The equivalent for the antinatalist would be something like "Moral acts are to minimise suffering". — Isaac
I can raise evolutionary, cultural, linguistic, psychological and sociological reasons why moral acts might be those which benefit the community. — Isaac
Yeah, I think that's right. So what kind of evidence would one bring to bear if one were to make an argument about the parameters? Say if we were talking about 'dog', you might argue some new creature was a type of dog by pointing to similarities with other dogs (physiology, genetics etc). You might argue that my toaster isn't a 'dog' by the opposite method. — Isaac
But in a world where most people are not color-blind, the color-blind person has to adapt to the color-normal use (say, learning how to navigate traffic lights by noting the light intensity at a bulb position). With regard to this very specific distinction (and the color-normal standard), they would not be seeing things as they are. — Andrew M
The interesting question is, if no-one can see it, is there a world as it is? — Echarmion
'Moral' is a word in our shared language. — Isaac
It can't be a term which you apply to describe absolutely anything — Isaac
More generally, the meaning and function of truth is a long-standing question in philosophy, one of the less tractable ones, but I am not sure whether your query has anything to do with that. — SophistiCat
It's not that the 'deeper' rules are arbitrary, it's that they're definitional. Obligations which count as 'moral' ones (as opposed to just any obligation) have to be defined, in order to be in that class. — Isaac
that one could reasonably define it as 'an arbitrary set of rules one sticks to for no reason at all' — Isaac
For me, I'd say 'moral' obligations we those obligations which related to creating a more harmonious community (we live together with less conflict and suffering if we follow them). — Isaac
There is some benefit A which carries a risk B to person C. If I'm under no duty to provide benefit A then it is not appropriate to take risk B if I cannot get the consent of person C to do so. IF, however, I'm under some responsibility to provide benefit A and still can't get the consent of person C, I might well take risk B because failing to provide A would be no less of a risk - be an equally morally relevant outcome — Isaac
Finally. This time it only took you sixteen pages to admit the same point we get to every time...
"I have some weird axioms, look what weird consequences arise from following them"
Summarises all these threads in on sentence. — Isaac
I'd say 'moral' obligations we those obligations which related to creating a more harmonious community (we live together with less conflict and suffering if we follow them). That seems to encompass what most people are trying to get at - even Kant. — Isaac
Covid is up next. Think we can make it there ...? — Marchesk
It was the refusing to apply it bit I was confused about — Isaac
None of that sounds anything like an arbitrary set of rules which are simply followed for their own sake. — Isaac
You'll have to point me back to where you think I did this. — Isaac
There is some benefit A which carries a risk B to person C. If I'm under no duty to provide benefit A then it is not appropriate to take risk B if I cannot get the consent of person C to do so. IF, however, I'm under some responsibility to provide benefit A and still can't get the consent of person C, I might well take risk B because failing to provide A would be no less of a risk - be an equally morally relevant outcome — Isaac
Not quite sure how to take this. Are you implying that moral behaviour has no objective. It's just series of arbitrary rules we follow just because...? — Isaac
Another antinatalism thread and another case of the same arguments being re-hashed or going nowhere :roll: — Albero
How does that which is absolutely true become something the sureness of which comes into such question that we must affirm it absolutely? — tim wood
But it seems we need some absolute standard so that we can conclude that the (small t) true statement is at least closer to it as the false one. — Echarmion
In my own life, and from discussion in this thread, I would say that we cannot find an absolute truth but the need to find frameworks and personal, authentic truths is an important aspect of life and essential to philosophy. — Jack Cummins
Why bother with “people that try to go for it”? — Mww
but to justify something we can be absolutely sure of, and that is the unconditioned, a deductive inference that can’t be reduced further without self-contradiction, from within the same system. — Mww
It's true — Banno
êtes-vous sûr de cela? — khaled
you believe it is evident in your continuing replies to my English sentences. — Banno
When we call something “true” or “real” all we’re saying is that we agree on it.
— khaled
should be...
When we believe something all we’re saying is that we agree on it. — Banno
Like the bishop always staying on the same colour — Banno
seawater being salty — Banno
elephants being mammals. — Banno
Lots and lots of things are true; some of those are even certain. — Banno
Yep. Except for that bit, and a few other bits. — Banno
Well, you are right that this thread is in English.
So that's not right. — Banno
You jumped form "We might be mistaken..." to "We don't..."; from we might not to we never do.
We get it right sometimes, too. — Banno
You seemed to suggest that we don't see things as they are — Banno
Looks suitably relevant. — Banno
not trees and rocks and stuff. — Banno
We're conscious of seeing trees. That is qualia. — frank
unjustified, perhaps? — Banno
But there's lots we know for sure — Banno
We know some statement when at the least we believe it, it fits in with our other beliefs, and when it is true.. — Banno
Really? Not to me. — Banno
Well, if it is raining, while you go dancing in the puddles, do you choose to believe that it is raining? — Banno
should be...
When we believe something all we’re saying is that we agree on it. — Banno
That question is the same as "what should you believe?" — Banno
Is "We" just you and I? Or a simple majority? Or can we use Hare-Clark? — Banno
I don't think we have any common ground on which to base an argument. — Isaac
Really? So if we all agree on something, that makes it true? Or real? — Banno
But we are still capable of seeing things as they are, no? — Andrew M
What's the point of behaving morally, for you? — Isaac
So why would you want to reduce suffering...above all else...seemingly to the complete exclusion of all other considerations? — Isaac
There is some benefit A which carries a risk B to person C. If I'm under no duty to provide benefit A then it is not appropriate to take risk B if I cannot get the consent of person C to do so. IF, however, I'm under some responsibility to provide benefit A and still can't get the consent of person C, I might well take risk B because failing to provide A would be no less of a risk - be an equally morally relevant outcome — Isaac
No. It had no notification attached to it, quite deliberately. — Isaac
We can also add to this that in some moral frameworks, it's not unreasonable to assign a duty to members of a community, and as such we would assume this duty of our imaginary child when predicting their opinion. — Isaac
A world with no-one in it is not a good world — Isaac
and (4) would indicate that avoiding those harms via extinction would be self-defeating — Isaac
The analogy wasn't necessarily aimed at you. — Isaac
For fuck's sake, it was an analogy and hopefully you knew perfectly well it was an analogy when you wrote it, otherwise it was mindnumbingly stupid thing to write. To make the analogy correct, we'd have to add that there are situations where it is your responsibility to buy me a suit. — Isaac
There is some benefit A which carries a risk B to person C. If I'm under no duty to provide benefit A then it is not appropriate to take risk B if I cannot get the consent of person C to do so. IF, however, I'm under some responsibility to provide benefit A and still can't get the consent of person C, I might well take risk B because failing to provide A would be no less of a risk - be an equally morally relevant outcome. — Isaac
The risk that a person might end up displeased with their life is worth taking because not taking it also causes harms. — Isaac
Why are you suddenly only taking into account the harm you alleviate from yourself as the only positive in the balance? — Isaac
I've also stated that other people may decide differently. — Benkei
You claim that the "chance of bad outcome" needs to be near 100% for having children to start to be considered wrong.
— khaled
Yup. That's my personal moral intuition — Benkei
And you claim at the same time that putting the bar at >0% is wrong. On what basis?
I never said that. I said the question doesn't pertain to reality and as such the question is moot — Benkei
Why is it everyone couches disagreement as the other side not 'understanding'? — Isaac
So definitions aside, I don't see what difference there is. It might well be your responsibility to ensure I'm suited — Isaac
Is absolutely evidently insufficient. Driving is a risky undertaking. You risk harming others in doing so, that much is unarguable. — Isaac
And as Benkei has pointed out, the odds of causing net harm to a future person are pretty low. — Isaac