someone who relies on their religious faith does. — Janus
Buddha says that Buddhism itself is like a raft, used for 'crossing over' the river of suffering, but to be let go of once it's served its purpose. 'Dhammas should be abandoned, to say nothing of adhammas'. That is specifically about not becoming attached to Buddhism. — Wayfarer
I acknowledge that if I felt such certainty, I may not be skeptical about it; indeed I could not hold such certainty unless I was not skeptical.
The point is that no matter how much I might feel that I could not be wrong; there could still never be any real guarantee that I was not mistaken; neither my own conviction nor any institutional judgement based on tradition could ever suffice to give rational grounds for absolute certainty about anything. — Janus
Detachment is more about the abandonment of egotism than being callous or indifferent. — Wayfarer
"Finding refuge"; if you find refuge in something you rely on it and/or care about it, no? — Janus
Buddha says that Buddhism itself is like a raft, used for 'crossing over' the river of suffering, but to be let go of once it's served its purpose. 'Dhammas should be abandoned, to say nothing of adhammas'. That is specifically about not becoming attached to Buddhism. — Wayfarer
To rely on something or to care about it is to be attached as I see it. — Janus
attempt to shock people with an extreme example towards their own (possible) revulsion with the idea of this sweet spot and the pragmatic error of attachment to outcomes being wrong but desire is ok, etc. — Coben
there is something anti-human (or you could say anti-limbic system in Buddhism). There is a judgment by some parts of the brain that the limbic system is a problem, period. That there are problems with being a social mammal, internally. In the context of what is often presented as a non-judgmental, pragmatic system, — Coben
Others may be mystified by what is actually fairly complicated and not realize that what they might think of as resistance to Buddhism (and 'resistance' in a pejorative sense for them) is actually the fact that they do not share the same values as the Buddhist teachers and masters, who are willing to cut out a portion of themselves to reduce and even eliminate their pain. — Coben
According to Buddhist thinking it is fine to be attached ("find refuge") in the Sangha (the community of the faithful), the Four Noble Truths and the Dharma ("Way") because they are believed to lead away from attachment to transient, earthly things and lead towards the changeless. — Janus
OK, your kid's getting treatment for childhood leukemia. You want your kid to live.
Where's the sweet spot? — Coben
If you are talking about addictions I would agree, but do you think that is what is meant with attachments here? Maybe, I'd need to think about it some more. — ChatteringMonkey
I'd say this is more a question of a lack of confidence. — ChatteringMonkey
It's sort of a psychological downward spiral that compounds the mistakes that other non-top players get stuck in. How do you see the relation to attachments here? — ChatteringMonkey
There is supposedly a sort of mental "Sweet spot" where you want things but at the same time are not distraught at failing to get them. — khaled
at different degrees of what is essential one psychological process. It seems a matter of degree rather than discrete things — ChatteringMonkey
Maybe they can shrug it off more easily, I could buy that. — ChatteringMonkey
If I don't get what I want, I'm disappointed. If I don't get what I'm attached to, I'm very disappointed… — ChatteringMonkey
Purpose meaning here to desire or want certain things to happen, which is another way of saying that living things have (emotion) attachments to certain things or outcomes — ChatteringMonkey
You focus on playing every game as good as you can, and try to care only insofar you played well or not. — ChatteringMonkey
I think that attachment is linked to desire — Jack Cummins
However, I would argue that it is supremely difficult, for better or worse, to live without attachments and desires. — Jack Cummins
If we simply stayed in bed most of the time rather than pursue grander desires, it would still involve an attachment to the comfort of being in bed. — Jack Cummins
Human morality concerns biological and cultural adaptations to allow humans to live together in social groups and allow social groups to co-exist. — Kenosha Kid
Individualism is an antisocial moral philosophy — Kenosha Kid
Merry Christmas!!!! — Kenosha Kid
We can call it an ethic insofar as you can personally subscribe to it, but it has zilch to do with human morality — Kenosha Kid
Characteristics are always definitional though: that's why they're called characteristics. — Kenosha Kid
So "you should use a 10mm spanner if you want to undo a 10mm nut" is a moral claim? — Isaac
Secondly, you still have not resolved the issue of what makes claims 'moral'. As the SEP quote clarifies not all values basing a moral theory are properly countable as 'moral'. It's insufficient to simple say that other moral frameworks have slightly different values and therefore any value equally counts as moral. A multiplicity is not the same as arbitrary. — Isaac
In the normative sense, “morality” refers to a code of conduct that would be accepted by anyone who meets certain intellectual and volitional conditions, almost always including the condition of being rational. That a person meets these conditions is typically expressed by saying that the person counts as a moral agent. However, merely showing that a certain code would be accepted by any moral agent is not enough to show that the code is the moral code. It might well be that all moral agents would also accept a code of prudence or rationality, but this would not by itself show that prudence was part of morality. So something else must be added; for example, that the code can be understood to involve a certain kind of impartiality, or that it can be understood as having the function of making it possible for people to live together in groups. — SEP - The Definition of Morality
descriptively to refer to certain codes of conduct put forward by a society or a group (such as a religion), or accepted by an individual for her own behavior — SEP - The Definition of Morality
Firstly, It's not my claim - I'm using it as an example (one I have a good deal of sympathy with, mind). — Isaac
My claim is that it is community co-operation. — Isaac
If you mean to say that we have no reason to favor "Avoid risking harm to others without consent" over "Ensure the harmony of the community", I'd agree with you.
— khaled
No. I'm saying the exact opposite. We simply do not have arbitrary desires. — Isaac
a) what features of certain normative claims make them 'moral' ones — Isaac
My claim is that it is community co-operation. Efforts to support it are what unite certain normative claims we call 'moral', and the normative force is the maintenance of such co-operation - 'if you want {community co-operation}, then you should [moral rule]'. — Isaac
Your claim seems to be that there is no 'if you want...' component at all — Isaac
So you need to fill in the blank 'if we want to...we ought to avoid risking harm to others without consent'. What is in the blank? — Isaac
Or...you're arguing that avoiding the risk of harm to others without consent is the contingent part - 'if you want to {avoid risking harm to others without consent}, then you ought to [not have children]' — Isaac
But here you're faced with the naturalistic argument. We are evolved and culturally embedded creatures. We simply do not have random wants en masse. So why would anyone have an otherwise unfounded desire to avoid risking harm to others without consent? — Isaac
Likewise deeming something to be a moral consideration or not on the basis of its ubiquity is not about popularity: that ubiquity speaks to the presence of an evolved characteristic. — Kenosha Kid
What does then make a thing 'moral'? Our agreement that it fits in some loose category. What causes us to agree on such a loose category? Our shared experiences. Why do we assign normative force to the behaviours in that category? Because we have some drive to do so. — Isaac
This leaves you in the bizarre position of claiming the moral rules have no purpose at all, that we're inclined to add such normative force to them for no reason. — Isaac
the fact that we evolved moral sentiments to enable a more harmonious community that moral sentiments would be aimed at the maintenance of such a community. That's just how evolution works. — Isaac
"x lacks features a, b and c (which moral impulses share)" — Isaac
If we did not have a drive to co-operate, for example, there'd be no material cause for us to "decide that acting on the drive to steal is wrong". — Isaac
It must be something to do with living co-operatively because if that weren't an issue we'd have no morality at all. As such, any purported 'moral' objective which cannot claim to be working toward such an end is not moral, by definition. — Isaac
Given that you seem to agree, what purpose to you suppose a drive to avoid imposing suffering on others without consent might serve? — Isaac
At some point we determined some drives and responses as "better nature" and others as "selfish". This was not done by looking at our impulses.
— khaled
Then how do you suppose it was done? Randomly? And the massive levels of correlation between disparate cultures are what...just coincidence? — Isaac
If you just stick to avoiding harm, you end up with contradictions (such as surgery) — Isaac
such a maxim cannot really count as 'moral' because it is not focussed on living together better, the need for which is the only reason we have morals in the first place. — Isaac
I don't think we can describe any drive, including the drive to procreate, as either moral or immoral. How we act, yes. Perhaps even how we think. But one cannot be responsible for one's biology or one's upbringing. — Kenosha Kid
On the contrary, I think it is the crux of morality. Were we a solitary species, the question would not arise. Likewise were we of a hive mind. It is the competition between impulses that gives us ambiguity, without which there's nothing to talk about at all. — Kenosha Kid
if there's no naturalistic reason to accept that premise then, in the absence of any other moral authority, the resultant moral rule is arbitrary. — Kenosha Kid
There are biological drives and responses that act as the angels of our better nature, as well as selfish ones. — Kenosha Kid
If we cannot accept the premise on grounds of common experience, nor on grounds of biology, nor by extending existing in-group morality to out-groups — Kenosha Kid
Of course! And situations where it's fine to let someone die, and ones where it is morally compulsory to give to charity. But none of them are generalisable. — Kenosha Kid
It's neither moral nor amoral — Outlander
It's a means not an end to a means, one that can result in either outcome. — Outlander
We don't have a natural drive not to steal. We have a natural drive not to do to others that which we would not have done to us (empathy and altruism) — Kenosha Kid
The fact that it rests on a unjustifiable claim does. One can dismiss it with as little justification. — Kenosha Kid
The best you've got is a self-consistent argument. — Kenosha Kid
For that, you need a compelling argument, not just a self-consistent one. — Kenosha Kid
And who will help to ensure and/or correct it's current state toward this? — Outlander
See above. People will continue to be born, either with the mission or at least inclination that they should or perhaps could better their fellow man and thus future selves in the process, or not. Regardless, births will continue. — Outlander
but you can always tack on a 'Why?' — Kenosha Kid
That we do not tolerate certain behaviours under certain circumstances (e.g. allowing a person to die who can easily be saved) but are fine with others under other circumstances (not giving to charity at noon tomorrow) is sufficient to demonstrate that the the moral claim that all suffering is equivalent and any action or inaction that might yield or fail to quell it is as bad as terminal negligence is simply not a reflection of human morality — Kenosha Kid
Why don't we two, if you're up to it, analyze the notion of Satori (sudden enlightenment) against the backdrop of koans (paradoxes) and epiphanies (Eureka moments)? — TheMadFool
It's not a job if the standards are arbitrary. There's nothing to be done. Plucking a rule out of thin air is not a 'job' in any normal use of the term. — Isaac
What I'm saying is the judgement of which is better must also have a naturalistic explanation, or be non-physical in origin. If the former, then there is no 'better' in objective terms, nothing to debate. — Isaac
The mere fact that antinatalist premises make claims to be moral and that we can understand what those claims mean does not make then automatically right about that claim. — Isaac
a) how this 'job of ethics' is to be done - what do we use to judge — Isaac
b) if there's not a naturalistic explanation (predictive model) to be had regarding which we will choose, then what does the choosing? If, on the other hand, the choosing is done by some natural mechanism, then there exists a naturalistic account of the choice. — Isaac
Just that words are not defined by individuals alone, nor by some rational process. They are defined in the use they are put to in a community. — Isaac
We cannot 'work out' what counts as moral, it is already worked out by the ways we use the word, all we can do as individuals is describe that meaning. — Isaac
We have those imperetives. That's what we just established. The's not some 'other' you that gets to decide what the 'natural' you wants. — Isaac
Some of which are 'moral' according to the definition of the word. — Isaac
the definition of the word, which is a community reflection of some grouping. — Isaac
Well then it's not arbitrary, is it. — Isaac
If that explanation is natural, then there exists a naturalistic basis for that shared understanding. — Isaac
OK. The way I would put it is that we are capable of being mistaken about what we perceive. — Andrew M
Then how does anyone learn what the word 'moral' means? — Isaac
To be clear, my position is that morality is not imposed from some divine (or otherwise non-physical) external source — Isaac
the idea of 'moral' behaviour is just that behaviour we find ourselves generally inclined toward with a certain category of effect (either internal or external). The inclination (ceteris paribus) is already there. — Isaac
There's a huge difference between seeing someone right in front of you who will die if you don't help them, and deciding whether or not to give to charity. I find it remarkable that you apparently can't see that difference. — Janus
The key point to note here is that there is a natural standard in play. That is, we are comparing one human-observed scenario to another. — Andrew M
a creature-specific standard. — Andrew M
So, given we both agree that they have not arrived in our heads by divine force, then their origin is natural, hence it is not a naturalistic fallacy. — Isaac
There is no 'should'. — Isaac
The relevant task is only to try to describe and predict that process. — Isaac