You're conflating the distinctions between the two different types of "fideism" and "skepticism" above. What you're saying here is an argument for "liberalism" over "cynicism", and I agree with it. That's different from an argument for "criticism" over "dogmatism". Correct, we cannot (and even if we could, must not) actively doubt to the point of rejection everything all at once, so we must hold some beliefs without having proven them from the ground up. That's "liberalism" over "cynicism". But we can (and must) remain open to the possibilities of each particular belief being wrong, not holding them above questioning. That's "criticism" over "dogmatism". — Pfhorrest
There are several different senses of "moral relativism", and the usual one in meta-ethics is (surprise) meta-ethical relativism, which very much is just the negation of universalism. Saying that what is right varies with context and circumstance isn't relativism in that usual sense and isn't anything I'm arguing against. — Pfhorrest
There are questions about those things, but they can be analyzed into some combinations of those big two, because there are only four possible directions of fit — Pfhorrest
there is pragmatic reason to dis-prefer positions that require jumping through elaborate hoops to maintain them like that, namely that of efficiency, which in the case of descriptive knowledge manifests as parsimony. — Pfhorrest
If this were the case you should be able to produce evidence of it happening. — Isaac
See the history of science for reference. — Pfhorrest
Naturalism is the study of 'what you see out the window'. Phenomenology is the study of 'you looking out the window'. — Wayfarer
Just to be clear, you mean the people whose reason tells them that if they order themselves to do X, then necessarily Xing is right? — Bartricks
There is no countervailing evidence. — Bartricks
“An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise.” — Victor Hugo
Er, no. I didn't say any of that.
If something appears to be the case, that is prima facie evidence that it is the case. That doesn't mean it 'is' the case, just that it is evidence that it is the case. So, what's true is not just that which seems to me to be true. — Bartricks
If individual subjectivism is true, then if I tell myself to do X, then necessarily it would be right for me to X (for by hypothesis the rightness of Xing 'is' my instruction to myself to do it). Yet it is as clear to my reason as that 2 + 2 = 4 that if I tell myself to do X, that does 'not' entail that it is right for me to do X (anymore than if I tell myself that 2 + 2 = 5, then it will = 5). Thus individual subjectivism is false. — Bartricks
it is as clear to my reason as that 2 + 2 = 4 that if I tell myself to do X, that does 'not' entail that it is right for me to do X — Bartricks
This view, commensurablism, is just the conjunction of criticism and universalism, which are in turn just the negations of dogmatism and relativism, respectively. If you accept dogmatism rather than criticism, then if your opinions should happen to be the wrong ones, you will never find out, because you never question them, and you will remain wrong forever. And if you accept relativism rather than universalism, then if there is such a thing as the right opinion after all, you will never find it, because you never even attempt to answer what it might be, and you will remain wrong forever. — Pfhorrest
I hold that there are two big mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive questions, neither of which is reducible to the other, and between the two of which all other smaller questions are covered. One is the descriptive question of what is real, or true, or factual. The other is the prescriptive question of what is moral, or good, or normative. — Pfhorrest
All that matters is whether there are any reasons at hand to prefer one answer over another. — Pfhorrest
In my view the changes of worldview are largely unpredictable and unstructured, but by constantly weeding out the untenable extremes, the chaotic swinging between ever-less-extreme opposites still tends generally toward some limit over time. — Pfhorrest
It would not only be unphilosophical but also unscientific to follow the mainstream simply because it is mainstream. After all, today's mainstream can be tomorrow's nonsense. — spirit-salamander
"some people don't believe in moral universalism therefore moral universalism is false". — Pfhorrest
your same objections ... have once again flooded another thread and displaced any conversation that might have taken place about the actual topic of it. — Pfhorrest
...while completely ignoring the libertarian deontology that ameliorates pretty much all of your claimed concerns — Pfhorrest
It's a matter of the "looney" being able to convince the expert presiding over the case that he has a point, so that that expert will at least suspend judgement while he (if necessary) escalates the issue to those above him and so on as necessary. Like how if a student in a science class somehow finds something that looks plausibly like new evidence against a prevailing theory -- which should get less likely over time, just as described in the OP -- he can show his professor, who can then begin the process of research that might possibly overturn the scientific consensus. And in the mean time, the professor knows that he shouldn't just outright tell the student he's completely wrong, if the student managed to present plausible evidence to the contrary. — Pfhorrest
why did you mention equality ("egalitarian" = equal-itarian) here? — Pfhorrest
If we have a generally libertarian society where everyone gets to be master of their own little domain instead of being subject to the whims of others then we don't run into those kinds of conflicts nearly so much and so don't need to predict huge numbers of tiny details far in advance. — Pfhorrest
The only issues that remain are in public spaces, where e.g. Alice is doing something in a public park that Bob claims harms his equal right to use the park, and Alice rebuts that Bob is being an over-sensitive crybaby and she's not doing anything harmful, and we need to decide whether Bob's claim is legit or not. — Pfhorrest
For that we don't need to predict a ridiculously complex dynamic system of all people everywhere years in advance. We just need a "today's forecast", to use your weather analogy from the other thread. — Pfhorrest
I realized that last bit a month ago and went back and made a new post with that argument in that thread, but you ignored that. Maybe go back and read that now? I can link it if you want. — Pfhorrest
Do you see the pattern here? — Pfhorrest
a thread on the libertarian and deontological aspects of my ethics ... would address many of [my] concerns based out of [my] assumption that [you were] some ends-justify-the-means authoritarian — Pfhorrest
most philosophers agree that one of the marks of a moral norm is that they have categoricity. That is evidence that the reason of those who are exceptionally good at attending to their reason - represents moral norms to be categorical. — Bartricks
you sound like grudge central to me. — Bartricks
that's what the vast bulk of contemporary metaethicists do. They defend stupid views very cleverly. — Bartricks
the "dynamic" solution to the problem I'm talking about is a liberal/libertarian one: let everyone control their own surroundings in real time. — Pfhorrest
You seem to want to force upon me a dichotomy of either me saying nothing new and so nothing worth saying, or else me arrogantly thinking I'm some kind of unprecedented genius because (so far as I can tell) I've had a new idea. — Pfhorrest
People come up with folk beliefs about what is real all the time too, and broadly agree on the obvious things, yet disagree on less-obvious things. Does that mean we shouldn't do natural sciences, but instead just poll people on their beliefs? — Pfhorrest
Yes yes complexity I get it... so we shouldn't do meteorology then? — Pfhorrest
You can argue in your defense that you didn't do the thing, or that the thing you did is not the thing the law is against, but "I did the thing the law is against, but it's not wrong to do that" is a non-starter. You don't even get a chance to argue that the law is incorrect. — Pfhorrest
What does this have to do with (in)equality? — Pfhorrest
Societies are bigger now, so we must have authority (and thus inequality) to make them predictabl(y bad)? — Pfhorrest
You don't do philosophy by consensus. You assess a position based on the evidence. — Bartricks
It is also worth noting that the majority of philosophers who have thought carefully about this issue have also come to the conclusion that we have free will, despite disagreeing over what possessing it involves. — Bartricks
most moral philosophers agree that moral norms and values are categorical — Bartricks
most people's intuitions - most people who think soberly about such matters, are capable of understanding, and who are not in the grips of a dogma - deliver the verdict that it would be wrong to torture one to maximise the happiness of the many.
That doesn't mean they're right. But it is very good evidence that they're correct. — Bartricks
the majority agree that we have free will of the moral responsibility-grounding kind. — Bartricks
Has a professional philosopher annoyed you or been mean to you or something? — Bartricks
Professional philosophers are expert reasoners. — Bartricks
Where in there (in either case) was any actual systematic research and consensus-building done? You just asked some people what they already thought — Pfhorrest
We naturally strive to accommodate those who we care about, but rarely explicitly codify in our processes that we should accommodate everyone, as I'm advocating. — Pfhorrest
And when those cultural practices are entrenched, in law or even just in tradition, we're loath to make exceptions of revisions to them when they fail to work. — Pfhorrest
I'm advocating that if a "law" as written produces a demonstrably bad result, that alone is reason to change the law. — Pfhorrest
Are you suggesting that inequality produces good outcomes more reliably? Or just that it lets us more accurately predict outcomes -- by forcing them to be bad? — Pfhorrest
The part you're talking about is basically my account of how to compile reliable advice on how to avoid conflicts in such a free and equal society, to use both preemptively to prevent such conflicts from occurring, and in the assignment of culpability if such conflicts occur anyway. — Pfhorrest
You are again assuming that I'm aiming to create a static world that permanently satisfies everyone exactly how it is, rather than a dynamic world that adapts to satisfy people's changing appetites in real time. — Pfhorrest
Would you at some point say "that's enough suffering eliminated, we can stop now", and just give up on even attempting to get rid of even more? Where is that line to be drawn, and why? — Pfhorrest
The whole method of verifying people's hedonic experiences that you're contesting to vehemently is just a way to tell reliably if something consistently causes certain types of people to suffer in certain contexts, so that we can know to stop doing that. — Pfhorrest
some of these recent adaptations are the things met with the fiercest social and political resistance. I guess just half of everyone are sociopaths? — Pfhorrest
See a few paragraphs up ("The whole method of..." and "This is exactly analogous...") for elaboration on how what I'm advocating is different from that. — Pfhorrest
Translation + stress testing of the bridge translation builds. — fdrake
the inverse question induced by the translation; said the neuroscientist to the folk theorist - does this make any difference on a day to day basis? Does this make a difference therapeutically? — fdrake
One way of framing the issue is that if people behave as if there were a thing, and that behaviour wouldn't work as it does without it functioning as if there were a thing, does it make sense to say that thing exists in some sense? — fdrake
if something behaves as if a model of it were true, then the model can be treated as real/held to be true/is true. Like F=ma or something like that. If the system involved works in accordance**
with F=ma, F=ma is true for it. So that system's behaviour generates a commitment to that it acts in accord with that description of it. — fdrake
If you can't already tell we have will, there's nothing I can say that will make you believe that we do. — Manuel
I thought you were studying free will, not the "sensation that you have chosen to do so". — Manuel
Object permanence highlights the point that was already obvious to people like Locke. It doesn't tell you how it arises, nor why we have it. — Manuel
If statues and trees and everything else were subject to "learning", we would still be debating what they are. — Manuel
I said:
"the complexity of manifest reality cannot be explained by neuroscience, we simply know way too little."
"brain science says very, very, very little about the mind"
Also "knowing a tree", "speaking of trees", "classifying trees" aren't explained by anything in current brain science.
I said that physics says virtually nothing about the mind.
Now you are mis-interpreting me. — Manuel
I still do not understand your point. — Bartricks
like I say, the argument I have given demonstrates that view to be mistaken. — Bartricks
I didn't say anything about only considering present first-person experiences. Future suffering or enjoyment is still a first-person experience. True, we can't know the relationship between present and future experiences entirely in the first person, we have to do a third-person study of the world to establish that, but that's once again a question of particular means, not of general ends, and so not something I'm saying anything about here when doing philosophy, but a subject for some logically posterior scientific investigation. — Pfhorrest
he doesn't seem to care whether his theory of morality actually has the potential for ever being applied by humans. — baker
The part of moral theory we're discussing here is deciding on what are good ends. That's not in itself a means to achieving those ends, it's just deciding what ends to try to achieve. How to achieve them is a separate, later question. — Pfhorrest
What you think you're doing is immaterial to issue. — Isaac
So you get to tell me what my views are, and I don't get to clarify that what you think I'm saying or doing isn't actually what I'm trying to say or do? — Pfhorrest
You're taking too much emphasis on the "perfect" part, unless you want to deny that even something so vague as "certain kinds of people in certain contexts will tend to find certain things pleasant and certain other things unpleasant" is impossible to predict, — Pfhorrest
I've already said it but I'll say it again: I'm not suggesting that we have to make the world one exact unchanging way that will make everyone satisfied forever, and so figure out exactly what exact unchanging static state of the world that would be. Just that we have to (do our best to) ensure that the world and people's target valences always align, which can (and probably would best) be done in a dynamic way, enabling people to adjust the part of the world around them to satisfy their appetites in real time. — Pfhorrest
The affect resulting from finding oneself in some set of circumstances changes with the model that each person has of those circumstances and the likely affect they would cause. This model is itself effected by one's own moral thinking and that of one's culture. To resolve a moral dilemma (using positive affect in all people in all circumstances as a target) one would need to know what affect each option of the dilemma was likely to result in, not just now (that would be the cliched hedonism you deny) but in the future and for future generations. At least to a level of probability capable of significantly distinguishing between options.
But the feedback inherent in the fact that your decision will change the affects felt in the future means that you cannot possibly have a clue in any but the most obvious of cases. Anything remotely complex and the chaos effects of the multiple feedbacks would quickly render the likelihood incalculable. So only simple, clear cut cases could be decided this way.
And then you remind us that your model is not meant for simple clear cut cases as we've already worked these out.
You might argue that the rate of change in affect is slower than the rate at which we could discover the effects of acting on such a change... But the rate of change in affect (and the rate at which we can calculate the effects) are both empirical matters, and you've assured us that your approach here does not rely on empirical data for its soundness. — Isaac
we as a civilization (any civilization, or the global civilization) sure don't seem to be recognizing and practicing it in the political sphere right now. — Pfhorrest
f you think the ordinary legislative processes in use today resemble that process, I'd appreciate if you spelled that resemblance out, because I really don't see it. — Pfhorrest
That's a clear sign of cause and effect. That's something we normally wouldn't do in normal life, put a flashlight in front of your eyes. If for whatever reason, you choose to look at a flashlight, you are using your will to continue looking at the flashlight. That's different from causes and effects. — Manuel
If for whatever reason, you choose to look at a flashlight, you are using your will to continue looking at the flashlight. — Manuel
Do you believe we have free will, experiments aside? If you do, then you'll look at how that's possible using neuroscience. If you don't, like Sam Harris, he'll look to neuroscience to prove his point. — Manuel
Psychic continuity is what Locke described: when we look at an object at time t1, we take to be the same object at time t2. In other words, when you go outside and see a bird in the sky, you will continue to see it as the same bird through out the time span you are looking at it. Maybe I'm a total Martian, but I can't help but recognize the tree outside my window as the same tree the next day. I can't get rid of it if I wanted to. — Manuel
I'll grant you the "self" argument, people are different in these regards. — Manuel
You're telling me that when you visit a place for the first time, you don't already know what a river or a statue is? You take time after seeing a place to think to yourself that's a tree and not a light post? — Manuel
the point remains. I don't know of a physicist who claims that physics tells us anything substantive of the mind, that was not already obvious years ago: that it's physical. — Manuel
Having you're finger move by an electrical shock is the same as you willing to move the finger? Press you palm with any object and watch your fingers move. Afterwards move your fingers by yourself. Is that in any way the same thing? — Manuel
Either we have free will and you can find some way to see if neuroscience as anything to bear on the subject. Or we lack it and we go to neuroscience to prove that we don't have it.
In either case it's stipulated. — Manuel
I'm mentioning specific things: "self", "psychic continuity", "categorization", etc. What's given in experience and must form a part of it for us to form an intelligible world at all. — Manuel
we could not theorize at all if did not have these things as given. When we speak of the self, at no point do you lose consciousness or stop categorizing, it's always there on every topic. — Manuel
We experience speech and vision as manifest activity, not non-mental processes. That these non-mental processes are essential for speech or vision, no one could doubt, but we have linguistics and vision science, which are different than neuroscience. Why do we have these fields? Why don't linguists just study the brain and forget about sentence structure? — Manuel
Which physicist would be crazy enough to say appeal to physics to explain the mind? — Manuel
Physics is amazing, while saying almost nothing of mind. — Manuel
If that's how you interpret it, fine. — Manuel
You're speaking about stimuli and reaction. I'm talking about will. — Manuel
when we speak of will, science either denies it exists or tells us nothing about it. — Manuel
You can speak of stimulating a finger to go up, but it's very different from moving your finger. It's a bit like Wittgenstein once asked:
"What is left over if I subtract the fact that my arms goes up from the fact that I raise my arm?" — Manuel
You can't take these things away and study the world "value free" as it were. — Manuel
seems to be highly unlikely that physics can say much about mind. — Manuel
Neuroscience is extremely useful, while not being able to say much about the self — Manuel
we don't need to know anything about brains to discuss whether or not it is the case that suffering and suffering alone (as a kind of experience, in the first person) is intrinsically a bad state of affairs. — Pfhorrest
But of course we need to know about brains to properly discuss how to reduce suffering, since it turns out upon third person observation of the physical world that the experience of suffering is a product of brain function. — Pfhorrest
the philosophy is just laying the groundwork for why and how to go do a science of some kind, rather than some ineffectual non-science that will at best yield non-answers. — Pfhorrest
I directly responded to that, immediately after the bit you quoted:
I'm absolutely not saying that we need to be able to predict perfectly exactly what everyone's target valence will be so as to preemptively prepare a static, unchanging world that will perfectly satisfy everyone's target valences. — Pfhorrest
I cited the fact that we have mapped all 302 neurons in C Elegans. We don't know why the thing moves. — Manuel
What I take the tree to mean, how I categorize it, how I relate to it, etc. It comes from the brain all right, but these things are assumed, not discovered. — Manuel
There's the problem also that neurons might be the wrong place to look, in that case we might have to look at microtubules. But then it goes down to the level of physics. You would not be wrong in saying that seeing a tree is nothing more that the complex behavior of quantum phenomena. I don't think that says much at all. — Manuel
Maybe one part of "what's missing" is regarding the scope of useful condensations of the information. On a day to day basis you don't have access to someone's brain, but you do have access to someone's behaviour. — fdrake
What I have in mind when I ask that question is that it seems to me that a lot is left missing. You can say that stimulating X and Y area of the brain is the same as seeing a tree. I think that while in principle you could stimulate the brain to do this, we know way too little about the brain. — Manuel
if “seeing a tree” is an experience independent from the physical state, how does it influence it and seem influenced by it? Same with “anger”. How did the emotion move the arm (I would simply say that the emotion is precisely the neural event that moved the arm)? — khaled
I thought you were coming from a Churchland perspective. Alex Rosenberg would argue in this manner. — Manuel
What on earth makes you think all that hasn't already happened in our long history of social interaction. — Isaac
A doctor (rightly IMO) takes as given that reducing pain and suffering is an end goal, and then concerns himself with the means to do so. If someone was self-harming because they thought they morally deserved it, a doctor would see that as a sign of poor mental health — Pfhorrest
Your system relies on static data points of hedonic value — Isaac
I literally just said otherwise in my last post, and you even quoted it: — Pfhorrest
You can say what the answer was yesterday, but by the time you've worked out what the answer is today it's already not the answer any more. — Isaac
We have to stipulate what the brain is, what parts of the body are directly relevant to the brain and so on. — Manuel
It is crucial to remember that we also have another structure that resembles the brain, but is not conscious:the gut brain — Manuel
If you think that seeing a tree and all that goes into such an act, such as belief, perception, categorization, psychic continuity and so forth is explained by saying, it's because of actions in the brain, you've said almost nothing. — Manuel
how a brain state produces a qualitative state, such as seeing the sky or a tree. — Manuel
If you think that by studying the brain, we will understand not only seeing trees, which includes all of what I mentioned (categorization, psychic continuity, etc.) then I think you're mistaking different aspects of reality. — Manuel
I think it is an evident mistake to think that you need to do neuroscience to do philosophy of mind at all. If what you say is true, then Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Locke, Hume, Kant, Russell, Strawson, etc. haven't done anything. — Manuel
That manifest reality is explained by processes in the brain is another assertion — Manuel
I'll focus on manifest reality. There need be no clash, I don't think. — Manuel
If you had no intentionality or "aboutness", there would be nothing to produce the effects, or being more accurate, there would be too many factors coming in to distinguish anything from anything else. — Manuel
I'm speaking of the mental, what you are seeing right now, as you read these letters and whatever examples come to mind as you think of a reply. You are saying that this is caused by neurons — Manuel
there's much more to speech than what can be accounted for by looking at Broca's area — Manuel
There is much more complexity in manifest reality than what can be said by appealing to causes in the brain... There seems to be a massive gap in our knowledge when we go from the brain to our picture of the world... Also "knowing a tree", "speaking of trees", "classifying trees" aren't explained by anything in current brain science. — Manuel
Simply put: a neuron looks nothing like green or brown, it doesn't smell anything and by itself, it sees nothing. So there is a gap between quantity like number of neurons involved and location of brain module and experience. — Manuel
give me one example of how a brain state produces a qualitative state, such as seeing the sky or a tree. — Manuel
In the first phase, analogous to the creation of primary sources in a typical academic peer review process, detailed accounts are to be published, not of observations or sensations, but rather of appetites — Pfhorrest
In the second phase of the process, analogous to the compilation of secondary sources in typical academic peer review, groups of other people are to review and comment on the quality of that original research in media such as journals — Pfhorrest
the third phase, still others are to gauge the consensus opinion held between those secondary sources on what can somewhat reliably, though of course alway still tentatively, be said about what is moral, and publish those conclusions — Pfhorrest
