So virtue ethics might well be seen to involve personal development that does not have a social implication. Virtue has a broader scope than morality. — Banno
The sad part is that in order to teach children to become socially functional and responsible adults we must untrain them from simple and pure delights. And enable them with critical thinking, a healthy skepticism, and distrust, so that they do not get exploited or bullied by others that are more clued into adult conduct - broad/large-scale reasoning. — Benj96
Because psychological wants have no reality? — javra
If wants are real, then there will necessarily be truth-apt propositions in reference to them. — javra
then what would a "want" entail other than that it be fulfilled — javra
either way, they seek fulfillment as far as I know. — javra
"underlying want", when a person wants to turn on the radio it's usually because of an underlying want to hear what the radio is playing. — javra
On what grounds to you conclude that sentience does not have a base underlying want that motivates all others? — javra
If you are really interested in the history of education you will love reading Paul Monroe, Ph.D.'s book "A Text Book on the History of Education published in 1910 or James Mulhern's book "A History of Education" copyright in 1946 and 1959. — Athena
I claim that I do not include myself in that "we". Of course I think illness is bad in the sense of unfortunate, don't wish it to happen, but without a conscious agency, I don't see how it can be wrong. "Illness happens" is just a morally neutral fact, like "Rocks are hard".I claimed that we ascribe value judgments to it: as in, it is of value or not of value ... right / good or wrong / bad in this sense ... — javra
Psychologically speaking, self-cutting is intentionally done for the purposes of inflicting bodily self-harm intended to result in various degrees of emotive euphoria. — javra
So, you hold that wilful self-harm is/ should be evaluated not according to its effect, but the subject's motivation? Does that mean that's it's okay to damage one's body for decoration or tribal identification, but not okay to do it for stress relief?It is not done so as to decorate oneself, apropos to tattoos and studs. — javra
Yes, I think it's not just possible, but usual. Ethics are set out in systems, with philosophical basis. Any transaction - and even many isolated actions - can be judged according to the tenets of the ethical system to which the actor subscribes.Is it not logically possible that ethical judgments can be correct or incorrect? — javra
No, on two counts. I already stated that it's not a question of truth. And it's not universally shared. I don't believe in a disembodied 'underlying want' that can seek fulfillment. Sentient entities need things and want things, sometimes conflicting things, and seek to resolve those conflicts through the application of ethical rules. As I already mentioned with torture, it's probable that the majority of the human race considers torture a generally bad, undesirable thing, but condones it in certain circumstances. (Or we wouldn't allow it at all, anywhere.)Such that if one judges that torture is bad, this ethical judgment can be truth-apt relative to the reality of a universally shared, underlying want that seeks to be fulfilled? — javra
Well, that's one long-standing philosophical debate closed! — SophistiCat
For instance, is it right, or else good, that mental aberrations occur? — javra
Ethics is based on well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe what humans ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues.
Yes.Is the person's self-cutting neither good nor bad? — javra
In this case, I'm not sure either that responsibility can attributed, or that harm has been done.But in a different sense of the word, who else is technically responsible for the act of self-harm but the individual themselves? — javra
But here’s one possible exception to the rule of thumb: a sole castaway on an island with no hope of rescue cuts themselves to relieve stress. Since there’s no interaction between persons, is this action then good strictly on account of it being the personal preference of the individual? I know that various intellectualized answers could be provided, but also believe that in our gut we all sense there’s something wrong with so doing — javra
Are you saying the 1958 National Defense Education Act was not a fundamental change? — Athena
Where? When? How long? For which children?Education in the US was modeled after Athens's education for well-rounded individual growth. — Athena
Need we mention the vast differences in church-sponsored education, in racially segregated education, in income levels?Apprenticeships began in America in the 1600's and was an early form of education. Since coming to the New World, the Puritans were needing skilled workers. These apprenticeships were developed to teach young boys a trade that they would continue into adulthood.
Forms of child labor, including indentured servitude and child slavery, have existed throughout American history. As industrialization moved workers from farms and home workshops into urban areas and factory work, children were often preferred, because factory owners viewed them as more manageable, cheaper, and less likely to strike.
The National Child Labor Committee’s work to end child labor was combined with efforts to provide free, compulsory education for all children, and culminated in the passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938, which set federal standards for child labor.
Does the OP endorse the statement "torture is bad"? I should hope so. — SophistiCat
Are locutions such as "torture is bad" truth-apt? — SophistiCat
I am thinking the world wars, fundamentally changed the US attitude about war and this change is expressed in the 1958 National Defense Education Act. — Athena
At the ends of WWII, hoovering up German military eggheads plus access to all the British innovations didn't hurt their technological odds, either.In 1882, the U.S. Navy consisted of many outdated ship designs. Over the next decade, Congress approved building multiple modern steel-hulled armored cruisers and battleships, and by around the start of the 20th century had moved from twelfth place in 1870 to fifth place in terms of numbers of ships.
Given that it is good to help those in need, I don't see a problem in saying that it is true that it is good to help those in need. — Banno
Your bias on what is important military information discourages me in discussing the military situation with you. I think it is a mistake to believe things are as they always were for the US. — Athena
If you believe there are no moral truths, you must also believe there is no valid reason to want anything. — Leftist
Question: in light of your own definition of morality / ethics, do you think people invoke morality on their own side of the argument, despite its irrelevance, in order to unfairly strengthen their arguments? — god must be atheist
People may quite readily generalize their own rooted belief to all of "morality" without intending to be unfair in their arguments. If I were pretending to be an uncritical Christian right now, I would fall back on the biblical commandments (a sterling example of non-empathy) as a universal basis for both ethics and morality. The same would be true of anyone who holds an ingrained, internalized world-view.an individual’s guiding principles and personal values that influence their notion of right and wrong
One shouldn't confuse explanations for morality being the way it is, and reasons for acting morally - that would be a naturalistic fallacy. — SophistiCat
But that (they argue) is a mistake, because for a moral claim to be true, there ultimately needs to be something out in the (real) world that has the property of being good or bad or otherwise morally flavored, and there are no such things. — SophistiCat
Which group if either do you believe are most likely to try to "break free". — Benj96
If I was to use "bad" in the loose sense, it would be for things such as this: — Down The Rabbit Hole
I will continue to eat meat without an ounce of guilt — I like sushi
In everyday life I am happy to use good and bad in the loose sense of what my preference is — Down The Rabbit Hole
- and a decisive majority, or a sufficiently powerful minority of them express a preference, they write that into a constitution upon which the code of law is subsequently based. When a majority of people - or a minority with majority political clout - share a preference that falls within the parameters of the constitution, it's written into law. At any given moment in time, some of the citizens disobey the law and are deemed by fellow citizens to be doing "wrong", and therefore punished. When a majority or substantial minority no longer share that preference, the law is disregarded and eventually challenged; struck off the books or amended.to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them
Value judgements have connection to truth in that value judgements can be correct or incorrect. You can't just randomly decide something actually should be done, or shouldn't be done, and be correct. — Leftist
"The community creates moral truths."
I attribute this argument to Michael and Vera Mont.
It was not explicitly stated that the community creates moral truths, but that's the implication. — Leftist
Even the OP asked about people going directly to the slaughterhouse rather than prancing about in a forest with a rifle. — I like sushi
Hunting is for the romantic and is a necessary part of managing wildlife in some situations. — I like sushi
But what if at a butcher you had a holding pen. And had to kill the animal yourself. The butcher would then prepare the meat for you to take home. — Benj96
And that's [that many meat-eaters care to hunt] the kernel that vegans hang their argument on. — Benj96
but I have no male friends I can think of, past or present, that would shy away from it. — I like sushi
Probably because most of them have not actually done it and experienced the mess and the smell or had to skin and gut anything. But then, many have served in the armed forces - women too, now - and been inured to violent death.Interesting. I wonder why that is. — Benj96
I will continue to eat meat without an ounce of guilt and scoff at those who simply regurgitate swaddle they saw on some twitter/youtube/instagram horror show of manipulation misinformation born out of boredom and attention-seeking arm waving hysteria. — I like sushi
Moral claim: "I wish to cause the least harm to the greatest number of people possible".
What is wrong with that moral claim? — Benj96
Quantity over quality. Similar to mistaking sound for substance. ie. "I would prefer to destroy the least amount of schools as opposed to the most amount of brothels because destroying buildings is generally considered immoral therefore it is the moral choice to make", etc. — Outlander
I never needed a salary to teach, I needed a salary to live. — universeness
But do we not kill more animals through the easily justified demand of conveniently buying a pack of burgers say, in the supermarket. — Benj96
Therefore, you have no logical reason to stop me from hammering a toothpick under your fingernail. — Leftist
I think the difference between you and me on this issue is one of emphasis, not primarily substance. — T Clark
I would happily pay extra to kill the animal I eat because I find it more upsetting not knowing how the animal I am eating died. — I like sushi
Unfortunately, I can not copy and paste the charts of US military spending — Athena
That's right. Not at first. The ambitions grew with the successes; since the Monroe Doctrine, their scope and reach kept growing until they were a World Power, Big Four, Policeman of the World, NATO boss, The West, the top banana. That's expensive. Especially when you start losing.And I offer this evidence that the US was not interested in being the military power it is today... — Athena
How did the capitalists break the system? — Athena
Do you really? How did demand for oil cause the 1929 market crash?I think our economy goes up and down in relation to the supply of oil and its demand... — Athena
The point I've been trying to make is that each community, each school system, should have input in deciding what is and isn't taught in its own schools; what is and isn't included in its library. — T Clark
Yes, I fully agree that 's an integral part of the learning experience, just as contact with peers is an integral part of the socialization process. I'm only proposing that it alternate with solitary study (computer-aided homework) and take place in different settings and with a variety of teachers, as well as different cohorts for each activity, rather than the same little flock (with their same pecking order), presided over by the same adult (with his or her same competence level and preconceptions) in all subjects.I still think person to person, teacher to student, contact is needed for true learning. — T Clark
Now back to Roosevelt and the New Deal. Hoover and Roosevelt worked together to give us a fascist form of government. That is leaving property in the hands of private owners, but regulating industry. — Athena
We are as focused on war as the Prussians who lived for the love of war as much as the US lived for the love of God and family. — Athena
Charles III. I quite like him, actually, but he can't control the tories in his own country any more than he could here, and the tories are controlled by moneyed patrons. Of course it's the same elite - they just call themselves CEO instead of OBE and maybe they did their thieving through different methods - the top 0.01% who own 50% of everything, including governments and information.Their power has been in decline since the days of the first nations, otherwise you would still be ruled by a foreign King Charles II. — universeness
What I meant was that what either of us prefers doesn't matter. It's the community's values that should be taken into account. — T Clark
Another thought. I think any centralized, standardized education program will be subject to political and social pressure to conform to a particular vision of what education should be. That's already a problem with regular school systems. — T Clark
I would add a few more outdoor and creative activities, but I think some version of this flexible arrangement would serve children's far better than sitting in plastic chair all day long.They don't attend school but they do still get together physically in groups, when they can, for the purposes of live debate, physical education etc. They visit hospitals, charity orgs, parks, museums etc. The cities become their school grounds so to speak. At home, they are taught via Virtual reality systems, augmented reality systems and just by networking with software and live teacher/pupil conferencing — universeness
Better to plan for a better future than to mourn the bad behaviours of the past or present. — universeness
We could. But "we" don't want to.Do you think we could create a very high quality, economically viable, reliable, balanced social and academic, virtual reality, home based education system, that would do the heavy lifting in nurturing all the children in the world from year 1 to year 21? I think we probably could. — universeness
I agree with the level of complexity you cite within the issues you raise but I think the solution may lie in some kind of AI/expert systems, which will help humans deal with such complexity and will indeed allow the kind of nuanced, individualised approach, which will remove the chance of personal human prejudices being applied, which cause unjust and imbalanced actions. — universeness
Sorry, I left a post that i had thought had been pertinent, but it was not; I talked about the issue of morality vs empathy. Apologies. — god must be atheist
