I take it you agree with the principle that good can more than make up for the bad — Down The Rabbit Hole
You write this like I owe you something. I write my thoughts not to convince you believe it or not. — schopenhauer1
The imposer doesn't realize they are imposing, neither does the imposed (the controversial part). Again, there was a time when people used to think X was not wrong.. X is now considered wrong. What makes this any different? — schopenhauer1
We think because if there is a multiplicity of choices for X — schopenhauer1
You will say that "as long as "most people" don't see not having the option for no option as bad, it's all good" — schopenhauer1
Rather, it's analog and binary. The evaluations are still subjective.. So even the analog is subjective. So when you have something super painful, or even just mild irritations throughout the day, you would subjectively evaluate that. What I am saying is the results may be different — schopenhauer1
More cognitive distortions. Once you have a kid, you generally can't take it back or be in a state where you didn't have a kid. — schopenhauer1
The main point being here that there can be something wrong done, even if no one perceives the wrong. — schopenhauer1
That's the thing, they minded it at the moment. — schopenhauer1
Well right, analog versus digital. When the question is asked, it's digital, but much of life is lived in the moment in analog (give me this binary answer right now!). Even the mood of the time being asked might affect things. Also, the question, "Did you want to be born" might be gotten at in different ways that isn't as straightforward, as this has all sorts of implications of suicide, depression, etc. that no one would want to project. — schopenhauer1
However, investigate the holistic case of what is going on throughout the feelings, moods, and experiences throughout a day, a week, a month, a year, etc. — schopenhauer1
Is the boss wrong in what he is doing? Is he being exploitative of someone's comparative willingness to work? Is this just? Is this too much of an imposition? — schopenhauer1
When you add it all up, you're actually at a net negative. — schopenhauer1
1) Cultural bias.. Even if someone was to REALLY think about life in depth, without reflexively giving an answer, that person might look to what social norms generally accepts as an appropriate answer. So a person on the fence who is thoughtful might never give the true answer, because then they are the weird "Negative Nancy" or "Debbie Downer" (or put in X pejorative here).
2) Cognitive bias... People have cognitive biases to distort what their experiences are when recalling them. They become cherry-picked, confused, etc. So sure we can say that in their evaluation they sounded like they were content with the situation, but then not be living the situation they are describing (see Scenario 2). — schopenhauer1
(khaled and Isaac same person, slightly different writing style? haha.. collusion?) — schopenhauer1
Well, precisely. This is again to throw doubt on simply saying "it's all subjective". — schopenhauer1
Your point here, again, is reinforcing my point -this brief summation may simply not be "the" answer, because it was constructed based on various factors which may bias it. — schopenhauer1
It's about how we assess what "too much" imposition is. — schopenhauer1
Sometimes, a slave for example, might not know how bad they have it objectively — schopenhauer1
Are we measuring whether someone makes a statement at a point in time that “All burdens that happened, currently exist, and will exist are fine and dandy.” or Are we measuring the amount of actual burden one is given once one is given the dual“gift” of both burdens and non-suffering circumstances? — schopenhauer1
Certainly, most surprise parties and gifts don’t reach anywhere near the imposition, enduring duration, and frequency of burden as this gift. — schopenhauer1
Well, no one suffers not living. — schopenhauer1
I don't have any argument against giving someone money or a gift, even if they weren't expecting it. I just don't agree with giving someone a burden and then justifying it by giving them a gift. — schopenhauer1
I'm not sure I'm trying to do that. In our back-and-forths, due to you wanting me to provide a one-size-fits-all heuristic as a basis for my AN, I do end up doing that I think (see previous discussions). — schopenhauer1
If so because you legitimately believe acts can be done to someone or on their behalf because "most people" think its okay with disregard for those who don't think so, is ethics then simply based on the current preferences of a particular group? Are ethics voted in by majority rule? — schopenhauer1
One can even argue, giving a present to someone is also doing this — schopenhauer1
surprise party, or whatever example you want to use. — schopenhauer1
Wouldn’t it be a morally good thing to disable the mine even though nobody who would be harmed by it is alive? — Albero
“In order to prevent work and suffering one must prevent someone else’s or his own work and suffering. [The anti-natalist] is preventing no one’s work and suffering.” — NOS4A2
but in order to prevent work and suffering one must prevent someone else’s or his own work and suffering. You’re preventing no one’s work and suffering. I can’t get past that fact. — NOS4A2
If I stand on the street and refuse to punch 100 people, I cannot say my behavior was ethical because I prevented 100 bloody noses, when in fact I did nothing at all. — NOS4A2
If so because you legitimately believe acts can be done to someone or on their behalf because "most people" think its okay with disregard for those who don't think so, is ethics then simply based on the current preferences of a particular group? — schopenhauer1
So 'I knew' means the picture I had of X matched the way X really was. Substitute those meanings into our tricky sentences and they are safely conserved between tenses. — Isaac
A "livable" wage is arbitrary and subjective — Kasperanza
Someone's income is not based according to their needs and wants. — Kasperanza
No one asked how you feel.
— khaled
I've given due respect to how you feel/think — TheMadFool
However, people are uncomfortable with that decision in re the trolley problem.
— TheMadFool
Does not lead to.
people don't or hesitate to mathematize morality.
— TheMadFool
— khaled
You've lost the plot Khaled. — TheMadFool
However, people are uncomfortable with that decision in re the trolley problem. I take that as the clearest, most unequivocal sign that people don't or hesitate to mathematize morality. — TheMadFool
Something's off Khaled - you're in dire need of some soul-searching. — TheMadFool
You're blinded by mathematics — TheMadFool
I've been honest with my answers but it's obvious that you're set in your ways — TheMadFool
Self-critique is a good thing I hear. Carry on Khaled. — TheMadFool
You have accused me but you haven't made your case yet. — TheMadFool
However, people are uncomfortable with that decision in re the trolley problem. — TheMadFool
people don't or hesitate to mathematize morality. — TheMadFool
You're contradicting yourself Khaled — TheMadFool
I was upfront about how I felt. Choose 1 rather than 2 but this isn't a dilemma — TheMadFool
but as you already know or should know you've only increased the number of people without affecting the essence of the moral dilemma encapsulated by the trolley problem. — TheMadFool
In other words, they're equally good — TheMadFool
A very large number of problems have their beginnings in folk failing to differentiate clearly between knowledge, truth and belief. — Banno
However, people are uncomfortable with that decision in re the trolley problem. I take that as the clearest, most unequivocal sign that people don't or hesitate to mathematize morality. — TheMadFool
You do catch my drift right? If the issue were about a better (moral) deal, there would be no dilemma in the first place. — TheMadFool
That said, I'd very much prefer it if you do save my life from a car crash and also donate 100 dollars to charity. — TheMadFool
Technically, you end up with an infinite regress always trying to justify the thing that justified. — Cheshire
But it is just poor expression to say you know something that is false. — Banno
A very large number of problems have their beginnings in folk failing to differentiate clearly between knowledge, truth and belief. — Banno
If they're both good, it doesn't matter which one you choose. — TheMadFool
Do you know things that are false? — Banno
All I have done is to set out the consequences of answering "no" to that question. — Banno
Under this system you can know true things and mislabel false things as known. — Cheshire
Pull the lever, one innocent dies (bad). Don't pull the lever, many die (bad). This is the meat and potatoes of the trolley problem.
It's both bad.
The Protagorian solution: Pull the lever, many are saved (good). Don't pull the lever, one innocent survives (good).
It's both good. — TheMadFool
A similar argument applies to Kantian ethic in re the murderer at the door thought experiment. — TheMadFool
That's exactly why we don't know what to do - moral ambiguity. — TheMadFool
Ok but which should I do though? This doesn't help — khaled
Protagoras paradox makes it a clear as crystal. — TheMadFool
Please read through my previous posts. — TheMadFool
This makes as much sense as resolving the trolley problem by saying "Do what you want, it's all bad".
— khaled
Exactly! — TheMadFool
Do what you want, it's all good. — TheMadFool
If you pull the lever, you save many innocent people (good) and if you don't pull the lever, you don't kill one innocent person (good). — TheMadFool
Do what you want, it's all good. — TheMadFool
It might be wrong, but as things stand it isn't. So it doesn't follow that it cannot be wrong. — Banno
Stopping someone from using their property is a violation of property rights and is immoral by ANCAP standards — Oppyfan
And yet we know that this thread is in English. — Banno
We talk about stuff we know all the time, but khaled would have us not do so — Banno
replacing knowledge with mere belief. — Banno
There's a reason we have the word "know" and use it sometimes rather than "belief". — Banno
Mandating that we not do so. — Banno
To put it another way, if you think we are lumps of meat - just lumps of meat that happen to think things - then you have a problem when it comes to explaining our moral value. — Bartricks
If you had said "knowledge is a belief that is not false" we might have agreement. The difference is that one can believe one knows something, but be mistaken. — Banno