds a relevance for us beyond it's mere 'is'ness - the two are inseparable. — Kaplan
I don’t understand your explanation of how you go from the fact that:
“…living is the first 'thing' an organism does and is what makes it an organism” to
“Living is an obligation for life. Therefore one ought to live, as being a being implies this by default.” — Mark S
Life by definition wants to live. There is no life otherwise and no discussion of anything.
— Kaplan
Even if this is true, can you demonstrate how this assists us with morality as per my earlier question - — Tom Storm
Living is what life does. Living is not an obligation of life because life has no moral obligation to live regardless of needs and preferences.I get to the conclusion of obligation by the fact that the processes to create life in the first place exists at all. The opposite of life and existence is death and nothingness. Life doens't have to happen. But the mere fact it does leads me to believe that to proactively force the opposite is a violation. — Kaplan
At the most basic level this would assist us with every single moral question as it is the foundation. What I mean is, if the above statement is true, then good would be that which aids life and bad the opposite. As to the exact permutations and combinations this would look like in specific moral questions and practical/applied ethics, that is not my goal here. — Kaplan
Living is not an obligation of life because life has no moral obligation to live regardless of needs and preferences. — Mark S
What I mean is, if the above statement is true, then good would be that which aids life and bad the opposite. — Kaplan
Life by definition wants to live. There is no life otherwise and no discussion of anything. — Kaplan
t'd be weird to have large language-ready brains and not ethical systems centered on the cooperation of Us which is sometimes against Them. This (coincidentally?) mirrors the cooperation of the organs within our bodies. 'Inefficient' ethical systems would seemingly be filtered out in something like memetic evolution, while efficient ones would spread --- perhaps by conquest, but maybe just by trade, missionaries, etc. — plaque flag
If evolution can code for cooperation , [ then ] it can just as easily code for the opposite. — Joshs
If evolution can code for cooperation , [ then ] it can just as easily code for the opposite.
— Joshs
That does not follow. At least in the human context, that seems highly unlikely. We are born helpless and mute. Our killer app is language, which depends on trust and cooperation — plaque flag
Does this mean that cooperation is not an evolutionary adaptation? — Joshs
Not all objective morality is the same, and the term "objective" itself varies in meaning, but perhaps you're better off not trying to create an ought. The desire to live weaves its way into our moral thinking, it manifests as our proclivity for ascribing value to life. While that doesn't create an ought, it does do something to ground moral thinking. "Ought" isn't built into us quite so explicitly as you may like, but our biology is designed in a way that naturally leads us to certain conclusions. While we don't "have" to do anything, what we will do is being influenced by our biology, as will what we think we should. You could expand on the idea from there. — Judaka
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