However, economics is not a utilitarian practice, fundamentally, and never should be. Very few people are motivated by anything short of greed, and greed is not an evil. In fact, praxiologically, it is going to be difficult for anyone to make the case that they aren't motivated almost exclusively by what has been termed "greed," which I would, in that specific sense, regard as irrational self-interest, or self-interest with a disregard to people's rightsAs far as a base level ethical framework, Utilitarianism, I hold, should be one of the primary starting points when alayzing any ethical dilemma. And as far as its presitige, it inarguably dominates the theoretical ethical landscape. There isn't a single philosophical framework that I know of that doesn't incorporate a good deal of utilitarian ethics. Period.
Do you think this is true of post-marxist, postmodernist and phenomenological philosophies as well? And what about Nietzsche’s relentless critiques of utilitarianism? I guess what I’m wondering is if utilitarianism is a big enough umbrella ( isnt consequentialiam an even bigger umbrella?) to cover political and ethical positions extending to the far left as well as the right.
— Garrett Travers
Forget Sam Harris -- call General Mills to set up a company to sell intelligence-restoring omelettes in convenient heat-and-eat packages (recyclable, of course) — Bitter Crank
you haven't addressed the topic and have instead waisted our time on an anti-scientific, metaphysical belief that we both know isn't true. As you have addmitted. As it happens you've also pointed out that it is a metaphysical domain, instead of a scientific one, which was literally my point the entire time — Garrett Travers
Metaphysics is not the ground and condition of physics, nor physics the ground and condition for metaphysics. — Cornwell1
So, if you don't agree with this view, and you know I said no scientist abides by it, and you've been arguing for it anyway, even though we were talking about the nature of ethics, then I'm gonna need to know why you've been wasting time on this absolute quackery instead of addressing what was the topic of this forum — Garrett Travers
To place this sentence: "Perhaps philosophy isn’t a good match for you."
In the same statement as this sentence: "In short, mathematical objects are just as “real” as ordinary physical objects."
Is the kind of irony even numbers cannot be used to quantify. Which, judging from your strange, implacable commitment to pseudo-science - which Mathematical Platonism is by definition - qualifies it as just as "real" as ordinary physical objects. — Garrett Travers
But what you're putting forth so far excuses, for example, the way the Nazis treated the Jews during WWII. "The attributes that are to be valued in the Jews were invisible to the Nazis. The Nazis acted ethically, in accordance with their insight into the Jews." — baker
Mathematical objects are independent of intelligent agents and their langauge, thought, and practices... in the Platonic Realm of the Forms....Which doesn't exist. Even from Penrose's own view, his concept of the material world of mathematics is in that of the Forms, not in this material universe. Do you understand now? — Garrett Travers
This has gotten to the point where this topic has been completely derailed by an insistence on asserting that math is an objective fact of the universe, when we all know, and all scientists know, that it isn't. And Penrose is not claiming that it is. — Garrett Travers
Taking up being in the world would never step beyond the boundaries of historical possibilities, just as science could never step radically out of the paradigms that make its thinking possible, just as a person's freedom is bound to personal and cultural history, still. Anything beyond must be familiar in its parts, and any revolutionary shake up can only shake what is contained therein, that is, "shake" language as such. If it is within language that the shaking occurs, then this cannot be beyond language. — Astrophel
Penrose here is not saying that math exists in the universe, but that the truth that can be gleaned from the universe through the implementation of mathematics goes well beyond the confines of what we that it could be used for. Math is more a langauge for reality, rather than reality itself. — Garrett Travers
He's claiming that consciousness has the power to detect reality, not that reality is made of math. It's time to put this to bed — Garrett Travers
The beyond of language? — Astrophel
There are scientists that claim that the universe is comprised of mathematics. Or are you making a distinction between numbers and mathematics?
— T Clark
I'm going to start here by saying: find me one and show me his arguments. — Garrett Travers
it's a false dichotomy to have only one, or only the other. The two are compatible. I am an independent rational mind capable of choosing my own courses of actions, and I am also suspended within a vast network of people all influencing eachother. T — Garrett Travers
Ethics is a tool for optimal behavior. Just as science is a tool for optimal obervation of reality. Just as math is a tool for optimal analysis of patterns, values, and change. Just as Jazz is a tool for optimal musical performance. All of these are conceptual tools by which we appraoch domains of interest for optimal results in each respective domain. — Garrett Travers
I'm not arguing that interpersonal ethics aren't to be considered. It is the people in this forum that are arguing that ethics is only the domain of interpersonal relations. I am arguing that both are encompassed by ethics, and that ethics is first and foremost an individual pursuit, as the Stoics, one school among many, also contend. — Garrett Travers
one has to deal with language and logic, and language is self referential, roughly put. — Astrophel
Also, you're kind of a jerk. — RogueAI
The values of the individual are organized and shaped via interaction with a larger culture, so the individual is already operating within that larger framework in enacting an ethical code. That was Nietzsche’s argument against utilitarianism.
— Joshs
This is completely irrelevant. It doesn't matter how values are shaped or within what culture an individual lives. Each individual chooses to direct their own behavior as they enact it. It isn't possible for others to act for you. — Garrett Travers
Considering that Rand's ethical epistemology is the single most comprehensive and sophisticated epistemology generated since Immanuel Kant, I would say her work is invaluable to my ethical framework, just like Kant's, Hume's, Mill's, Locke's, and all others. However, I'd say hers is far more sophisticated than Hume's and Locke's, and every bit as groundbreaking Kant's and Mill's. — Garrett Travers
Regardless of whether or not any practice is an achievement of culture, it is only individuals that can enact codes of ethics, the whole cannot do so, because the whole does not have brain or cpu, only indiviudals do. — Garrett Travers
Regardless
My whole point here was that relegating ethics exclusively to interpersonal relations is both binary and demonstrably inaccurate across ethical frameworks. Ethics is the domain of both arenas, public and private. — Garrett Travers
That’s right: Right actions are those that are likely to result in the greatest happiness of the greatest number.Jeremy Bentham and Mills divised an ethical framework to cover both individual and interpersonal ethics (Utilitarianism). — Garrett Travers
The Stoic ethical framework is almost exclusively predicated upon individual behavior. — Garrett Travers
The Objectivist framework, being the most comprehensive ethical framework to date - with perhaps the exception of Kantian ethics, is predicated almost exclusively on individual flourishing and well-being. — Garrett Travers
ideas such as self-flourishing and individual well-being have never been divorced from ethics in any significant, or historical capacity. I — Garrett Travers
Morality encompassess the behaviors I engage in privately, as I have the power to impact my life in ways both beneficial and deleterious, and because I am confined to my body and am its sole proprietor with sole responsibility over my well-being — Garrett Travers
Phenomenology puts the burden of meaning at the level of basic questions to the "things themselves" which is, in my thinking, reduction away from argument and analysis and toward intuitional givens. The pain in the kidney is, I argue, foundational, unassailable, absolute. — Astrophel
All this 'being in the world, and sein und dasein - is metaphysical hocus pocus. Any philosophy worth reading begins with epistemology; and the epitome of epistemology is scientific method. — karl stone
If by that you mean reality is complex, then I agree - which is part of what makes it so astounding. There are 26 letters on a keyboard, from which can be constructed about 200,000 english words, that can be strung into a virtually infinite number of meaningful sentences. Similarly, there are 118 chemical elements, and four fundamental forces - and that's before we get into quantum physics, from which all the diversity of life on earth is written. If you're not amazed by that - and feel some yearning need to string up philosophical fairy lights and set off fireworks to make reality special, then you're missing something — karl stone
Uncompromising Realists are assuming that they can observe the world from an objective perspective, which eliminates the subjective biases of the observer. Although, objectivity is the ideal goal of Science, it's an unattainable perfection. — Gnomon
Pain, e.g., is intuited entirely outside of how time and its flow is construed, regarless of it being an event IN time. I would put it like this: there is no way to conceive the structure of time such that it has any bearing whatever on the immediate experience of affect. — Astrophel
when one lacks the insight into another's capabilities, one doesn't know thusly, one doesn't know one lacks said insight. Instead, one is convinced that one already has the right insight into another's capabilities..
"You are inferior, and therefore, I can beat you, I can take from you, I can kill you, and you must let me do so".
It's an approach to ethics that externalizes the standard of ethical behavior, making it the responsibility of the other for how others treat them. It says, "You are responsible for how I treat you. If you want to be treated better, you need to prove to me that you deserve it." — baker
Thinking about the temporal experience of listening to music, or of reading a novel, can be misleading, though, if we think of the perceptual process as something that takes place wholly during the very short duration of a "present moment" and if we think of this momentary "present moment" of experience as being merely externally constrained by the past through the exercise of short term memory and by the imaginative anticipation of a future experience that has not yet occurred. — Pierre-Normand
As a pragmatist, I assert that no philosophical position is meaningful unless it has concrete implications for phenomena present in the everyday world, life, and experience of normal human beings. — T Clark
Philosophers mostly talk about knowledge as a proposition that can be true or false. In a pragmatic view, knowledge is a conceptual model that can be accurate or less accurate. — T Clark
A day-old infant has very limited cognition skills. So, by your logic, ethical treatment of very young infants should likewise be limited — SophistiCat
We don't know Time via our physical senses, but only with our sixth sense of Reason, which relates one thing or state to another. Time is not Real, but Ideal, a metaphor in the mind, not a flowing river or immobile ice-cube out there. — Gnomon
Leaves the question: Is there any mystery left, when we analyze time? Isn't it perfectly clear? Critique welcome — Raymond
, I am wary of the feeling that comes along with this that there is something arbitrary about the relation between the individual and the purpose they pursue, the feeling that we ought generally to think of purposes as choices or preferences. That feels weak to me. Oxygen is useful and valuable relative to the purpose of the respiratory system, which is in turn useful and valuable relative to the purpose of remaining a going concern. Swell. But that’s not a choice or a preference in any simplistic way. (And I want to say that, the fact that we can choose to prevent ourselves from breathing, doesn’t mean that each moment we don’t we must have chosen to continue. Bollocks.) — Srap Tasmaner
