Nothing else available for what morality ultimately depends on than subjective dispositions. — Terrapin Station
Hence the word ultimately. That wasn't just there for decoration. — Terrapin Station
It is, because nothing else is available — Terrapin Station
Yeah, on my body. How I feel about the situation at hand/what my natural disposition is.
Again, this is ultimately what everyone does. — Terrapin Station
I intentionally try to intuit how I feel about a particular situation, simply as that particular situation. — Terrapin Station
No. Because I think that seeing any moral principle as a trump card (so you're falling back on it) always results in ridiculous policies. — Terrapin Station
and I don't use the terms differently . . . well, not that I even use the phrase "moral code") — Terrapin Station
Sure, it could. — Terrapin Station
Only if you’re looking for one - ie. if you’re motivated by fear.
Any statement of ethical principle is inaccurate, whether it’s positive or negative. — Possibility
dispositions or intuited feelings about interpersonal behavior. — Terrapin Station
Relativists or Pragmatists — Mark Dennis
Those who feel that they cannot sustain such an impression (again whether real but forgotten or not real makes no difference) and so had better go with a robust defence of auto didactia — Isaac
But I don’t think it comes down to ‘DON’T’ statements, to be honest. — Possibility
all aspects of human thought and belief are unique to humans: — uncanni
I always thought that ethics was not defined and it is undefineable. Because it is societal indoctrination, which does not even stick with everyone, and it can hugely differ from society to society, as it is culture-dependent. So how do you prepare to defend a thesis about something undefinable and undefendable? — god must be atheist
The theory works as a model, it's just that the model doesn't quite fit reality. — staticphoton
If "truth" is subjective — Harry Hindu
That is the thing, the Q theory by itself holds water, — staticphoton
One fair example would be the wave/particle duality of matter. We can express it with abstract artifices such as quantum theory, but the brain is incapable of visualizing how a particle can be in one place and everywhere at the same time. — staticphoton
No matter how much information you get there will always be something unprovable within your system. — Sam26
Knowledge by inference or proof comes to an end, i.e., not every premise can be shown by inference to be true. — Sam26
For instance you could not count General Relativity, Quantum mechanics, and Buddhism as percentages of the whole, since they all paint a different universe/reality. — staticphoton
I think that would be a valid approach, as long as the "pieces" match. — staticphoton
I would have to go with the greatest minds of course, they represent the upper limit of human cognitive ability. — staticphoton
2. There are aspects of the universe and its workings that are simply beyond the capability of human reasoning. We will continually formulate more sophisticated models to explain the universe, however if somehow the true universal laws were presented to us, it would be beyond our capability to decypher them. The fundamental workings of the universe will forever remain a mystery that the human mind is not capable of grasping. — staticphoton