Moral systems are very old. They come from humans living together and depending on one another. For the group's and the individual's long-term survival, it is necessary to establish trust among the members of the group. You establish trust by sharing the same values and goals; by being available to help when another member is in trouble; by living up to your obligations and keeping your promises. It's not all that complicated: people need other people, but the only way they count on other people is by proving that other people can count on them. — Vera Mont
However, this also resolves to me the trouble of an "end goal" to a moral system. — Jerry
No, only help society if one feels the urge. — jgill
It's to act in accordance with our authentic selves, from our hearts if you will. That requires that we have faith in your our spontaneous action. In my understanding, the foundation of all this is our nature as social animals with family feeling, community feeling, and empathy. All "rational" moral systems are intellectual and ideological overlays we use to justify our actions after the fact. — T Clark
This sounds like a fine assessment of the fact of the matter, but this doesn't address the foundations for the moral system. For example, are you saying this from an individualistic perspective, where what matters is one's own survival, and the rest of the group is just a means to that end? Or do we intrinsically value other members of our group? Also, why is survival, either as a group or an individual, desirable? — Jerry
We are no longer the same agents we were a hundred thousand years ago. — Jerry
I'm more concerned with moral systems as they take place now. — Jerry
It seems like if it is obligatory to do certain good things, even within your means, then you're almost a slave to the world around you. — Jerry
Of course, this seems not to be the complete picture, because one could imagine an agent who truly believes in the righteousness of their action, despite it seeming wholly unethical from a different perspective. — Jerry
Human flourishing (i.e. optimization of common agency via reduction of individual harms¹).What should be the goal of a moral system? — Jerry
Reason (i.e. performative self-consistency of reducing risks of dysfunctions¹ due to neglecting / exacerbating our species functional defects (i.e. natural vulnerabilities e.g. thirst-hunger, bereavement, insecurity, shame, mortality, confusion, etc))What is the grounding for the moral system, ...?
Habits cultivated – reinforced – through 'moral' conduct, judgments & relationships are either more adaptive (flourishing, virtuous) or more maladaptive (languishing, vicious). "Good deeds happen" because, as most socialized children learn by trial & error, they tend to work more often in social circumstances than "bad deeds".... and if we aren't obligated to do good deeds, why should good deeds happen?
Human flourishing (i.e. optimization of common agency via reduction of individual harms¹). — 180 Proof
Rape and murder, for example, can apparently always be justified on consequentialist systems in one way or another. — Leontiskos
The reason I say "We are no longer the same agents we were a hundred thousand years ago" is because we have different, perhaps more evolved ideas of morality. — Jerry
That's shown by how I can undermine the usual story of the origins of morality by questioning those values and proposing alternatives. — Jerry
And "the goal" of virtue ethics is flourishing (re last paragraph of my post ).I now prefer more virtue-based ethics than consequentialism ... — Jerry
I stated "the goal" is flourishing and that reason provides "grounding" of a "system" to facilitate flourishing. I said nothing about "survival", Jerry. As for why flourishing "ought" to "be the goal"? That's as silly as asking why health-fitness ought to be the goal of medicine or why sustainability ought to be the goal of social ecology.I'll just go ahead and ask, why ought this be the goal? You say the grounding for it is, from what I understand, supporting our own survival — Jerry
As for why flourishing "ought" to "be the goal"? That's as silly as asking why health-fitness ought to be the goal of medicine or why sustainability ought to be the goal of social ecology. — 180 Proof
And "the goal" of virtue ethics is flourishing — 180 Proof
Probably a good reason why I now prefer more virtue-based ethics than consequentialism. — Jerry
While context is pretty much always required when evaluating whether a particular action is just, the idea of "This is bad, unless..." just sounds like making ad hoc excuses for a bad action. — Jerry
I could argue, and shall, that the true character of a person, and truly good deeds occur only when faced with adversity and harm. — Jerry
To minimize suffering is analogous to a child never leaving their room for fear of danger from the outside world. — Jerry
Rather than minimize suffering, we ought learn how to best equip ourselves to become resilient to harm. — Jerry
The other aspect is why human flourishing for the species as a whole is desirable. — Jerry
Flourishing for society? Flourishing for the individual? — Jerry
Does flourishing mean a life without harm, or building resiliency towards harm? — Jerry
As an example, to me, virtue ethics is about the individual "flourishing" where flourishing means to act in accordance with one's own values. — Jerry
What the heck is 'true character'? How are good deeds designated true or false? Adversity and harmto whom is required to prompt those good deeds? — Vera Mont
Given the knowledge that a particular action is good, I believe that one who can do the action without deliberation may be acting well, but not virtuously, whereas one who must deliberate on the action (because of qualms or circumstances that make the action undesirable) is acting virtuously. To return to your questions, this would be a display of stronger "character", because the actor must overcome the harm/adversity to do the right thing. Again, assuming we already have an idea of what the right thing is to do; I don't at the moment have a good answer for where that knowledge comes from.Bran thought about it. ‘Can a man still be brave if he’s afraid?’ / ‘That is the only time a man can be brave,’ his father told him.
Let's all become yogis - yes, even the tiny tots with fetal alcohol syndrome! There is nothing virtuous in becoming tough; that's a survival strategy, not a moral precept. — Vera Mont
It means living as near as possible to our potential of accomplishment, freedom, health, fulfillment and happiness as we can, in our given environment and era. — Vera Mont
What I wrote should suffice ...First of all, "flourishing" is too vague. What do you mean by it? — Jerry
Apparently you intend to quarrel with a strawman or English is not your first language as evidenced here:Human flourishing (i.e. optimization of common agency via reduction of individual harms). — 180 Proof
You ask what do I mean by "flourishing", then you claim I mean something I've neither stated nor implied. Please don't waste any more of your time or mine with tendentious twaddle like this, Jerry. Take issue with what I actually say or ignore it. :shade:... the flourishing you seem to be proposing, which is to make the human species as a whole "flourish", in terms of reducing harm and promoting good will towards others. — Jerry
There is a social contract. Living in a society obligates us to respect the social contract. That's why there's morality and the law. I wouldn't want to live in a world where people aren't obligated to help the victim of a kidnapper or rapist. Or a parent beating the child to death, literally. Or a spouse torturing the other.Furthermore, if there is any such obligation to do good, how do we go about determining which good actions are the "most" obligatory, for example giving money to a charity vs working at a local soup kitchen? It seems like if it is obligatory to do certain good things, even within your means, then you're almost a slave to the world around you.
So, what is the answer then? What should be the goal of a moral system? What is the grounding for the moral system, and if we aren't obligated to do good deeds, why — Jerry
You're not given that knowledge; you have to learn it. From some source(s).Given the knowledge that a particular action is good, — Jerry
I believe that one who can do the action without deliberation may be acting well, but not virtuously,
whereas one who must deliberate on the action (because of qualms or circumstances that make the action undesirable) is acting virtuously.
To return to your questions, this would be a display of stronger "character", because the actor must overcome the harm/adversity to do the right thing.
I see. Then how do you know it's correct?Again, assuming we already have an idea of what the right thing is to do; I don't at the moment have a good answer for where that knowledge comes from.
I don't understand the cynicism, your aversion to the concept of resiliency. Is it not better to confront a problem despite discomfort rather than avoid the problem entirely? — Jerry
I don't know Ayn Rand, and I don't think I'm saying people's values are unique, only that, whatever values one has, they should be followed with conviction. — Jerry
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