If the language-less child believes that there is a treat under the cup, then it's belief cannot consist of the terms used to report upon it. What else could it consist in/of — creativesoul
But isn't this just de facto what we do, because the counterfactual of suicide is repugnant? Just because suicide is usually culturally/biologically not an option for most, doesn't mean that the opposite (having things matter) is good. It is what we do yes, but why is mattering something good in itself other than its the default state of a human mindset? — schopenhauer1
So how can the present be ambiguous if it is not a concept of perspectival experience — sime
Is a social context something we are 'in' , or is it something that we move through? Do we not alter the normative context every time we participate in it? — Joshs
is to talk of 'the present' necessarily to speak of a concept? — sime
the present is at this location" when making plans? — sime
4 doesn't refer to 'present' as time, but to 'present as context. Context and present will always be deeply associated, because a context can be said to define a present, but I think that's only due to that correspondance, and not because context necessarily refers to a present. — Akanthinos
Material resources aren't the only source of wealth. Just think of the digital and service sectors. Some programmer who creates an app and becomes rich didn't exploit any poor person. — Thorongil
That purpose is teleology is what undoes your post. You need to argue that teleology is not purpose. — Banno
In my view the notion of the human is a nature of the human. We can only have this discussion because some pre-interpretation of the word 'human' is in play. So for me the issue looks to be how fixed and/or articulated this notion/nature is. — ff0
So, do you think it moral?
What does your answer tell us about you? — Banno
It remains an is, from which explanation is needed if you are to derive an ought. — Banno
You would still have trouble getting from what is the case about human nature to what we ought do.
Perhaps the right thing to do is to fight our nature.
The naturalistic fallacy. — Banno
You would still have trouble getting from what is the case about human nature to what we ought do. — Banno
"Grounded in" isn't at all the same thing as "determined by." — gurugeorge
If the biology changes, that's like the position of the stake (to which the tether is tied) changing — gurugeorge
given our biology and the given nature of the world in general. — gurugeorge
Our social identity is constructed by adapting our actions to those of others; and even more, knowing me myself as such is only possible by me seeing myself through the eyes of the other (Bakhtin, 1990).
I watched it a long time ago. I think it portrays NOTHING in a negative light - a destroyer - and that's how people generally see it. But, what of the positive aspects of NOTHING? Is NOTHING the prime evil in this world or does it also contain, within it, the seed of a new beginning? — TheMadFool
I think ethics does presuppose a human nature, and also a nature-of-the-world. It presupposes that things and people have innate tendencies, innate patterns of behaviour — gurugeorge
If the physical is defined as that which is susceptible to being understood in the terms of physics, then animals (and possibly plants) cannot rightly be thought to be physical. — Janus