All your disagreements here seem to consist in one what I would see as a misunderstanding. Ethics is about how best to live; that is what it consists in. Obviously though this will be context-based. If you want to live alone, then nothing I have said about participating in community applies to you. (Having said that an argument could be made that a solitary life can never be the best life for a human being, given that we are social creatures). — Janus
So, to repeat what I have said in other posts, if you want to participate in community then exploitation is going to be a stumbling block to your aim. Most people do want to participate, so exploitation is ethically wrong for them. If you are a criminal who lives on the fringes, then this will not apply to you, except that if you want participate in a criminal sub-culture it will apply in that context, but not in the larger context of the whole society. — Janus
Ethics and moral philosophy are not really much different except that moral philosophy is usually taken to involve others; whereas ethics does not necessarily by definition do so. There's no point trying to browbeat me into agreeing that I am not doing meta-ethics and that I am thus "off-topic" because that would only be so on your interpretation of a definition, which I don't accept. I see nothing in the wiki article you quoted which is out of accordance with what I am doing here. — Janus
Meta-ethics is the branch of ethics that seeks to understand the nature of ethical properties, statements, attitudes, and judgments. Meta-ethics is one of the three branches of ethics generally studied by philosophers, the others being normative ethics and applied ethics.
While normative ethics addresses such questions as "What should I do?", evaluating specific practices and principles of action, meta-ethics addresses questions such as "What is goodness?" and "How can we tell what is good from what is bad?", seeking to understand the nature of ethical properties and evaluations.
Some theorists argue that a metaphysical account of morality is necessary for the proper evaluation of actual moral theories and for making practical moral decisions; others reason from opposite premises and suggest that studying moral judgments about proper actions can guide us to a true account of the nature of morality.
According to Richard Garner and Bernard Rosen,[1] there are three kinds of meta-ethical problems, or three general questions:
What is the meaning of moral terms or judgments? (moral semantics)
What is the nature of moral judgments? (moral ontology)
How may moral judgments be supported or defended? (moral epistemology)
A question of the first type might be, "What do the words 'good', 'bad', 'right' and 'wrong' mean?" (see value theory). The second category includes questions of whether moral judgments are universal or relative, of one kind or many kinds, etc. Questions of the third kind ask, for example, how we can know if something is right or wrong, if at all. Garner and Rosen say that answers to the three basic questions "are not unrelated, and sometimes an answer to one will strongly suggest, or perhaps even entail, an answer to another."[1]
A meta-ethical theory, unlike a normative ethical theory, does not attempt to evaluate specific choices as being better, worse, good, bad, or evil; although it may have profound implications as to the validity and meaning of normative ethical claims. An answer to any of the three example questions above would not itself be a normative ethical statement. — Wikipedia
I should have amplified the question to not only ask whether it is sensible to think that people should follow their passions, but also to ask whether it is sensible to believe that they do follow their passions and only their passions. — Janus
The purpose of ethics is to understand how best to live, and to practice in accordance with that understanding. So, the first principle for anyone who wants to live in a community is how best to harmonize with the other members of the community. — Janus
I just don't think the idea that ethics consists in individual's feelings alone is adequate to give a comprehensive account. — Janus
If you want to participate in a community then you should care, not only about yourself, but about the community; otherwise you are not really participating, but exploiting. If you want to benefit from the community without giving anything in return, without caring about the other members or the welfare of the whole community, then you are basically a disingenuous, even dishonest, individual. This is on account of the fact that you could not be honest about your intentions, because if you were you would be shunned. That might work for you for a while but it cannot but end badly. — Janus
Also I think it is an ethical truth that if you exploit others you also exploit yourself. — Janus
This cannot be the best way to live, and if ethics is about how best to live, then it cannot be ethical at all, by any measure. — Janus
Is it really sensible to think that everyone should be ruled by their passions? — Janus
Thanks, I appreciate that. There seems so few sense makers here that ive wondered if it isnt just a matter of the medium or miscommunication of some kind but...how in the fuck can you know when most everyones not making sense!? Lol
I dont even care if some is ignorant or dumb, who isnt ignorant or dumb about something, but its not recognising ones own limitations or not having the humility to have an open mind to being wrong I find truly irksome. Plus, I don’t WANT to sound like an arrogant prick but...so many being so wrong. Whats a guy to do? — DingoJones
You recuse yourself and the human race ceases to exist. Good job. :wink: — I like sushi
The human race will die unless a billion people are killed tomorrow. You are the world leader and have to decide who dies. — I like sushi
I know, I just had to let the steam out a bit or my head would explode. After reading through the responses in the “kill 1 billion” thread Ive began wondering why im here at all. Screw the “forest for the trees”, I cant see the worthwhile discussion for the philosophically brain dead. What are you guys up to in the “Morality” thread? 64 pages? Astounding fortitude sir. I do not have it in me. — DingoJones
I am simply telling you I am not a theist nor an atheist. — Frank Apisa
Such as? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
In the name of baby jesus this is getting SO tiresome.
Not believing in at least one god is what atheism means! You have just declared you are not an atheist by describing your atheism!
Help me Odin, Zeus, Thor, Oprah, Hubberd...fucking anyone take my hand and guide me to where something so simple can be understood! Fuck!
Is it just the internet?! Please oh holy god of holyness, tell me its just the internet and this isnt what passes for a critical thinking person in the world at large.
Phew. Done. Carry on, sorry you had to be the back breaking straw frank, but THINK about what you are saying! — DingoJones
When a sincere speaker says "I promise to plant a rose garden on Sunday", then it follows that there ought be a rose garden planted on Sunday.
You disagree, apparently. — creativesoul
"It is like trying to throw a feather; for some things, breath is better than strength; stronger". — StreetlightX
Madness is to immerse oneself in one's imagination; it is to destroy reality, and build it anew, each breath one takes. — Louco
There are those who chose religion, and I respect their choice. — Louco
But I do find it disrespectful to confound these things. Religious folk are the stiffeners of thought; madmen are facilitators of imagination. When you say religion is madness, you make a disservice to madness. — Louco
What is not absurd? That small balls hit each other and that builds reality? Or that spirit becomes flesh? — Louco
Madness is just another option. Up to you to take it. — Louco
Take gravity, for instance: we fall down when risen above the ground. This happens because of the faith in that what has risen, must fall. — Louco
We can fly using planes and helicopters: it is the faith in scientific machines that makes them fly. — Louco
Yeah...like the lack of evidence that there are any sentient beings on any planet circling the nearest 25 stars to Sol...
...is evidence that no sentient beings live on any of those planets.
Good grief.
What are you doing in a philosophy forum? — Frank Apisa
"The evidence!"
What a laugh.
Identify two pieces of unambiguous evidence pointing one way or the other on the issue. — Frank Apisa
Should have been "feelings." — Frank Apisa
I am not her for that. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I am NOT a theist. — Frank Apisa
it is a high vibrational energy — 0 thru 9
This is a big aside, but don't people realize that when they write so many long posts in such a short period of time that most of what they're writing isn't going to be addressed or even digested very well (if read at all)? — Terrapin Station
In other threads, and on other forums, I have found that the most common 'strain' of philosophers have a very low tolerance for ambiguity, seeking to strike it down wherever they find it. Which is not very open-minded either. — Pattern-chaser
You've turned into an equivalent of the antinatalists with your obsessive, daily (if not more frequently) starting of threads that are all essentially arguing the same thing. — Terrapin Station
You can't have an explanation for a phenomena which fails to account for its cause. — Devans99
