Why should one do that which is good? No, I don't think that good is synonymous with, "something one ought to do". For example, most people would agree that selling all your worldly possessions and donating the money to charity is something that would be good. However, that doesn't mean that one is obligated to do so. Please input into this conversation with your own takes. — Hyper
You're probably right. But the question seems simple. "Should we do good?" Of course, we should do good. I always feel good when I do the right thing. Then I can better respect mysel
Why should one, in the general sense, do good is much harder for me to answer than why the good is attractive
Tyler Durden is smart, courageous, iron willed, etc. They have some of the key ingredients for flourishing in spades. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, that doesn't mean that one is obligated to do so. Please input into this conversation with your own takes. — Hyper
And again, is the goal to achieve "the highest level of being human", or just to do what is right? — Banno
Biology can inform ethics without ethics being reducible to biology. — Count Timothy von Icarus
That we have evolved to do something or to prefer something simply does not imply that we ought to do that thing. There remains the logical gap between what we do and what we ought do. Until you get your heads around that, you are not even addressing ethical issues. — Banno
We have new understanding of psychology and sociology that seems to offer near-empirical evidence as to what builds and sustains societies that last and what factors, behaviors, and deviations lead to their collapse. — Outlander
Why should you or I or anyone else value “sustaining society” more than our own comfort or advantage? — J
Now, the question "Why should we?" might be answered by: Because we want to belong to the group. Because we want to live in peace. Because we want safety and security. — Questioner
Why should you or I or anyone else value “sustaining society” more than our own comfort or advantage?
— J
We need to take the long view of our evolution, going far back beyond civilization. — Questioner
If the individual conscience is the sole arbiter of virtue, then who's to say that's not good?
Why should you or I or anyone else value “sustaining society” more than our own comfort or advantage?
And "we" don't care if all these peace, safety, and security come at the expense of the other group. — baker
You should want the virtues because they are most likely to make you flourish, and because they help others flourish (which is key to our flourishing and freedom at any rate). You're safest when everyone around you is freer and wants what best for you. If they only do what is good for you because of coercion, then your happiness is unstable because that coercion can break down (and you are not free to remove that coercion without consequences).
As Saint Augustine says: "Thus, a good man, though a slave, is free; but a wicked man, though a king, is a slave. For he serves, not one man alone, but what is worse, as many masters as he has vices." Epictetus, the philosopher-slave, makes a similar point. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Why in the world should I care about what happened millions of years in the past — J
should I care about "sustaining society" more than I care about looking out for Number 1? — J
even leaving aside the question of "what is truly best," people are often unable to bring themselves to do what they truly see as better. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Sure, this is not true for everyone, but for the majority. — Questioner
So if I'm one of the ones it's not true for, then it's OK for me to choose to act selfishly? — J
A version of rational egoism says, "I don't believe 'the good of society' or 'the good of future generations' are goods at all. It's not that I'm unable to act with those goals in mind because it's painful or difficult; I deny that they're worth sacrificing anything for. I want my own desires to be satisfied, period, and no, I'm not a selfish monster, because some of those desires include concern for those I love. But they are still mine. Societal progress has absolutely no claim on me."
A version of rational egoism says, "I don't believe 'the good of society' or 'the good of future generations' are goods at all. It's not that I'm unable to act with those goals in mind because it's painful or difficult; I deny that they're worth sacrificing anything for. I want my own desires to be satisfied, period, and no, I'm not a selfish monster, because some of those desires include concern for those I love. But they are still mine. Societal progress has absolutely no claim on me."
Ok. Do you think this is a good position? Is it "as defendable as any other?" — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yet the good is essentially filling the role in practical reason of the true vis-á-vis theoretical reason. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'll ask the question again. Ought we try to become "the highest level of being human"; or ought we do what is good?IMO, the highest level of being human is to be your most true, authentic self. This means getting the most in touch with your natural instincts, with your "wild knowing." The question becomes, does this coincide with doing right or doing wrong? — Questioner
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