How would you define ethics? — chatterbears
How would you define personal ethics? — chatterbears
How do you differentiate between right and wrong? — chatterbears
I am not certain that I exist, but I believe I exist. It is an assumption. — Waya
I am skeptical that we as human beings can say anything at all of value about the nature of "God" . I know of no reasonable basis to believe that we poses the tools or capabilities to understand such a thing as what "God" can or can't do, be or not be, think or not think. It could well be no more accurate than a puppy's explanation of relativity. — Rank Amateur
Again, you are answering for other humans. I want to know about your personal subjective beliefs. I don't care what other humans are doing. I am in this forum to talk to people directly, not to talk about other people. — chatterbears
A person's ethical stance cannot be as follows:
- Humans should not be owned as property.
- I own black people as slaves. — chatterbears
I am not sure of myself and see no way to prove it. I simply assume I exist and what I see is probably true. — Waya
It is impossible to prove it. — Waya
Life could just be a grand illusion, all the interactions are just products of an overly active imagination. — Waya
As one point made by Hume, what reason do we to have to suppose that things will continue on as they always have? What reason do we have to suppose that the laws of physics will be the same in 500 years? We can't prove this, except to say that that's the way things have always been. — Waya
So it would seem that the sciences will have to import big-picture capacity from philosophy to make overall sense of what they are all up to. (And they should, because they are messing around with very basic, root-level stuff, as well as very high level phenomena.) How should they go about that? — Bitter Crank
I have always seen Philosophy as somewhat similar to math we haven't found a use for yet. It exists for the time being as useless but becomes important when we finally find a use for it. Philosophy is a study of the nature of our own minds and how that relates to the universe, (at least from my perspective) and Science is a study of the universe using our own minds. — TogetherTurtle
If we make art to explain ourselves and do Science to explain our universe, Philosophy is that missing link where we ask questions about ourselves to find out why we explain things. — TogetherTurtle
Philosophy may not result in beautiful pieces of art or life-improving appliances, — TogetherTurtle
I think there is some truth in it, but of course the other side has its claims too. — sign
Yes? No? — Bitter Crank
I don't see professional philosophers being of much help here, because science did bud off quite a while back (several hundred years) and has since developed it's own body of knowledge which, on average, a philosopher-specialist probably doesn't have time to gain in one lifetime. — Bitter Crank
[url=http://]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_to_Methuselah[/url] — sign
Shaw also advocates what he calls homeopathy as a pedagogical method, arguing that society "can only be lamed and enslaved by" education. Shaw's "homeopathic" educational method consisted of lying to students, until the students were able to see through the lies and argue with the teachers.
Philosophy used in that way becomes much too large a blanket to be meaningful. — Bitter Crank
As long as wisdom is relevant, philosophy is relevant. — Tzeentch
If, on the other hand, you restrict "philosophy" to what is studied in departments of philosophy, then no: philosophy is irrelevant except inside a narrow academic ditch. — Bitter Crank
You're defining philosophy so broadly that it applies to everything and thus fails to pick anything out non-trivially. — MindForged
Philosophy itself is worthwhile the same way Literature is worthwhile: studying it won't make you a philosopher any more than studying literature will make you an author. — Bitter Crank
Why, when we have access to so much knowledge and such incredible technology, can life seem so utterly bereft of meaning? I think that's a pretty central question for philosophy. — Wayfarer
I think there's something in the way modern Western culture construes reality that is corrosive and dangerous, to the soul and to the planet. We're seeing that writ large in environmental degradation, and on a personal level in the kinds of problems referred to above. Again, philosophy ought to wrestle with why that is, why despite our amazing technology and privileges, such problems keep occuring. That is very much in keeping with the kinds of questions that Socrates would wander about Athens asking. — Wayfarer
In fact it's the very absence of such questioning that distinguishes what is taught as philosophy in Western universities... But a great deal of what is taught under the banner of philosophy in the Universities is the emaciated corpse of the grand tradition. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure what you're saying here. Philosophy doesn't interest most people, and isn't all that relevant to most problems outside some fairly specific cases. And the boons to, say, quality of life have no direct and obvious connection to philosophy outside an incredibly hamfisted "Everything is philosophy" idea, so I don't think it's unfair. — MindForged
How closely philosophy resembles reality ought to be assessed on the prevalence or lack thereof of realistic positions in philosophy. To my knowledge, the more wacky positions, like idealism, and even more so solipsism and panpsychism, remain a relatively small minority. — S
I don't think that philosophy is better than science as a method for acquiring knowledge. I think that philosophy has been superseded in that regard by science. Philosophy is too varied and at odds with itself, whereas science is more unified and more reliable. — S
Can anyone explain how God is the creator of time and remains changeless? — Walter Pound
That's irrelevant to the point. Years ago, black people were believed to NOT have free-will as part of the equality package. This meant that, LIKE animals, black people did NOT get to determine their circumstances. — chatterbears
There is less utility in animal agriculture than there was in black slavery. Utilitarianism leads to Veganism, not away from it. Veganism benefits the world more than non-Veganism. Health, environment, and the animals themselves. — chatterbears
And by the same "utility" standards, could I not justify slavery by saying "Some humans are bred into slavery (black people), some for companionship (white people), etc..." — chatterbears
But even if it were the case, that humans only treat other humans well, but not other animals, why is that? They would have to provide a justification for why one sentient being is deserving of life, and another sentient being is not. — chatterbears
You keep saying how selfish we are, but do you apply those beliefs into your own actions? Are planning on become Vegan, since it seems to me that you think it would be selfish not to, correct? — chatterbears
You actually have not given me your personal views, at all. — chatterbears
personally, I think all animals should be under partial or complete domestication. This means that, even wild animals should be regulated through family planning methods until their numbers are greatly reduced and manageable. Also, we should tag all animals (if possible) so that we know where and how they are at all times for the sake of regulating their activities, like in times of natural crises or to protect them from human activities that may harm them. — BrianW
Personally, I think causing harm to animals is wrong. — BrianW
Personally, I agree that it's cruel to kill animals for food. — BrianW
How I determine ethics/morality is a combination of:
1. Precedence.
2. Personal analysis.
3. Reciprocity.
This doesn't mean I follow any precedence, just that I take it into consideration. — BrianW
For example, stealing. There's previous precedence that makes stealing a unanimous no no. Also, personally, I'm against it due to the negative effects it has. And, since I would not like to be stolen from, I think it would be wrong to steal from others. — BrianW
You conform to the social norm. — chatterbears
You, again, keep answering for society. Answer for yourself. Do you believe that laws should be based on equality, fairness and justness? — chatterbears
Your opinions are decent but society isn't waiting for an individual to make decisions for them. Animals will have equality when enough of the individuals in the society are capable of perceiving them as equals. So, the question becomes, "how do we develop that capacity in others?"Give a man fish and you'll feed him for a day; teach a man how to fish and he'll never go hungry.
The vast majority of humans already know what mistreatment is. We have put up laws against animal cruelty, especially regarding dogs or cats. There's a massive sense of cognitive dissonance here, where you can understand why a dog needs love and affection, but not why a pig would need the same thing. — chatterbears
Our democracy is not just about equality, but about knowing the laws of nature and basing our decisions on them. — Athena
The value of equality, decency, compassion is written in huge flaming letters in every page of nature and how it nurtures everything despite the favourable and unfavourable flavours of experience it offers. — BrianW
I think we've done a great job to realise that if we don't conform to nature's wisdom we might just be left behind... — BrianW
It is about knowing who and what we are and have, and acting appropriately.
To have such an understanding and to express it harmoniously there is need for intelligence — BrianW
To have such an understanding and to express it harmoniously there is need for intelligence, otherwise, they're just words without significance.It is about knowing who and what we are and have, and acting appropriately.
So thought conceptually divides reality in to the "relative" and the "constant". — Jake