as thing-in-itself — jancanc
So, I think Levinas might have said that trying to pin ethics down to something like a "human nature" is a form of violence to the Other. By doing so, we'd be trying to ground ethics in the familiar and intelligible when the Other is not this way. — darthbarracuda
something innate while simultaneously pointing to or articulating what is fundamentally distinctive about us — bloodninja
Morality is our necessary "crowd control" system. It's our built in (we have to learn it) self-control mechanism. "Built in" but not pre-programmed. It has to be taught and learned. But "taught and learned" doesn't preclude a built in, biologically based capacity for crowd-control and self-regulation. — Bitter Crank
If HN is as I understood you to mean, then HN is such an obvious and uncontroversial fact, so bound up with our background knowledge about the world and ourselves, that it is hard to even separate it out, so that we could evaluate its specific relationship with morality. You may as well say that for there to be human morality there have to be humans. — SophistiCat
You might like Rorty. He tackles exactly this in C,I, and S. We can understand ourselves as groundless. We simply want a certain kind of society, one that maximizes freedom and minimizes cruelty, for instance. I don't find Rorty completely convincing, but he tackles exactly the issue you mention. — t0m
It's funny. As I write above, I see this as an issue that can be explained by our physical nature and you focus more on our minds, perhaps our souls, but we come out in very similar places about how it affects our idea of what it means to be human. — T Clark
I think for something to count as human nature it has to be something innate while simultaneously pointing to or articulating what is fundamentally distinctive about us (so DNA is completely useless). Examples of this innate human nature are Plato's tripartite theory of the human soul, Aristotle's claim that man is the rational animal, Chomsky's ideas about language, perhaps Nietzsche's the will to power, etc. The difference between possessing an innate nature and not is that if the former is true then we can ground our moral claims and give them strong normative force. If the latter is true, and there is no innate human nature, then it appears that we have nothing to ground our moral claims in so they have weak normative force; we would be a social construction just like the socially constructed moral claims. Morality would be completely meaningless and arbitrary. To the question why be good? there would be no sufficient answer. I hope this clears things up :)What do you mean by "human nature," anyway? What would be the difference between possessing and not possessing "human nature?" — SophistiCat
I think he does think morality is what we would call objective. The nazis used rational means, sure, but having rationality doesn't make anyone virtuous by Aristotle's, or anyone's standards. In other words, rationality is necessary but not sufficient. There are lots of rational psychopaths, for example. In his view, there was a lot more that went into someone being virtuous than merely being rational. E.g., emotions, intention, disposition...Does Aristotle also mean that morality is objective? — TheMadFool
It indicates that man is the kind of entity whose only fixity is being-always-in-progress — t0m
we all have our own individual natures even while we all partake of a common human nature. — javra
is a cop-out.Everyone observes life differently — Rich
Only as possible intent to action, but it is past as it happens. — Rich
a flow of memory pressing into the present — Rich
It is true we are an amalgamation of our pasts. However when we are in the "present" we are always directed towards a future. The way I'm thinking, the present seems to be something that is never really experienced, more of a made up theoretical fiction. The objective ticking away of time is not an experience I have ever had. What I experience is constantly being directed towards the future while being informed by a past, a past that includes understandings, moods, significances, language, other people, happenings, meanings, etc. It is only upon the past that I can press into the future, but if I could no longer press into the future (if I died) then the past could not exist through me. Does this not make sense?I am an amalgamation of my past; my body is the food I've eaten, my beliefs are the ideas, experiences, and concepts that my mind has absorbed, my memories are an unreliable catalogue of my subjective experiences which are no longer the present. — Noble Dust
But by whose standards is this wrong? By your contemporary culture's generic norms?As we (society) evolve we ascend into higher forms of morality, whereas in the ancient times certain cultures would enslave others or oppress others we can now see from history that this is wrong and advance. — MountainDwarf
Are you xenaphobic?Un-evolved societies are not as moral as technologically advanced societies. — MountainDwarf