Do you ever look in the mirror and realize how compeletely worthless these posts are? — Baden
Doesn't this then reduce to good intentions? What we're really describing here is expectations. Part of making a moral choice is an expectation of an outcome for a given course of action. The actor can only act on likely outcomes based on prior experience and incomplete reason. An expectation of an outcome of one's own actions is an intent. — Kenosha Kid
So, crawl back under your rock, please. It's disgusting that you think you have any moral standing here. — Baden
You support the guy whose lies resulted in 200,000 Americans dead. — Baden
Being hungry is what causes me to desire food. Being in pain is what causes me to desire it’s alleviation. — Pinprick
So the “force of Evolution” can be defeated. But that is always going to be a pyrrhic victory of man over nature. — philosophience wordpress com
I doubt that a desireless person has ever existed and I doubt that even if existed, she/he would be happy. — philosophience wordpress com
But is it true that this always occurs? Do good people always end up happy? Do bad people always end up unhappy? — petrichor
When we see people suffering, is it always because they did something bad and so deserve it? — petrichor
Only mosquitoes and idiots don't go away when you ignore them. When any bible puncher is ignored they eventually figure out that they are wasting their time and go away. If you get upset by them I think it says more about you and your agenda than theirs. — Sir2u
The answer to a moral question in your theory cannot be equivalent to 'he must be unhappy deep down because otherwise the answer comes out wrong'. — Kenosha Kid
So what is inner peace or true happiness? Sorry if you already defined these terms, but I can't continue this discussion without knowing. — Aleph Numbers
Perhaps true happiness is achieving a happiness that is free of the constraints of one's maladaptive tendencies, experiences, and base desires? But what makes tendencies and experiences maladaptive? — Aleph Numbers
What are base desires? — Aleph Numbers
For sure, but in a moral theory that depends entirely on personal happiness, if you assume everyone to be lying about their happiness if the wrong moral fact is derived, you don't have a workable theory: it is circular. It is not a question of completeness: you have precisely demonstrated that you have not answered anything, merely deferred the question. — Kenosha Kid
Human beings have both selfish and social drives, and satisfying either can be a source of happiness. A less extreme example might be a guy running off with a woman he's infatuated with, leaving his wife and five young children unsupported and none the wiser. This is unconstrained hedonism: the man is doing exactly what he wants undeterred by considerations of responsibility and consequences for others. The harm he causes far outstrips the benefit he enjoys; nonetheless I'm sure he's having a wonderful time. — Kenosha Kid
This actually seems like the no true Scotsman fallacy: If one acts in a way that is sadistic in order to achieve happiness, you say they never were actually pursuing true happiness. — Aleph Numbers
But how is it known if doing sadistic things works against one's true happiness? Couldn't it be behavior unrelated to their happiness and thus not be immoral according to your third claim? — Aleph Numbers
Then you don't have a moral theory. You're merely deferring a moral judgement to one about happiness, while insisting that a person is not the judge of their happiness but rather you are. You can bypass the middle man of happiness entirely and just insist on what is moral and what is not on a case-by-case basis, which is what you're doing with happiness. — Kenosha Kid
What if someone derives inner peace from torturing small children? From causing immense amounts of suffering? I've known sadistic people, and they genuinely revel in others' suffering and misfortune. — Aleph Numbers
So being immoral prevents one from achieving true happiness because you say that if one doesn't achieve true happiness one is acting immorally. — Aleph Numbers
That might be true of some people who murder, rape and torture but not all of them. Some people might do it just because they enjoy it, and those are the people im talking about. How would you exclude these people from being moral? — DingoJones
The Nazi’s thought they were creating a better world, they were in the pursuit of true happiness, they thought they were doing good. — DingoJones
Some people are born or conditioned by experience to derive true pleasure and happiness from inflicting pain or rape or whatever. — DingoJones
what do [you think] constitutes an act which is moral? — god must be atheist
It totally is the opinion of the majority of people, yes — Aleph Numbers
You make a good if obvious point: circumstances and motivations are important. — Aleph Numbers
Motivations and circumstance, rather than the action itself, are, in my eyes, way more important in judging the morality of a certain action. In what way can it ever be said that the motivations and circumstances of all a groups' members are exactly the same? — Tzeentch
