Damn dude, to think I kinda took you seriously before
now I know that Binary thinking has you skewed like fuck to the point you posit the US as "Good."
I think it was the omnibenevelence of God comment that shows how blunderous your binary thinking is
You obviously have yet to go "Beyond Good and Evil," with that black and white duality of thought.
Okay, that is fine if you accept that. But it still stands that, since there are no concrete examples of these, they are no more provable than beings with pink and yellow spots. Just because YOU BELIEVE them to be true, it doesnt mean that they are. As your belief, that is fine, and i totally respect that, but if you want to state this as a fact, you need to back it up with proof. And there is no concrete proof from real life, as we know it.
Goodness has two historical meanings: hypothetical and actual perfection. — Bob Ross
What exactly are you questioning the facticity of (in my view)? — Bob Ross
Your entire OP is based upon a false definition followed by an unending stream of equivocation between goodness and perfection, which are manifestly not the same thing, as pretty much everyone has agreed, except for you. Trying to further equivocate with harmony only makes your reasoning more precarious.
The primary historical meaning of goodness is not perfection, it is virtue, which is understood to be independent of pragmatic concerns. This is why it is possible to do good, to do the right thing, even in the face of overwhelming odds, even when the right or good actions fail. This is the entire significance of deontological ethics. Indeed, many philosophers believe (and I agree) that actions which are done out of pragmatism do not qualify as moral; rather, only those actions which are done out of the sense of duty. — Pantagruel
I am questioning the idea of anything being perfect. I am saying that it could be impossible, or simply a made up concept, since there is no evidence of it. If this is the case, according to your definition, goodness also does not exist. Now, something is clearly amiss here. This would suggest that there is something wrong with your definition. — Beverley
And also, this whole notion that there is some kind of behaviour-transcending "perfection" can be utilized to justify any action that the believer believes is consonant with it. ie. it is a rationality which is conducive to the abuses of extremism. Very dangerous. — Pantagruel
Your entire OP is based upon a false definition followed by an unending stream of equivocation between goodness and perfection, which are manifestly not the same thing... — Pantagruel
The primary historical meaning of goodness is not perfection, it is virtue... — Pantagruel
Is virtue (arete) unrelated to perfection?
Is virtue (arete) unrelated to perfection? — Leontiskos
But the idea of "virtue," singular, as opposed to the "virtues," is a modern innovation. The virtues were those excellences a person needed to fulfill their social role, and they might vary depending on the sort of person you were. The virtues required of a knight are not necessarily the same as those required by a nun, or a teacher, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If this be so the result is that the good of man is exercise of his faculties in accordance with excellence or virtue, or, if there be more than one, in accordance with the best and most complete virtue. — Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 1098a15
This is the sort of analysis where the virtues were originally intended. Aristotle sets out the "life of contemplation," as the highest sort of life, but maintains that one may be virtuous and flourish in other types of life. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The virtues are the skills and talents needed to attain eudaimonia. There are many, so speaking of "attaining virtue," singular, would be similar to saying one needs to "attain skill," or "talent" to be a good musician. The English-language history is interesting here because if MacIntyre's sources in After Virtue are to be believed, speaking of a single "virtue," as in "the singular skill of being good," didn't enter English discourse until 18th century. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Plato does attempt to unify the virtues in the Protagoras, but in the sense that all virtues are born of knowledge, not that there is a single excellence required for "the good life." — Count Timothy von Icarus
What gives aptness and force to justice as "doing one's
own business" is that so understood it becomes the excel-
lence of excellences in a world under the rule of the Good.
For that the Good rules can only mean that in its light each
being is both good in itself and good as a part of the whole.
But that is precisely what justice accomplishes in our work-
ing world, which is a reflection of the realm of being: To be
just according to Socrates is to be both good on one's own
and good for others. — Raymond Larson, Introduction to the Republic, p. xlv
The point is not that the virtues are wholly dependant on one's vocation or social status; Aristotle's analysis applies across these distinctions. It's that they are seated and expressed within a context on an entire life, which necessarily includes these things. . . — Count Timothy von Icarus
The polis shows up most robustly in contrast to thinkers like Hume, for whom morality must be about the concerns of the individual. For both Plato and Aristotle, there is a strong sense of a "shared good," e.g., Socrates' claims that it would make no sense for him to make his fellow citizens worse. The point here is that there is nothing like the tendency to think in terms of "trade offs," the way there is in modern ethical discourse, where we are always concerned with how much utility an individual must give up to obey some precept and "shared good," is just defined as "every individual benefits as an individual from the same good." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Your entire OP is based upon a false definition followed by an unending stream of equivocation between goodness and perfection, which are manifestly not the same thing, as pretty much everyone has agreed, except for you. Trying to further equivocate with harmony only makes your reasoning more precarious.
The primary historical meaning of goodness is not perfection, it is virtue, which is understood to be independent of pragmatic concerns
Any and every virtue ever considered in a serious manner by people, especially experts in the field of study (even prior to there being a formal field of study for it), is virtuous in virtue of cultivating a character that habitually strives towards universal harmony and unity. — Bob Ross
You're not doing a good job of expressing your position, I'm only attacking you at certain points in order to uncover it more fully
Conversely however, goodness obviously did not stem from the perspective of satisfying all needs, but rather from the perspective empowering the needs of the powerful few, and thus goodness obviously does not satisfy any condition of perfection
The historical analysis that you quoted here is all fine and correct, but you conclusion from it is not.
In short, the farther back one goes into human history, the closer a person’s notion of (moral) goodness is to the most egoistic context of self-harmony and self-unity; and the farther forward goes into human history, the closer a person’s notion of (moral) goodness is the most universal context of self-harmony and self-unity. All Nietzsche is doing in the Genealogy of Morals is providing most of the justification for this (without meaning to). He just sees this evoluation as a shift in tastes towards universal harmony and unity as opposed to an actual objective (moral) progression towards it.
So, yes, there are periods of history, a while ago, where it was common to define ‘good’ terms relative to the elite’s tastes or values; but, to my point, they still by-at-large recognized, implicitly at least in their notions of goodness, that what is good, in its most abstract form, is self-harmony and self-unity; which is self-apparent, in the case of an aristocracy, when one asks an elite noble what is good for them. People recognize almost innately the form of The Good when it comes to themselves: that’s why I think the most fundamental, primitive, and easily-understood context of moral goodness is egoism—it is incredibly obvious to almost anyone that what is best for them is to be in harmony and unity with themselves even if they cannot abstract out this form and apply it universally.
This is my first conundrum, as Goodness stems from a person's own wants and desires, not perfection.
You boil that down to two parts too and not even in a contrasting manner as you were trying to do: Complete Disarray (imperfection) vs Harmony and Unity (perfection), then you make the blunderous error of saying "and Unity," well unfortunately, Harmony is a unity of two (or more) already, it's a coming together, a hybrid of two or more.
Which you then boil those down into a Higher and Lower Goodness
The higher goodness being "that which is goodness in-itself."
You've basically said what Nietzsche makes fun of in BGE 11: Or is it not rather merely a repetition of the question? How does opium induce sleep? "By means of a means (faculty)," namely the virtus dormitiva (the sleeping virtue), replies the doctor in Moliere,
You: "The Higher Goodness is that which is Good in-itself!"
You see with conundrums like these I can't really take your argument seriously
I mean you use Harmony as the extreme which contrasts complete disarray (Harmony is a middle ground betwixt multiples; hence it takes several notes to make a harmonic
You mention the omnibenevolence of God here:
When I say that historically people have used notions of goodness that refer to either hypothetical or actual perfection (in the sense that I outlined it in the OP), I mean theism as an example of it. It is not a coincidence that the historical progression even within theism about God’s omnibenevolent nature has evolved such that we have slowly understood it to be universal harmony and unity. — Bob Ross
You're a dogmatist, through and through, and aren't very well up to snuff with Nietzsche... you think:
quite frankly, he takes as granted the Dostoevskian idea that ~”without God, everything is permitted”
That said, sorry if I did actually offend you, take any actual insult as blustering/questionably ethical information probing.
And I did offer you an aphorism from BGE by Nietzsche, expressing the utility, the pragmatic goodness, of the use of opposites in language, even if their examples in the real world are often somewhere in between. Hot and Cold, Left and Right, Up and Down, Pragmatic and Moral, East and West, but even on the axis of East and West, there are 358 other degrees/angles (if only counting WHOLE NUMBERS).
Hey man, use whatever definitions you need to feel good about yourself.
Part OneOn the Prejudices of Philosophers
1
The will to truth, which is still going to
You will fail as all the dogmatists did before you. In finding that elusive unicorn of "objective morality."
You're just foolish enough to think you're the first to see this concept of yours.
Since any utility is good... be my slave and become utilized
Harmony still equates disarray, completely organized is the opposite of complete disarray Harmony is the synthesis between the two.
I mean the peaceful congruence of all parts of a thing, when I say a thing is in 100% self-harmony. This is not equivocal to being the synthesis of two extremes. — Bob Ross
Let's hear about what isn't good in your philosophy. Or, since I can turn literally everything into utility everything and every action is good?
Or do we have a 0-100 point scale we can't see, some sort of RPG statistic, that increases and decreases on the goodness scale depending on our collective actions and so long as we're in the 51% utilitarian "by at large" we are goodness?
No you're fucking not. You've had multiple people come here challenging your definitions and claims. Which has only served to highlight the self serving prejudice behind your position.
Thing is you think God is Omnibenevolent. You're cute enough to think there is one, but even cuter than that is your God is omnibenevolent
Anything can be believed so continue believing in whatever it is that makes you feel good about yourself I guess. Sounds trolling, but wtf have all philosophers done? Believe in their own philosophy and their own prejudice.
Natural systems do not exist in a state of "peaceful congruence." Natural systems if anything exist in a state of far from equilibrium meta-stability governed by non-linear dynamics.
What comes across is an attempt to foist a common-sense, naturalized umbrella encompassing everything that you feel aligns in some way with the notion of goodness, that does not in any way do justice to the notion of morality.
Just to clarify, I am not claiming that morality is just about ‘what is morally good’: this is, indeed, an invalid oversimplification. — Bob Ross
However, as a final note, I will say that, if your theory is accurate, it ought to be conducive to harmony (otherwise what is the point?) In fact, it appears to have had the exact opposite effect. Which tends to testify against its validity.
I don't understand: could you please elaborate? — Bob Ross
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