To me it just represents the systems we have created to evaluate our actions and choices as "desirable" or "undesirable" — Qmeri
since it does not need to be justified since it's a logical necessity and therefore not a choice. — Qmeri
I have a goal of eating.
Therefore according to that goal I should eat. — Qmeri
It seems like you do not understand subjective normative statements. — Qmeri
It is not a non sequitur. — Qmeri
even you acknowledged that any system that makes normative statements is a moral system no matter how unintuitive they sound. — Qmeri
I have a goal of eating.
Therefore according to that goal I should eat. — Qmeri
If it's true, it's false. If it's false, it's true — frank
Heat death does not try to change its state unlike the current world which continuously tries to change its state until it reaches the heat death. — Qmeri
They mean the same thing in both of the cases. — Qmeri
Any person has a goal of stability by necessity
Therefore from the point of view of any person they should achieve stability by necessity — Qmeri
Entropy increases stability — Qmeri
Therefore from the point of view of any person they should achieve stability by necessity — Qmeri
That is a normative statement, — Qmeri
Still, an unstable system is trying to achieve a change in its current state, which is a goal and a logically necessary one. — Qmeri
I do still think all systems are trying achieve a stable state since we also see this in nature — Qmeri
This system is trying to solve Hume's guillotine by giving logically necessary personal normative statements — Qmeri
To me any system that makes normative statements is a moral system — Qmeri
I start with a premise that seems so obvious to me that I think everyone would agree with it. — Congau
If the person I’m talking to still doesn’t agree, I’m taking yet another step backwards until we find a common point of agreement. — Congau
that’s exactly where you can attack me — Congau
but if the person had had a previous life, he would actually have been a different person in that life. If Peter used to be the prince of Persia in his previous life, that prince would have been something different from the current Peter — Congau
If the odds were a million to one — Congau
It’s up to you to judge. — Congau
Therefore everything is trying to achieve stability since instability means that one is trying to change its current state — Qmeri
logically necessary personal goal — Qmeri
in most cases (not all) trying to achieve personal sustained stability is intuitively moral — Qmeri
but we do see people usually achieving sustained happiness in communities which are not too unstable — Qmeri
And slave-systems and others with much unhappiness do see revolts and instability reliably — Qmeri
since it does solve the Hume's guillotine — Qmeri
Luckily, the basic-assumption-problem can be solved by a logical necessity. And we already described a logically necessary goal — Qmeri
Everything tries to get away from instability to stability — Qmeri
And what is the most efficient way to achieve happiness? To create a stable state — Qmeri
and forcing some to be always unhappy — Qmeri
want to reduce your desires — ovdtogt
I am driven by a desire to own a Porsche, how does that make me do what I want? — ovdtogt
driven by my fear of failure, — ovdtogt
:clap: And failing to make or accept this distinction leads to the "destroy the village in order to save the village" catch-22 absurdities with which many antinatalists indefensibly paint themselves into a vanishing corner. — 180 Proof
To do good is to alleviate suffering
— ovdtogt
Bingo! :100: — 180 Proof
"The best option" is "best" IFF neither "already born" is harmed by not procreating nor the procreated is harmed by being born - both conditions met - otherwise, it violates the prohibition against doing any harm. — 180 Proof
The relationship of sex to pregnancy is statistical not deterministic - not a matter of volition. Not "nowhere" but somewhere other than the couple's (coupling's) choosing. — 180 Proof
Your argument "discounts" prospective parents - procreators - as already suffering individuals ... — 180 Proof
The first premise of the argument is not a random belief. It’s something so obvious that everyone agrees on it. — Congau
Therefore no one has a head start on anyone and so no one has a right to make demands. — Congau
if they had a previous life, we don’t know about it — Congau
Then you don’t consider it a great gamble. — Congau
Once you truly realize the things you desire are causing your suffering you will lose your desire for these things. — ovdtogt
Reducing your fesires does. — ovdtogt
If your desire/wish is to reduce your desire (to be rich, famous....etc) and you are indeed successful — ovdtogt
You will not stop 'seeking things' if you do not 'desire' to stop that — ovdtogt
This would more fall under the 'pop' Buddhism you are referring to. This is Buddhism for people in the West who want to be happy without sacrificing their possessions. — ovdtogt
So there is no difference between the 'desire' to smoke and the 'desire' not to smoke?
No difference between smoking and not smoking? — ovdtogt
they’re not saying “maybe there are other ways to reach Nirvana” — leo
“maybe for some people nirvana cannot be reached by following these truths and this path, maybe for some people it doesn’t exist” — leo
Curbing your 'sensual' desires is a way to achieve this higher goal. — ovdtogt
The desire to survive even the Buddhist can't do much about. — ovdtogt
There’s never an independent third-party judge to settle anything, but that doesn’t mean we can’t make objectively reasonable arguments.
Imagine two scientists arguing whether the Earth is round or flat. No one can settle that discussion for them, but I for one believe, based on thoroughly convincing arguments, that the Earth is round. I arrive at conclusions about ethics in the same way, through convincing arguments. There’s no difference. — Congau
I was referring to procreation as such. You don’t know if the future child will predominantly suffer or be happy, so procreation as such is not bad. — Congau
you are to accept your 'fate' your 'lot' in life — ovdtogt
But if you say it’s the Truth that others can share the same experience, or it’s the Truth that others will have such experience if they follow such practice, then you’re not a relativist — leo
You asked: “in order for someone to be a relativist he has to believe in some kind of objective reality?”.
I said yes, a relativist believes that other beings exist besides himself, and that these beings have their own point of view, so if you agree with the earlier definition of objective reality then you should agree that a relativist believes in some kind of objective reality.
And a relativist can believe that some other people do not believe in an objective reality, but then these other people wouldn’t be relativists they would be solipsists. The relativist himself does believe that these other people exist even when he doesn’t perceive them.
A relativist believes things exist beyond himself, but he cannot claim to know that it is True otherwise he contradicts himself. He isn’t certain that there is an objective reality but he believes in one. — leo
You can say it, you can believe it, but you cannot say that it is True beyond yourself — leo
Buddhists pretend to know something that is True beyond themselves — leo
you consider that there are things that exist beyond your experiences, so you consider that there is an objective reality. The alternative is to think that other beings reduce to your experiences, that they don’t have experiences of their own and don’t exist when you don’t have experiences of them, which is solipsism. — leo
but if you believe other beings can experience it then you believe in an objective reality. — leo
Yes, otherwise how can there be relativism if there aren’t other points of view beyond our own? — leo
any point of view is inherently more true than any other. So for instance a relativist wouldn’t say that there exists a state (Nirvana) that everyone can access, the relativist would say I’ve seen that I can access this state but I don’t know whether others can — leo
while presumably a relativist would claim no such thing. — leo
If in Buddhism everyone can attain Nirvana in principle then this can be a common goal of all people, so this isn’t relativism in which no such common goal exists. — leo
Perhaps I am confused by theories, but wasn't the idea of the shape of the earth once a scientific theory? What was once a scientific theory is no longer a theory. — Weynon5x
But Buddhists' have a concept of not-self and unconditioned existence — Weynon5x
Why can't there be a possible world where we can know that we understand gravity? — Weynon5x
Yet, if we were to affirm a theory and fully understand the interactions of whatever creates gravity and things like gravity, then we would no longer be applying a false concept. — Weynon5x
In a possible world where we discover how gravity works — Weynon5x
and since there is no third-party judge we can never settle once and for all who is ultimately right, — Congau
Doesn't space consist of a web of particles — Weynon5x
Even if they aren't trying to explain the world and they view conceptions as illusions that supervene over the reality of what make up aggregates, I am still curious as to what the metaphysics of such illusions would look like. — Weynon5x
These are also aggregates that can be broken down further and further until we get to the subatomic area of business that consists of particles with mass (proton, neutron, quarks — Weynon5x
If gravity is the interactions of gravitons — Weynon5x
if something threatens your life and you desire not to suffer then you are supposed to be content with the situation and accept your fate — leo
it could be possible to progressively change the way things are to get to a state where all of our desires are met. — leo
