Comments

  • Is morality just glorified opinion?
    This would only argue that we have common intuitions about morality. Is that the same thing as having an objective morality?

    And what of the cases where someone has intuitions that don’t match the majority? I think all of us have a few of those. What do we do about them?
  • Is morality just glorified opinion?
    This would be a meta ethical question.

    it's pretty easily to prove that falseDarkneos

    we made up morality (among other things).Darkneos

    Would be the sort of things moral realists would disagree with you on. I’m not one, so I don’t know how one would disagree. And I don’t think there are many moral realists on the forum either.

    You seem to be a moral anti-realist. Someone who thinks questions of morality make no sense in the first place. That nothing is right or wrong. Not many like you around either.

    Then there are moral relativists who define what’s “right” or “wrong” relative to something or other (the individual, the society, etc). Something can be wrong now and right later. This seems to be what applies to the majority of posters here from what I’ve seen.
  • What's the biggest lie you were conditioned with?
    That the more difficult something is to believe the more “genuine” or “correct” it is.

    A morphing from “Truth can hurt” to “What hurts is the truth”.

    Don’t know if anyone else shares this.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    What is happening is that I have. And you are incapable or unwilling to recognize that I have.

    And I have done so enough that I can sleep easily knowing that I have done all I could. And either you are simply incapable of understanding it or unwilling to. I cannot help in either case.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    No what I mean is that you are trolling or inept.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Yea... You're definitely trolling. Or just inept. I can't help in either case.

    Have a good one.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    What does 'a difference between an intuition and reality cannot be afforded' mean? It's gibberish.Bartricks

    I have explained it before. Can be afforded for the purposes of survival.

    Just express it in this form

    1. If P, then Q
    2. P
    3. Therefore Q
    Bartricks

    Why do you make it sound like that's the only form an argument can be expressed?

    Put your second premise in that form. Try. Try to deduce that we are morally responsible.

    Let me put it another way:

    If A -> C and B -> C and C is true, we cannot conclude A or B definitively correct? (We can conclude "A or B" but we cannot conclude "A" or conclude "B", not enough evidence as either could have led to C)

    Now replace A with "We are morally responsible", B with "We are not morally responsible" and C with "We believe we are morally responsible"

    You use C to conclude A definitively. Which is fallacious.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    can you read? Sure I’ll make it simpler for your comprehension.

    1- If a difference between an intuition and reality cannot be afforded we have good reason to believe the intuition is correct. On the other hand, if a difference can be afforded we do not have such a reason.

    2- A difference between our moral intuitions and what is actually moral can be afforded.

    3- therefore we cannot conclude that our moral intuitions indicate reality.

    4- Therefore your second premise is unjustified.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Your premise 2 is fallacious. You cannot say that we are morally responsible simply because we seem to be and that it is metaphysically possible. As it would have seemed to us that we are morally responsible regardless of whether or not we actually are.

    You tried to refute this by bringing up epistemology. But epistemology is not in the same boat as moral intuitions. Epistemological intuitions, if wrong, would get is killed. So we have good reason to think they’re correct.
    khaled
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    I have.

    Deductively valid argumentBartricks

    False.

    Nope. You just can't construct a deductively valid argument that has the negation of one of my premises as a conclusion and has rationally compelling premises, can you?Bartricks

    I can and I have. Your inability or unwillingness to recognize it is not my issue.

    I’ll go over it again one last time.

    Your premise 2 is fallacious. You cannot say that we are morally responsible simply because we seem to be and that it is metaphysically possible. As it would have seemed to us that we are morally responsible regardless of whether or not we actually are.

    You tried to refute this by bringing up epistemology. But epistemology is not in the same boat as moral intuitions. Epistemological intuitions, if wrong, would get is killed. So we have good reason to think they’re correct.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Oh. You’re trolling. I see now.

    Well have a good one. You got me good.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Yes it does. Christ.Bartricks

    Then we have as good evidence as we will ever have that uncaused causers don’t exist.

    If looking for something and not finding it is evidence then uncaused causers are probably the most sought after and not found thing humanity has ever seen.

    No parallel at all.Bartricks

    Let’s see about that.

    Did you conclude that uncaused causers exist despite us searching for them for centuries and not finding them? Yes.

    Did you give an example of one existing (or even its effects)? No.

    Did you ascribe them powers that contradict our physical theories? Yes.

    So I don’t see how there is no parallel.

    You've just ineptly dismissed all rational intuitionsBartricks

    I told you why I didn’t. You didn’t address it.

    You wanted to make the case that epistemological intuitions would fall under the list of things that would have evolved anyways regardless of their truth value. However that is not the case. They’re in the same boat about mathematical intuitions. If we’re wrong about them we perish.

    The rest was just you question beggingly expressing your conventional views.Bartricks

    If you seriously consider the laws of conservation are under doubt that would put you in the same boat as flat earthers. A staunch refusal to consider scientific evidence as anything more than “convention”. Completely dismissing the effort and rigor by which these theories were confirmed time and time again. All in favor of wanting to assert that what seems to be the case is in fact the case.

    Even worse than flat earthers. Because the thing you want to assert is the case due to it seeming the case can be shown to be dismissible. Since it would seem the case regardless of what the case actually is due to its evolutionary advantages.

    Present valid arguments that have the negation of my premisesBartricks

    I did. The premise that we are morally responsible can be dismissed.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Erm, yes there is.Bartricks

    Which is?

    It makes no sense to say you have empirical evidence something doesn’t exist. You can only have a lack of evidence that something exists.

    What. On. Earth. Are. You. On. About?Bartricks

    If someone concludes that unicorns exist, despite us searching for them for centuries and not finding them, and yet is unable to provide an example of a unicorn existing, would it be reasonable to believe them? Especially when he ascribes them powers that contradict our physical theories?

    Now replace “unicorn” with “uncaused causers”

    Premise 2 says that if I am morally responsible, then not everything I do traces to external causes, yes?Bartricks

    No. Premise 2 is that you are morally responsible.

    I’m challenging this:

    Am I morally responsible? Well, I now have every reason to think I am - for my reason represents me to be - and no reason to think I am not. If you think otherwise, you need to show some fault in the first leg.

    So, this premise is now one I have every reason to think is true, and none to think is false:

    2. I am morally responsible.
    Bartricks

    I am challenging it by showing that the intuition that we are morally responsible can be dismissed. Because it is one of the intuitions that would have evolved anyways regardless of what is actually the case.

    This is not the case with mathematical intuitions or epistemology. If we are wrong about either of those we die. If we are wrong about what we morally ought to do, we just survive as sinners not knowing they are sinners.

    In other words, we do NOT have every reason to think it is true, as it would have seemed true regardless of its actual truth value in reality (because it is what is evolutionarily advantageous)

    b) you're too conventional and thus you think that if a conclusion is unconventional that itself is evidence that it is false. I mean, can you seriously not see how that assumption is question begging? Seriously?Bartricks

    Let's establish a few things, shall we.

    First off, do you recognize that if something contradicts the laws of conservation of energy and momentum that we have pretty good reason to disbelieve it?

    And secondly, do you recognize that “uncaused causers” contradict those laws?

    I am not using “convention” (I would say physical theory is a bit more than convention) to conclusively say that uncaused causers don’t exist. I am saying that it is more reasonable to assume they don’t exist than that they do. Since we have centuries of searching for such things and not finding any.

    On the other hand, the only reason (you provided) to believe they exist would be your argument which relies on premise 2 where you use a dismissible intuition to argue that something is factually the case.

    Question begging would be assuming the conclusion in the premises. But I’m not assuming anything unreasonably here. Or do you think the laws of conservation are in question?
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    There's no empirical evidence that nothing that exists exists uncausedBartricks

    There is no empirical evidence that unicorns don’t exist either. But that’s not what I’m arguing. I’m arguing which is more reasonable to believe. An argument made over the internet about the existence of unicorns, or centuries of us failing to find them. I think the latter, wouldn’t you?

    Uncaused movers are worse than unicorns because not only have we utterly failed to find them, finding them would mean that our entire understanding of physics is false.

    an argument you've done nothing to challenge any premise of.Bartricks

    I’ve been challenging premise 2 haven’t I?

    So, insofar as you've thought at all about your position, you have simply assumed that all objects that exist are sensible objects.Bartricks

    I’ve assumed that all objects capable of moving things are sensible objects. And for good reason. Because if this was not the case the laws of conservation of energy and momentum would go in the garbage bin. If there were uncaused movers there would be uncaused energy, and uncaused momentum.

    So I’m pitting the conclusion of your argument against centuries of confirmed science. Conservation of energy and momentum haven’t failed yet as far as I’m aware. Which is more reasonable to believe?

    If you think that an evolutionary account of a rational intuition serves always and everywhere to undermine that rational intuition's credibilityBartricks

    I laid out when it does and when it doesn’t didn’t I?

    In the case of epistemology, if we think we have good reason for believing something when in reality it is not a good reason, we would not survive would we?

    So we have good reason to believe our reasons for believing things are accurate, as any mistake in them would result in our demise. If, for example, we thought we should believe things based on the time of day we heard them, and that was not the case, we would have all died out. Because we would end up falsely believing many things. Which is not conducive to survival.

    And that principle had better not be one that, when applied consistently, would undermine the credibility of our rational intuition that we have reason to believe things.Bartricks

    It doesn’t undermine it. Because a mistake in our epistemological reason to believe things would kill us. And since we’re not dead, we can assume no mistake.

    Here's what I'd say. If we have a rational intuition that seems - intuitively - to be inconsistent with the rest, and if we can in addition see that this particular rational intuition is one that seems highly adaptive, then we have some reason to suppose that that alone is why we are subject to it. That intuition can then be reasonably discounted.Bartricks

    What about when the intuition is inconsistent with centuries of confirmed science? I would think that if a scientific principle hasn’t failed for centuries despite us constantly looking for places it might fail, they puts it above any intuition wouldn’t you? If said intuition had implications that contradict it.

    A good example: We gave a very strong rational intuition that the earth is flat. All of us are surprised when first hearing it is round. Yet we do not go favoring the intuition do we? Even though that intuition is not particularly contradictory with any others.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    It's question begging, that's what.Bartricks

    In which premise is the conclusion assumed?

    There does not need to be any actual epistemic reason to believe those things in reality.Bartricks

    All that's needed to survive, is to 'believe' that we have epistemic reason to believe some thingsBartricks

    Now you’re applying epistemology to itself. “When can you reasonably believe that you can reasonably believe X?”.

    That just seems confused. You can keep adding layers here. “When can you reasonably believe that you can reasonably believe that you can reasonably believe that....... that you can reasonably believe X?”

    At some point you have to stop asking “when can you reasonably believe that”. Epistemology is about asking what we can know. If you start asking what we can know about epistemology, we’ll never get anywhere!

    Thus, you would end up having to conclude that epistemic reasons do not existBartricks

    But even if the above makes sense this doesn’t follow. Just as “All that’s needed to survive is to believe that we are morally responsible thus we are not morally responsible” doesn’t follow.

    All that would follow is that there need not actually be epistemic reasons to believe anything for us to survive. Not that there factually aren’t. It doesn’t follow from A not being needed that A doesn’t nevertheless exist.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility

    Most of that was just question begging.Bartricks

    Question begging is assuming the conclusion in your premises. Which conclusion have I assumed in which premise?

    I want to establish is that we have good reason to believe that there are no uncaused causers. The same reason we give for believing there are no unicorns or Yetis. We’ve looked and haven’t found any or even the effects of any. Moreover, for uncaused causers, we have found a massive volumes of contradictory evidence (conservation of energy and momentum) which is not even the case for the unicorn or yeti. What’s wrong with that as an argument?

    What's your account? When does an evolutionary account of our rational intuitions discredit them, and when does it not?Bartricks

    When a difference between what is actually the case and what we think is the case cannot be afforded for the purposes of survival.

    For example: mathematical laws. If we thought 2+2=5 we would not be able to survive. If every time we put two and two things together we are bewildered at a missing thing we would’ve died out long ago. So we have good reason to believe our belief is the truth.

    But an objective moral responsibility is not such a thing. Whether or not we actually ARE morally responsible has little to do with our survival. What matters is whether or not we think we are morally responsible.

    In other words, we could FALSELY believe that we are morally responsible and the belief would evolve. We could also TRUTHFULLY believe that we are morally responsible and the belief would evolve.

    However if our understanding of basic arithmetic is false we would’ve died out long ago. And definitely wouldn’t have been able to manipulate nature to the extent that we have.

    This is why I used AN btw. Our intuition about having children being ok can be dismissed on these grounds. Because even if it is the case that having children is wrong, our belief that having them is right would evolve anyways. So having the belief is not indicative of what is actually the case.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    If it is metaphysically possible for there to be such things, then we no longer have any epistemic reason to doubt we are morally responsibleBartricks

    But we have empirical reasons to doubt them.

    If an argument relies on unicorns existing you can’t say “It is metaphysically possible for unicorns to exist therefore this argument goes through”. If we have never seen a unicorn, DESPITE looking for unicorns, then we have very good reason to think that that argument is mistaken, for it relies on something that (it is reasonable to believe) doesn’t exist to exist.

    In the same way that if we have never detected the effects of “uncaused causers” (as detecting them themselves is impossible by definition) despite looking, we have very good reason to think the argument is mistaken no?

    One can have excellent evidence that X is the case, without having to know 'how' it is the case. For instance, I have excellent evidence my computer is working - it is working - yet if you ask me 'how' it is working, I haven't a clue. By your logic, of course, the fact I haven't a clue how it is working would constitute evidence that it isn't working!Bartricks

    Not a good comparison. Because your computer working does not fly in the face of empirical observations. Moreover, your computer working can be confirmed empirically. I can try to turn it on and if it does then it is working.

    However the existence of uncaused causers does fly in the face of empirical observations. And is not itself an empirical observation.

    On the one hand you have a confirmable event that you cannot explain. On the other you have a hypothesis that flies in the face of empirical data not just that you cannot explain (though that too). Again, not a good comparison.

    fallaciously thinking that if one can't explain how something works, then one has evidence it isn't workingBartricks

    That would be fallacious indeed.

    However what I actually said was that we already have evidence that goes against your hypothesis of the existence of uncaused causers. Or, at least, we have no evidence supporting it despite looking (which makes it reasonable to believe it doesn’t exist). Therefore uncaused causers don’t exist (at least we aren’t those). Until you can detect their effects you cannot assume they exist.

    For what do you mean by 'how does it work?'Bartricks

    “How does it fit into our understanding of physics”. It doesn’t, it contradicts it (conservation of energy and momentum would be thrown out the window). So it’s wrong in the absence of empirical evidence confirming the effects of these uncaused causers. And if you can find such evidence no doubt you would win at least a Nobel prize and would result in a new era for physics. A total overhaul.

    you are just appealing to the conventional assumption that we are physical bodiesBartricks

    It’s conventional because no other “we” had been detected. It isn’t question begging. It’s you who assumes uncaused causers exist despite a complete lack of evidence.

    And the way you arrive at the conclusion relies on premise 2 which I will get to.

    Oh, and you commit further fallacies - you think that as there is no empirical evidence that we are uncaused causers (how could there be?), that means there is empirical evidence that we are 'not' uncaused causers. Which is fallacious.Bartricks

    Where did I say this? I never said we have evidence uncaused causers don’t exist. I said we don’t have evidence they do. And such evidence is required for your argument, if you want it to be any more than idle conjecture.



    More importantly you haven’t addressed one of the more important points. That this:

    Okay. Now, we have extremely powerful epistemic reason to think we're morally responsible. Billions - I mean, literally billions - of people have rational intuitions that represent themselves and others to be morally responsibleBartricks

    Is not actually the case when it comes to evolutionarily useful beliefs. As I have explained and gave an example for. When something is evolutionarily advantageous to believe then we CANNOT say that simply because it seems to be the case and it is possible that it is the case. Because if it evolutionarily advantageous it will seem the case REGARDLESS of what is actually the case.

    As an example, if what follows death is heaven OR hell (not saying those are the 2 options, just a hypothetical), people will still think death is bad. Because the people that survive are only those that think death is bad REGARDLESS of which is actually the case.

    Similarly, the people that survive will think they are morally responsible REGARDLESS of which is actually the case (because if they didn’t they would be dead by now).

    So your premise 2 remains unjustified. The premise you use to say that we are uncaused causers.

    So your conclusion, that we are uncaused causers, uses an unjustified premise (that we are morally responsible) AND flies in the face of empirical observations or at least is completely unsupported empirically despite people looking for support for it.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    The best evidence one can ever have for anything is powerful epistemic reason to think that it is the case and none to think that it isn't. Right?Bartricks

    But there is plenty to think it isn’t.

    Antinatalists accept that they have the burden of proof and then they seek to discharge it.Bartricks

    And Strawson accepts that he has burden of proof and seeks to discharge it. He does this (in the same way antinatalists do) by relying on our other intuitions. One such intuition is that we are not responsible for something if its cause traces entirely outside of ourselves. So in order to be responsible you would have to somehow cause your own creation. Or, as you noted, you would have to be an uncaused mover.

    Problem is, you don’t actually specify in any way what this “uncaused mover” does or how it works. If it existed, then we would expect spontaneous, uncaused current or force within the body that we can then attribute to the “uncaused mover” aka “you”. Since this is not the case, we can conclude that we are not uncaused movers. That there is no “you” that is uncaused by your birth. As, again, if you want to propose the existence of a non sensible (or non physical) thing that can actually cause some movement, you would be flying in the face of empirical observations.

    Conservation of energy and momentum still hold even inside the human body. There is no “non physical causer”. Once one is detected then we can conclude that the necessary conditions for moral responsibility have been met. But until then, you cannot assume that the necessary conditions have been met.

    So given that, and given you cannot have created yourself, we have good reason to believe people are not morally responsible, since all your actions trace to external causes. It is a good reason because it is derived from other rational intuitions, in the same way ANs try to derive their argument.

    Again, if you have issue with this you would need to find some action A, and trace its causes backwards until you find an “uncaused movement” that can be attributed to yourself. Until this is actually done, you cannot assume it is possible. And if such a thing exists, I think scientists would have noticed by now that conservation of energy and momentum for some reason seem to not hold in the human body. So we have good empirical data (rather lack thereof) suggesting there is no such thing.

    I don't know what will happen to me after my sensible body dies. But it seems likely something very bad awaits us after our sensible bodies die, for our reason tells us to do pretty much all we can to avoid sensible death unless we are in absolute agony. So, that suggests - but doesn't entail - that what awaits us after our sensible demise is worse than here, but not absolute agony.Bartricks

    Not really suggestive. Thinking in terms of evolution, the only creatures that survive would be those that seek to avoid dying. So the fact that you are here right now implies you’re such a creature. In this sense, our reason is biased. Creatures whose reason told them that dying isn’t so bad just aren’t around anymore. Due to the bias there is not enough evidence to conclude that our reason tells us that dying is bad because it is actually bad. It doesn’t mean it is actually bad, only that it had been evolutionarily useful to think it is bad.

    It could be the case that heaven is real and everyone goes there with no downsides and people would still think dying is bad. Because they have no way of confirming the afterlife, and only the ones that avoid it (by thinking death is bad) will survive (obviously)

    Okay. Now, we have extremely powerful epistemic reason to think we're morally responsible. Billions - I mean, literally billions - of people have rational intuitions that represent themselves and others to be morally responsibleBartricks

    Again, not suggestive for the same reasons as above. A rational intuition that we are morally responsible is useful. Societies and people who didn’t have it died out. So of course everyone today would have it. That doesn’t mean it is true, only that it is evolutionarily useful to have. So we do not have powerful epistemic reason to believe we are morally responsible due to this bias.

    This is precisely why “It seems to be the case and it could be the case therefore it is the case” is a terrible argument. It could just be that it seems to be the case because it had been evolutionarily useful to assume it to be the case, not because it is actually the case. I gave the heaven example above.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    No. I said that if we are prime movers then we have what is 'in principle' needed to be morally responsible.Bartricks

    I understand.

    Once more: saying 'this is needed for moral responsibility' is not equivalent to saying 'this is sufficient for moral responsibility'.Bartricks

    Ok. How do you then get premise 2? Because

    “It is possible and it seems to be the case so it must be the case” Is a weak argument.khaled

    And it also applies to having children.

    First leg, and something I think anyone can agree on:

    1- If we need not concern ourselves with the well-being of people who are not born yet, having children is ok.

    Is having children ok? Well, I now have every reason to think it is - for my reason represents it to be ok - and no reason to think it is not ok. If you think otherwise, you need to show some fault in the first leg.

    2- Having children is ok.

    3- We need not concern ourselves with the well-being of people who are not born yet.

    See the problem? It is in deriving premise 2. It just doesn’t follow that “it is possible and it seems to be the case so it must be the case”. Which then leads to a conclusion that is probably false.

    So what the heck is this “You” exactly?
    — khaled

    Me.
    Bartricks

    Any other properties? Is it physical? What happens to it after its body dies? Etc
  • A puzzling fact about thinking.
    the scholastic research which predominates hereKen Edwards

    :rofl:
  • "Prove that epistemology is the only correct way of thinking".
    “Epistemology is a field of study not a way of thinking so wtf are you saying. And ways of thinking are not correct or incorrect, statements are correct or incorrect.”
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility

    However, I think he hasn't because there isn't really any evidence that you need positively to have created yourself in order to be morally responsible for what you are subsequently caused to do. What we have evidence for is a negative condition: that you need 'not' to have been created by alien forces. After all, if - per impossible - we did create ourselves from nothing, the reason that would make us in principle capable of being morally responsible for what we subsequently do is surely because under such circumstances nothing outside of ourselves would be responsible for us being how we are. So, the plausibility of Strawson's positive condition rests on the more fundamental negative condition: that to be morally responsible for how you are, you need 'not' to be a product of forces that have nothing to do with you.Bartricks

    What you did was show that it is sufficient. But then since the only other alternative is impossible it becomes necessary.

    As I said:

    But that’s a technicality since the alternative is impossible.khaled

    The rest, I shall charitably assume, is you being obtuse for the purpose of some kind of sadistic amusement.Bartricks

    Charitably? Sadistic? Amusement??????

    None of those applies.

    “It is possible and it seems to be the case so it must be the case” Is a weak argument.khaled

    This also applies to having children being correct. Possible, metaphysically. Also what our reason represents to us (at least, demonstrably what most people’s reason represents to them). Does that make it the case? Or are you going to say that our reason does not represent to us that having children is ok?khaled

    So what the heck is this “You” exactly?khaled
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    No. The opposite! We are morally responsible, therefore we are uncreated things.Bartricks

    So... all you argue is that we are uncreated things? You don’t actually argue about whether or not we are morally responsible? That’s just a given?

    Why mention strawson at all then?

    I have argued that moral responsibility requires being an uncreated thing, right?Bartricks

    Well you’ve argued that being an uncreated being is sufficient for moral responsibility as far as I can tell. But that’s a technicality since the alternative is impossible.

    1. If I am morally responsible, then I am an uncreated thingBartricks

    Or you somehow created yourself but that makes no sense.

    2. I am morally responsible.Bartricks

    You just assume this. And you do so to reach the conclusion that we are uncreated things (whatever that means). Again, why mention strawson at all if you’re not even going to argue that we are morally responsible, just that we are uncreated.

    But Strawson is not right - or so I have arguedBartricks

    What you have argued is really only premise 1. That is, one of the ways to be morally responsible is to be an uncaused mover. I don’t think anyone would disagree with this. The other way is to somehow cause yourself but that is impossible (because it makes no sense). And then you use this to say that we are uncaused movers based on the assumption that we are morally responsible.

    You have not argued that people have a moral responsibility. You’ve assumed it. When you title your post “Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility” and you conclude he’s wrong I assumed that you meant he is wrong about us not being morally responsible. But that’s not what you show. All you show is that we are uncaused movers based on the assumption that we are morally responsible. You do not justify or argue for this assumption. You just deem it obvious.

    a) our reason represents us to be and b) it is possible for us to be.Bartricks

    “It is possible and it seems to be the case so it must be the case” Is a weak argument. Sure we shouldn’t dismiss our intuitions, but saying that X is the case because it is possible for X to be the case and X seems to be the case is not very convincing in a debate about whether or not X is the case.

    This also applies to having children being correct. Possible, metaphysically. Also what our reason represents to us (at least, demonstrably what most people’s reason represents to them). Does that make it the case? Or are you going to say that our reason does not represent to us that having children is ok?

    Am I a created thing? No.Bartricks

    Ok so you are not a created thing. “You” also seem to be unaffected by what happens to your body (since when I suggest that “you” cease to exist upon death or blackout you don’t like that)

    So what the heck is this “You” exactly? A ghost? It is completely unaffected by the body, and uncaused by it. Yet it somehow affects it.

    What happens to “You” after you die do you think?

    And what are the physical implications of “You”. It is a mover yes? So it can exert some force on the physical world? (Otherwise it would just be obsolete and not a mover). So how do you explain that in the context of our understanding of physics? Are you going to propose that within a human body it is possible to detect spontaneous, uncaused forces or current that are caused by “You”?
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    2. I am morally responsibleBartricks

    Is question begging no? Not for the purposes of proving that we are uncreated or whatever, but for the purposes of proving that we are morally responsible. As I understand you use “We are uncaused movers” to show that we are morally responsible.

    I have epistemic reason to believe I am and none to believe I am not.Bartricks

    So your argument for:

    But when it comes to establishing that a proposition (in this case that we are morally responsible) is true, the most we can do is establish that there is powerful epistemic reason to believe the proposition is true, and no epistemic reason to think it is false.Bartricks

    Relies on the premise that:

    I have epistemic reason to believe I am (morally responsible) and none to believe I am not.Bartricks

    ?

    Yes, and I have not disputed that. But it is a conventional belief - and not a truth of reason - that we are our sensible bodiesBartricks

    Yes and I’ve asked a while ago what you mean by “uncaused” if not that your physical bodies are uncaused. You didn’t reply so I assumed that’s what you meant. Apparently not.

    Thus, though my sensible body was created, I was not and thus I am not my sensible body.Bartricks

    I never claimed you were. But was your creation not caused by the creation of your sensible body? I am not saying they are the same. I am saying the former is caused by the latter. If you wish to dispute this you’d have to show a “person” that doesn’t have a body. A tall order.

    On the other hand we know when certain things happen to the body “You” no longer exist. So that provides evidence that “You” require your body to exist. Or do we disagree there too?
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    You accused me - falsely - of committing fallacies.Bartricks

    But I didn’t attack you personally did I?

    If an object has been created by something external to it, then even though that object may well be able to cause events to occur without being directly caused to do so, the simple fact is that its existence traces to external causes and so the condition on responsibility will not be satisfied if we are objects of that kind.Bartricks

    And aren’t you an object of that kind? Your parents, and whatever factors influenced their decision to have you are all external to you. So even though you will be able to cause events to occur without being directly caused to do so, the simple fact is that your existence traces to external causes and so the condition on responsibility will not be satisfied if you are an object of that kind.

    To satisfy the condition on moral responsibility we would need to be objects that have not been created.Bartricks

    But we are so too bad.

    As it is metaphysically possible for us to be such objectsBartricks

    I have yet to see a human that was uncaused. So I don’t understand what you mean here. If a mind exists uncaused it’s definitely not a human mind.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility


    I am not an event, right? Events are events. Objects are objects. Big difference. All you're doing is pointing to events and pointing out that they have causes. Which is not something I dispute.Bartricks

    First off, what exactly does it mean to you for an object to be "uncaused". You argue that:

    We would satisfy the negative condition if we are uncaused causers - that is, if we are prime movers.Bartricks

    I assumed this meant "uncaused" as in "nothing caused its creation". Something like God. But no apparently the creation of something can be caused by external factors, yet the thing can still be an "uncaused mover". So what the heck does "uncaused" mean here? What would be a "caused" mover be if even when the object's creation is due to factors that have nothing to do with it, it is still apparently an "uncaused mover"?
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    But when it comes to establishing that a proposition is true, the most we can do is establish that there is powerful epistemic reason to believe the proposition is true, and no epistemic reason to think it is false.Bartricks

    Agreed. That's not what Strawson is doing though. He is arguing that we do not, in fact, have any moral responsibility. He is not arguing that we have no powerful reasons to believe that we have moral responsibility. He is providing powerful reasons to believe that we do not. Mainly, he assumes determinism and goes on to see that therefore we are not responsible for our actions.

    There is still a fallacy and I'll get to it.
    — khaled

    Er, that argument was valid by all the canons of logic.
    Bartricks

    You're right which is why I edited it out. How long have you been typing the reply lol. You must have not noticed that I removed it.

    An 'effect' is an event.Bartricks

    Your birth is an event. And your birth clearly had causes.

    But not all objects have causes.Bartricks

    No objects have causes. That's the category error. It makes no sense to say "My chair was caused". Objects are created. And their creation is an event. With causes.

    we've already established that you're rubbish at detecting fallaciesBartricks

    you don't know how to reason well.Bartricks

    Ad homs and an aggressive tone say more about you than me.

    for you committed the fallacy of affirming the consequentBartricks

    When exactly?
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    1. If we appear to be morally responsible, and it is metaphysically possible for us to be morally responsible, then we are justified in believing that we are.
    2. We appear to be morally responsible and it is metaphysically possible for us to be morally responsible
    3. Therefore we are justified in believing that we are morally responsible.

    Now, if we are justified in believing that we are morally responsible, and there is only one way in which it would be possible for us to be - and that's what I have argued - then we are justified in believing that such conditions obtain. That is, we are justified in believing that we are prime movers.

    There's no fallacy committed there. None.
    Bartricks

    Correct. But first notice this form of the argument. It ends with "We are justified in believing that we are morally responsible". I already said:

    That is an argument with the conclusion that “It is reasonable to suppose we are morally responsible”. Obviously everyone here agrees with this. Because if they disagreed they would be in jail and wouldn’t be here.

    But you haven’t argued that we are morally responsible. If all you wanted to say is that it is reasonable to assume that we are then I can get behind that. That’s weirdly along pragmatist lines even though you disagree with the view.
    khaled

    You then responded with:

    I have argued that we are morally responsible!Bartricks

    So which exactly are you arguing for? That we are morally responsible? Or that it is reasonable to believe that we are morally responsible? Because no one disagrees with the latter, and it is not what Strawson tries to argue against. The argument I quoted at the start of this reply argues for the latter well. Yet you claim you argue for the former.

    So you're simply confused about what you need to do to challenge my case.Bartricks

    You'll have to make your case clear first as per above.

    (The claim that some things exist uncaused is not equivalent to the claim that some effects lack causes).Bartricks

    How so? You want to claim that we exist uncaused. That is equivalent to claiming that our birth did not have causes no? Or else what exactly is the "We" that you claim exists uncaused if not our physical bodies.

    No they wouldn't. I'm a compatibilist myself!Bartricks

    Some other time.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility

    If he thought it was possible for us to be morally responsible, he'd no doubt agree with me that we are indeed morally responsible.Bartricks

    Why is that? Because we have the intuition that we are therefore it is reasonable to believe it? But we also have the intuition that every effect has a cause. You have to favor one and discard the other arbitrarily.

    to date, virtually everyone I have discussed this with, has shared the rational intuition that yes, indeed, if a decision's causal story traces entirely to external causes, then one is not morally responsible for that decision.Bartricks

    Compatibilists might have something to say about that.

    To counter my case you would need to argue that it is impossible for something to exist uncreated.Bartricks

    No, I would only need to argue that we are not such things. That WE do not exist uncreated. Which is precisely what Strawson tries to do. You have not actually argued that we exist uncreated. You've said:

    We would satisfy the negative condition if we are uncaused causers - that is, if we are prime movers. We know already that there must be some such things, for otherwise we get a regress of causes. So, some things must exist uncaused. If we are ourselves such things, then the negative condition on moral responsibility will be satisfied.Bartricks

    But then jumped to:

    And as the default is that we are indeed morally responsible, we now have reason to conclude that we are indeed prime movers.Bartricks

    Which is fallacious.

    1- If we are prime movers-> We are morally responsible
    2- The default view is that we are morally responsible
    3- Therefore, we are prime movers
    4- Therefore we are morally responsible

    Is clearly fallacious
    Just like:

    1- If Antinatalism is false -> It is ok to have children
    2- The default view is that it is ok to have children
    3- Therefore antinatalism is false.
    4- Therefore it is ok to have children.

    Is clearly fallacious.

    This wacko argument can be used to make any A and B true if A->B and B is the default view (not even if B is true which still wouldn't be enough to make A true)
  • Quotes from Thomas LIgotti's Conspiracy Against the Human Race
    He calls it “The great lesson the depressive learns”. Not “What things seem like to the depressive”. “The great lesson” seems prescriptive. Maybe he is just taking the lens as you say but it doesn’t sound that way to me.
  • Quotes from Thomas LIgotti's Conspiracy Against the Human Race
    I think you are making his point. He doesn't discount that these chemical processes are happening. He even alludes to them earlier in the quote. Rather, as a person with motivation, goals, wants, etc. it sort of becomes meaningless, laid bare, "going through the motions" such that one is playing a farce of what is "supposed" to be what people normally do.schopenhauer1

    I really dislike these kinds of arguments. Where people externalize parts of themselves to depress themselves for no reason. “I want to live” becomes “I am bound by the instinct of life this is so horrible”. “I enjoy playing soccer” becomes “I am a slave to the chemicals in my brain this is so horrible”.

    I don’t understand why people sometimes choose to do this. When they can internalize these things as parts of their identity they choose to view them as alien impositions.

    I think it’s motivated by the mistaken belief that just because something is more difficult to believe that that makes it somehow more correct. “The truth hurts” becomes “What hurts is the truth”
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    The issue is whether it is 'possible' to be morally responsible. If it is possible, then it is reasonable to suppose we are, as that's what the appearances say.Bartricks

    That is an argument with the conclusion that “It is reasonable to suppose we are morally responsible”. Obviously everyone here agrees with this. Because if they disagreed they would be in jail and wouldn’t be here.

    But you haven’t argued that we are morally responsible. If all you wanted to say is that it is reasonable to assume that we are then I can get behind that. That’s weirdly along pragmatist lines even though you disagree with the view.

    But then I disagree with the way you made the argument. Appearances also say that there is an external physical world. And they say that everything has a cause. Those intuitions are just as valid as the intuition that we are morally responsible. So, yes it is possible to be morally responsible. It is also possible that we are not morally responsible. Some appearances point to one and some appearances point to the other. Why are you favoring “We appear to be morally responsible” over “Every effect appears to have a cause”

    You’ve classified one as “a premise” and the other as “a rational intuition”. Really they’re both just appearances. You’ve yet to provide a reason why I can’t dub the former a premise and the latter the “rational intuition”.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    I am assuming that we appear to be morally responsibleBartricks

    False. You are assuming that we ARE morally responsible, not just appear to be.

    1. I am morally responsible
    2. If I am morally responsible, not everything I do traces to external causes

    And by rational intuition I can see - and so can you, surely - that it follows from these two apparent truths of reason that:

    3. therefore not everything I do traces to external causes.
    Bartricks

    As you wrote yourself. If you change premise 1 to “We appear to be morally responsible” then 3 doesn’t follow.

    And if 3 doesn’t follow then the negative condition is not satisfied either.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    If your rebuttal to an argument is assuming the opposite of its conclusion in the first premise then I don't know if there is really much that needs to be said.

    You are literally assuming that we are morally responsible as a first premise in a debate about whether or not we are morally responsible....
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Our reason is a faculty. It's deliverances are 'intuitions'. It is by intuition that you know this argument is valid:

    1. P
    2. Q
    3. Therefore P and Q

    That is, if your reason is working well, anyway.

    But 'intuition' is a term of art and is sometimes used to cover beliefs too. That is not how I use it. By talking about deliverances of our reason it is quite clear what I am talking about. If instead I used the word 'intuition' it would be less clear, precisely because that term is used to cover far more than just deliverances of our reason.
    Bartricks

    I think the belief that we are morally responsible comes precisely from the intuitions that are NOT deliverances of reason. “I am morally responsible” certainly doesn’t seem as clear to me as “2+2=4”. The latter is what I would call a rational intuition, not the former.

    And by rational intuition I can see - and so can you, surely - that it follows from these two apparent truths of reason that:Bartricks

    Sure. Except you have yet to show that premise 1 is a rational intuition. You have repeatedly stated that it is 4 times now, but haven’t shown it to be.

    Your “critique” of strawson involves assuming the opposite of what he is saying in premise 1. It is the most textbook case of question begging you can have. You keep stating that your first premise is an apparently rational intuition but have not shown it to be.

    Again, if “I am morally responsible” was as clear an intuition as “2+2=4” you wouldn’t have so many people making the argument that people aren’t morally responsible.
  • A puzzling fact about thinking.
    The conscious mind braincellsKen Edwards

    Isn’t one of the biggest problems of neurology right now precisely the non existence of these brain cells? There is no specific spot in the brain that “does” consciousness.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    Our reason tells us that if we make a decision, then we are morally responsible for having made it - that is, we are in principle blameworthy or praiseworthy for it. That doesn't mean we are morally responsible, it just means we have prima facie evidence that we are.Bartricks

    Do you mean "our intuition"?

    So you do not arrive by reason alone at the conclusion that you are not a prime mover, rather you arrive at it by first coming to believe that you are sensible object and then coming to believe that sensible objects have external causes of their existence and that you, as one such object, have an external cause.Bartricks

    And I could argue that in order to arrive at the conclusion that we are morally responsible for our decisions you have to assume we are rational movers. You make the unsubstantiated claim that reason alone shows us that we are morally responsible whereas to believe that we are not prime movers needs premises. I could flip that and make the equally unsubstantiated claim that reason alone shows us that we are not prime movers, and to believe we are morally responsible requires premises (one of which is that we are prime movers).

    For we can, by reason alone, know that we are morally responsible for what we do.Bartricks

    Again, I think you mean intuition. If by reason alone we could know that we are morally responsible Galen Strawson and many others wouldn't have made the argument in the first place. You don't see many people claiming that 2+2=5 because that is actually something that we can arrive at by reason alone. On the other hand, the age of the argument made by Strawson and others hints that maybe it is not something that we can arrive at by reason alone.
  • Strawson and the impossibility of moral responsibility
    What makes "We are morally responsible" a rational intuition while "We are not prime movers" mere convention?
  • Identity politics, moral realism and moral relativism
    It is necessary that the ends be one where everyone's appetites are satisfied, but that is not sufficient.Pfhorrest

    or said that there was something still morally wrong even though everyone's every need was met like that, then that person would just be incorrect.Pfhorrest

    Those two seem contradictory. In one you’re saying that means matter. In the other you’re saying that as long as everyone’s need is met, that’s all that matters (which implies the means don’t matter)
  • I have something to say.
    your post was left unanswered for quite some time. Then when you volunteered that you didn't notice how old it was - I knew that was it. That unanswered post was grinding on you for days - an insult to your ego. No-one can ignore little Khaled!counterpunch

    :rofl:

    Yikes. Well you can see that I have many unanswered comments and I don’t mind if you go into my comment history. I don’t go around trying to solicit answers out everyone. It’s hilarious to me that you think you’re so important that I could care less if you responded...

    Are you policing this public space? Do you see it as your role to tell people what they can and can't say?counterpunch

    No not my role. I just enjoy calling out pricks.

    You don't know the context. This thread is a continuation of a discussion on another thread - of which you were not a part. The apparent form, to which you are responding, is not where the meaning lies. Those observations refer to mistakes in thinking identified on the other thread, of which Issac may or may not have been aware.counterpunch

    Fair enough. But you didn’t mention the thread in the op in my defense.

    Don't call me a prick again!counterpunch

    Well I haven’t seen evidence to the contrary. Once I do I’ll stop.

    Thank you so much.counterpunch

    Any day bro.