That bringing happiness is good is a predication of goodness; and not a definition of what is good. You are putting the cart before the horse: the OP person needs to start at the basics.
I was talking about the concept of good, and of which one must have an understanding of before they can accurately assess what can be predicated to have it. This is a classic mistake that Moore rightly points out: ethics starts not with what is good, but what goodness even refers to---whereas, most people do it in the opposite order (or merely engage in the latter).
Begin at looking what brings happiness.
Why would they do that? They need to first understanding what it means for something to be good, then explore what is good. You are having them skip vital steps here.
(PS: the Nichomachean and Eudemian Ethics are good reads indeed: no disagreement there).
I was talking about the concept of good, and of which one must have an understanding of before they can accurately assess what can be predicated to have it. This is a classic mistake that Moore rightly points out: ethics starts not with what is good, but what goodness even refers to---whereas, most people do it in the opposite order (or merely engage in the latter). — Bob Ross
Where did Moore say that?
I reject that good has properties
Good is an ideal of pure practical reason
that principle which serves as the ground of determinations of will which satisfy the worthiness of being happy.
I agree with Moore, insofar as to define an ideal principle does little justice to it, while at the same time, all moral judgements are a priori in necessary reference to it.
…
Moral philosophy is not transcendental in a Kantian sense.
…..Real things, re: reality writ large, belong to Nature, insofar as Nature is their causality, and are given to us for the use of pure theoretical reason in determining how they are to be known;
…..Moral things, re: morality writ large, belong to us, insofar as we are their causality from the use of pure practical reason in determining what they will be, and are given to Nature.
Given this obvious and universal dualism, the dual aspect of pure reason itself is justified.
That’s the question: what is it that just is this sense and from whence does it arise
I'm actually writing a paper on this because, from my experience in government, it seems that something like Harris view is dominant amongst policymakers and economists (less the religious bigotry, which most don't share). — Count Timothy von Icarus
I didn't do that.
Just picture who you want to be and what kind of environment you want to be in 5 years from now. You're like an arrow shooting through time. Good is whatever is conducive to the arrow's path toward your vision. Evil is whatever makes the arrow deviate down some other path. — frank
How is it not putting the cart before the horse to talk about this being good, or thinking about if this would be good and how it would be, before the metaphysics of goodness? — Bob Ross
I found my old copy PE, and had a quick scan of the book. Moore says something like this,Where did Moore say that?
Your writing above seems to suggest Good is definable from what Moore had said about Good. Good is an absolutely primitive and simple concept. When Moore said Good is an absolutely primitive and simple concept, he didn't mean that it is a definition of Good. He was just telling about the nature of Good.I have maintained from the beginning of this discussion thread that I think Moore was right that good is an absolutely primitive and simple concept. — Bob Ross
You seem to think Moore had started with a concept of Good in PE, which is a misunderstanding of the original text in PE.
Your writing above seems to suggest Good is definable from what Moore had said about Good
…
He was just telling about the nature of Good.
How can you define good when it is not definable? It seems to suggest you don't understand what you have been maintaining, and are self negating yourself.
Show me where I ever said that we can “define” good in this sense. Never once. I even referred you to an earlier post I made where I explicitly stated that the concept of good is absolutely simple and cannot be properly defined. — Bob Ross
just like redness is the one property of ‘being red’. — Bob Ross
Good is an ideal of pure practical reason
—Mww
This seems to contradict your previous point though: if practical reason is attributing to things ‘good’….. — Bob Ross
…..all moral judgements are a priori in necessary reference to it.
Moral philosophy is not transcendental in a Kantian sense.
—Mww
Then, what do you mean by moral judgments being a priori? — Bob Ross
…..are given to Nature.
— Mww
This sounds like you are saying that moral judgments do not express something objective, correct? — Bob Ross
How reality is can dictate how it ought to be (for me). — Bob Ross
I would say biology. — Bob Ross
This is a classical mistake, and the most common of which (in this thread) was nudging the OP in the direction of happiness. — Bob Ross
Just was trying to clarify the murky points you raised in this thread.
It is not the main focus of this OP either.
I feel that my explanation for Good as the actions which brings happiness to all involved parties meeting at the mid point was good enough definition, if you really insist that one must start from a concept of Good.
am assuming you mean Mark Twain didn't study metaethics, normative ethics, nor applied ethics: in fact, I don't believe they existed as defined areas of ethics back then (given that it came along with Analytic Philosophy). More importantly, I am noting what is necessary to provide a treaties, an analytic proper, in ethics and not what is best for works of (american) literature. What is most convincing to people (politically), is certainly not a robust and rigid analysis of ethics. — Bob Ross
This was my main point that you keep dismissing without any response: happiness is good is not a description whatsoever of what goodness is. It is not an analysis of the metaphysics of goodness. When you say it “was [a] good enough definition”, that is patently false; because it was not a “definition” in any of the two senses of the term that I used before (or anyone uses). — Bob Ross
It is putting the cart before the horse to begin with what can be predicated to be good, when one hasn’t analyzed what goodness is itself. Do you disagree? — Bob Ross
In contrast to 'instrumental good' or 'aesthetic good', I define ethical good as flourishing (eudaimonia) from the moral conduct (eusocial habits) of non-reciprocally reducing harms (re: suffering).How do you define good? — Matias Isoo
I never said happiness is Good. I said, actions which brings happiness is Good
I thought my point in my previous posts were clear. Good is not an entity. It is property or quality.
Good is not an entity. It is property or quality. There is no such a thing called Good. So Moore was right, it is undefinable.
Only human actions are good or not good based on the fact that whether the actions brought happiness to the society
Until actions are performed, and analysied based on the above criteria, there is no such thing as Good. Good is the quality of some human actions.
If you went out for a walk or dropped off by the shop, that is not moral action category
If it is good to do things that make you happy, then you are good to be happy. There are many different ways good can be used.So, under your view, it is good to do things that make you happy; but not good to be happy? — Bob Ross
You seem to be trying to make things more complicated than necessary here.My critique did not presuppose that there is an abstract object of The Good. Predicating happiness as being good is analogous to predicating actions (that produce happiness) as being good. You can just swap the parts where I said “happiness is good” for “actions which bring about happiness are good” in my critique, and it all still stands. — Bob Ross
I was pointing out what looks like the source of your misunderstanding.That is a non-sequiture. Moore is talking about the property of goodness, just like you. Moore is not saying that goodness is undefinable because there is no abstract object for it. — Bob Ross
Where did you get the idea? :D Who on earth would deny happiness is good? Happiness is the purpose of life, according to Aristotle.That implies happiness is a good thing; which you denied above. — Bob Ross
I was looking into various philosophers' concept of Good, but there weren't much in them. One thing noticeable was that the concept of Good was all different in the different philosophers. Beginning with the concept of Good seems to be a not good idea in studying Ethics. Maybe you could come up with establishing the concept in the middle or later stage of reading up Ethics, if it is your topic of interest.“Good” is the concept of, roughly speaking, what ought to be: what you just described is the concept of ‘moral good’. — Bob Ross
Depending on the situation, it could be. It was just a simple example to help you understand the principle.You don’t think that it may be, under certain circumstances, immoral to go out for a walk? — Bob Ross
If it is good to do things that make you happy, then you are good to be happy
…
Where did you get the idea? :D Who on earth would deny happiness is good?
I never said happiness is Good. I said, actions which brings happiness is Good
You seem to be trying to make things more complicated than necessary here.
Beginning with the concept of Good seems to be a not good idea in studying Ethics.
You did: are you trying to troll me? That’s literally what I responded to, when you said: — Bob Ross
This explains exactly why your position is so muddied and convoluted. Instead of providing a substantive response, you just noted that you have absolutely no clue what I am saying. — Bob Ross
Redness isn’t so much a property as the relative quality of being red.
You might say attribution requires reason, but you can’t say reason attributes.
Moral judgements being a priori doesn’t make them transcendental. Reason isn’t necessarily transcendental, is only so in the consideration of those ideas the objects of which arising as schema of understanding, contain no possibility of experience.
Wouldn’t “given to Nature” indicate something objective?
In truth, reality merely presents itself, dictating nothing of its own or of itself
Wonderful. In a place where the main contributing dialectical factor….is metaphysical?
we know how reason gives us metaphysics but we don’t know how metaphysics gives us brains
I do that on purpose, for the simple reason the moral philosophy I favor has it as a condition.
It may not necessarily be true humanity in general gravitates towards instances of personal happiness, but it is certainly persuasive that it does
It could be the case that you might be injecting too much emotions into the interactions on what supposed to be objective and rational discussions.
You are still missing the point. I never said happiness is Good. I said, actions which brings happiness is Good. — Corvus
That implies happiness is a good thing; which you denied above. — Bob Ross
Where did you get the idea? :D Who on earth would deny happiness is good? Happiness is the purpose of life, according to Aristotle. — Corvus
It was a bit disappointing to see your reaction rejecting my replies outright without much substance on your counter argument, and your uncorroborated accusation on my posts as a troll.Your comments speak for themselves: — Bob Ross
From my observations in the past,You did: are you trying to troll me? That’s literally what I responded to, when you said: — Bob Ross
This was my main point that you keep dismissing without any response: happiness is good is not a description whatsoever of what goodness is. It is not an analysis of the metaphysics of goodness. When you say it “was [a] good enough definition”, that is patently false; because it was not a “definition” in any of the two senses of the term that I used before (or anyone uses).
This is analogous to if there was an OP asking where to begin studying what is red, and your response is to say “analyze red trucks”. One should not begin with an analysis of what can be predicated to be red (like a red truck)—viz., happiness—but rather what does it mean for something, in principle, to be red at all? That’s where begin. — Bob Ross
You are still missing the point. I never said happiness is Good. I said, actions which brings happiness is Good. — Corvus
So, under your view, it is good to do things that make you happy; but not good to be happy? — Bob Ross
My critique did not presuppose that there is an abstract object of The Good. Predicating happiness as being good is analogous to predicating actions (that produce happiness) as being good. You can just swap the parts where I said “happiness is good” for “actions which bring about happiness are good” in my critique, and it all still stands. — Bob Ross
You seem to be trying to make things more complicated than necessary here. — Corvus
Where did you get the idea? :D Who on earth would deny happiness is good? Happiness is the purpose of life, according to Aristotle. — Corvus
E.g., "where did you get that idea?": I don't know, maybe when you literally said it? — Bob Ross
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.