And how would that be, if you don't mind explaining? — Olivier5
It seemed like you were saying, in this particular case we shouldn't act on what would probably reduce suffering unless we have a "watertight" case, due to the irreversibility of extinction. — Down The Rabbit Hole
it's not reasonable to treat extinction as higher stakes than tens of millions with lives of suffering. And stakes being equal, we should use the balance of probability to guide our behaviour. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Reduction of the population is necessary to free enough land and resources to ensure quality of life, and deal with the 9 million deaths per year from pollution (16% of all deaths). — Down The Rabbit Hole
Well I appreciate your patience :lol: — Down The Rabbit Hole
Oh my god, I have almost 3000 likes!!! :love: — Kenosha Kid
whether morality 'objective' or 'subjective' matters mostly to philosophers, sophists and clergy – pedagogues (ideologues); that behaviors are either permissible or not however, matters to everyone else who lacks the leisure or inclination to reflect on whether morals (i.e. the permissible) are public customs or private preferences with which to each one regulates 'self-control'. — 180 Proof
How do models arise in an eliminative materialist model? — Olivier5
Eliminative materialism (or eliminativism) is the radical claim that our ordinary, common-sense understanding of the mind is deeply wrong and that some or all of the mental states posited by common-sense do not actually exist and have no role to play in a mature science of the mind. — SEP (my bolding)
... why would it matter if morality was objective or not? Objectively wrong, or subjectively wrong, they don't care either way. Neither force people to do what's right. — Isaac
Same with laws: why bother with legistlating or just punishment since "neither force people to do what's right?" — 180 Proof
Housing is highly illiquid. If you give everyone more money and impose rent control, rents will rise and many people will be unhoused. If you let prices float upward, it won't help much because you can't truck in new housing. — fishfry
the government is freezing rents and bailing out landlords. Making an absolute sucker out of anyone who scrimped and saved to honorably pay their rent. That's a big problem with bailouts, moral hazard. It makes a fool out of anyone who actually paid their debts. — fishfry
Historically, free markets do better than controlled economies in terms of vibrance, growth, doing business, and establishing the right price. Controlled economies lead to misallocation of resources.
To be fair I'm now arguing an Austrian economics position about which I know the buzzwords but not the details. I should probably quit while I'm behind here because I'm already in a bit over my head. — fishfry
But if you set the rate too high, especially in a world with a huge surplus of unskilled labor, you create massive unemployment. Which you solve with welfare programs, again making a sucker of anyone who works for a living. — fishfry
I'm sure you remember the famous story of the luxury tax on yachts passed 30 or so years ago by the US Congress. — fishfry
there are often grounds for a kind of 'mutual exasperation' in such discussions. — Wayfarer
There's the expectation that if you're going to criticize the role of science in culture, then you ought to have a good scientific reason for so doing. Allied with that, the expectation that if you do pursue that line of thought, then you must prefer to 'get your information from burning bushes' (I was actually told this recently). — Wayfarer
I do think eliminative materialism is unquestionably wrong (and I'm not alone in that). It's an example of the self-reinforcing tendency in this kind of theory - it purports to be 'scientific', although actually it's not, because there's no way of demonstrating it scientifically, it's not a theory about anything objective. — Wayfarer
Eliminative materialism exists due to the fact that the intrinsically subjective nature of conscious experience or existence, is out-of-scope for objective explanation as a matter of principle. — Wayfarer
this is something that critics of Dennett have been saying for 50 years - but none of it counts. He simply ignores the criticism, dismisses it as hand-waving. If no criticism can ever really be made, then who is being 'dogmatic'? — Wayfarer
Also want to clarify that where I think the problem lies is not with science - for instance, I have zero regard for climate-change denial, anti-vaccination, or creationism - but in taking science as being authoritative with respect to human identity or the human condition. — Wayfarer
I will often weigh in, usually when the opinion is expressed that humans 'are an arrangement of atoms' and are therefore understandable, in principle, in terms ultimately reducible to physical laws (in other words, physicalism). — Wayfarer
The thing is that modern culture, generally, presumes that the ‘scientific worldview’ is normative, kind of the arbiter of what is considered real. It is more like an undercurrent a lot of the time. — Wayfarer
I had largely taken it for granted that relativism is bad because, just cause.. — Cheshire
When “folk psychology” is spoken to you, what best describes what you hear, in a narrower sense of the term? — Mww
Not only are they worried about what’s morally permissible, their actions are bound by a strict moral justification. See Mein Kampf or the old and new testament But I get what you’re saying. In committing genocide they are rejecting one set of moral precepts
in favor of another. — Joshs
If it could be argued coherently that they shouldn't do it because of some sort of absolute morality then maybe it could be stopped, however. — ToothyMaw
Ok, what makes people do right or wrong things if not my naive proposal. — Cheshire
allowing for moral relativism no doubt allows for beliefs that cause actions that then cause unnecessary suffering. — ToothyMaw
No — Cheshire
Making wrong things appear permissible. — Cheshire
It delivered the worst humans have ever done. Slavery, Genocide, Illegal Downloading... — Cheshire
relativism causes so much harm — Cheshire
Generally don’t think I can be accused of being discourteous although plainly my views are at odds with many others. — Wayfarer
I can decide who and who not to respond to. — Wayfarer
The reason it’s pointless to debate you, is because you have a fundamentally positivist attitude which is never going to be shifted by anything I have to say. — Wayfarer
Science went searching for the ultimate basis of matter, and this is what it found. — Wayfarer
In that case, nothing to discuss. — Wayfarer
Do you recommend Daniel Dennett's approach to the subject? — Wayfarer
there could be some kind of loosely structured discourse where people who think they might have new philosophical ideas (either new possible positions, or new arguments for existing positions) can say what those ideas are, and then the responses should only be either affirming that that actually is a new idea so far as the respondent knows, or else, a link to or quote of or other brief educational presentation of someone else who has already had that (supposedly) exact idea, and why (if) not everyone is on board with it already. — Pfhorrest
The first poster can then clarify how (if) their idea is different from the older version, or put forth what they think is a new argument that defeats the existing counterarguments that have been presented. — Pfhorrest
The only way to make such a system work long term, is to give everyone free money and simultaneously implement rigid price controls. And then you create shortages. — fishfry
This is moral realism, though. Might makes right. The downtrodden will not like it.
"The existing natural state is that people have children. Because it is the existing natural state, it's ok." — baker
Surely the default should be that the existing natural state is OK until such time as... — Isaac
I don't think it's fair to err on the side of those in a neutral state as opposed to those in unbearable agony. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't know if I said something to the effect of "I just reckon" — Down The Rabbit Hole
I would say... — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't see any evidence to believe humans will go extinct by the year 2100 by which 3 billion people are projected to be brought into existence, and if even 1% of those are a life of suffering, that's 30 million. — Down The Rabbit Hole
at what percentage does the minority get discounted? — schopenhauer1
A color to a house and a human life you would think this rule would get more stringent, don't you think? — schopenhauer1
Is it not the case that you hold a vested interest in the proliferation of the stigma associated with psychiatric diagnosis?
The stigma is, after all, what makes the psychiatric diagnosis so powerful and so relevant. Without the stigma, psychiatric diagnosis would be triflesome. — baker
From what I've seen, psychologists tend to try really hard to live up to that stereotype. Maybe it's a professional deformation. Maybe it's something deeper than that. — baker
What I'm critiquing is not science but scientism. — Wayfarer
It was the classically modern scientific framework, I was referring to — Wayfarer
That has indeed begun to change — Wayfarer
the classically modern scientific framework — Wayfarer
excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’, — Wayfarer
I operate from the data I am aware of — Down The Rabbit Hole
wasn't sure of the gross increase in suffering you had in mind. Presumably, sadness of not being able to have children, less young people to look after the older generation? — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't know how the aforesaid suffering from antinatlaism could outweigh the millions of lives of unbearable suffering that would otherwise exist e.g. babies, children, and adults with horrific illnesses wishing it would all end, people tortured begging to be killed, and we are due another world war. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't think the extent to which anitinatalism will be successful is relevant to my position that procreation is a net bad. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I think any suffering resulting from not breeding will pale in comparison to the millions of lives of unbearable suffering that would otherwise exist. — Down The Rabbit Hole
These people with net bad lives and those with lives of unbearable suffering, exist as a consequence of natalism. In short, If people stop breeding, the lives of suffering eventually stop too. — Down The Rabbit Hole
the dream of some objective measuring framework is long dead. — Kenosha Kid
Yes — Wayfarer
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’ — Wayfarer
Special relativity killed off the idea that there's a special frame of reference for an ideal observer (a god's eye view) and quantum theory made it abundantly clear that observing an experiment makes you part of the experiment (gonzo science if you will). — Kenosha Kid
know that — Wayfarer
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
Modern scientific method excludes or ‘brackets out’ the subject, so as to arrive at ‘the view from nowhere’, i.e. an understanding of reality that is as devoid of all traces of subjectivity. But in so doing it then forgets or overlooks the fact that knowledge of anything whatever always requires the judgement of an observing subject. — Wayfarer
My instinct is that not even one person should have a bad life as a cost of the masses having a good life. It follows that natalism is wrong. — Down The Rabbit Hole
If everyone has an extra $1000/month for rent and there is no increase in available housing and there is no increase in rents, the available units will quickly be filled to 100% capacity and there will be no place to live despite the extra money in your pocket. — fishfry
If the price of water goes way up, people are incented to supply more water. — fishfry
you said jeff makes 800/hr. — Book273
But hey, Maybe in the UK it takes 30+ hours a week to fill out the benefits paperwork, so 10/hr. Not so awesome then. — Book273
"... an' they catch 'im... an' they say e's mental!!" — bongo fury
Hopefully you can see the passing relevance. — bongo fury
