Just when it seemed like we were actually having an actual polite conversation and coming to at least a productive sharing of thoughts on a topic... — Pfhorrest
This kind of thing really gives an air of you just looking to shoot down anyone who is insufficiently meek in your eyes — Pfhorrest
If I was arrogant I would be trying to get real philosophy journals to publish my thoughts. — Pfhorrest
because philosophy is supposed to be logically prior to empirical data. — Pfhorrest
Changing the target valences to match the external events is a perfectly fine way of achieving that match, on my account. And if one were to take a change-the-external-events approach anyway, and the target valences were unpredictable in advance, one obvious strategy would be to enable the subject to better adjust their environment in real time as their target valences change — Pfhorrest
Sure. If we commit ourselves to some extremely high moral standard, we are likely to fall short of it. This issue of looking to "moral leaders" and the like, is a big mistake. — Manuel
I said most contemporary metaethicists are stupid — Bartricks
The theory you're asserting (not defending) is the metaethical theory known as 'individual subjectivism'. It's a theory no professional philosopher defends — Bartricks
Experts don't defend it. — Bartricks
Moral norms and values appear external: there is no serious dispute about this, at least not among moral philosophers. — Bartricks
It's not that I can't imagine why you would possibly think the things that you think. — Pfhorrest
it's not that I can't comprehend why they would think that, because I used to think something much like that myself. — Pfhorrest
I don't see anything new, and I see the faults with it that I already found back when that was my own position — Pfhorrest
when they keep insisting that I come look at this view that I'm already quite familiar with as though it's something new and persuasive — Pfhorrest
I think most contemporary metaethicists are very stupid — Bartricks
I love a quote from Dogen, the founder of the Soto school of Zen Buddhism: "Before one studies, mountains are mountains and waters are waters; after a first glimpse into the truth, mountains are no longer mountains and waters are no longer waters; after enlightenment, mountains are once again mountains and waters once again waters." — Pfhorrest
It sounds like you read only the first half of the first sentence of the bit you quoted, and overlooked the second half: "...and to find out if there are any related things that are new and interesting to me that I can mull over and evolve my own thoughts with." — Pfhorrest
My point is only that I'm not here for competitive discussions, where we're fighting to convince each other that "I'm right and you're wrong", but rather cooperative ones, where we're sharing our views and reasons for holding them, but not caring whether or not anyone in particular is persuaded to change their mind because of that, only caring whether anyone in the discourse got any new ideas to chew on. — Pfhorrest
That's my issue with the way you engage. It feels like I'm being pelted with the same familiar contrary points of view over and over again, never something new. And I'm not interested in pelting you with my point of view over and over again in retaliation. That's intellectually boring and emotionally tiresome. — Pfhorrest
What I loved about formally studying philosophy at university, and what I hoped to replicate some semblance of here, was how I was getting exposed to interesting new ideas and the arguments both for and against them — Pfhorrest
But plenty of people see retribution as an end in itself. — Pfhorrest
Then the argument would be that they have an incoherent conception of liberty — Pfhorrest
Because I’m here for casual philosophical discourse, to share my thoughts with anyone to whom they are new and interesting, and to find out if there are any related things that are new and interesting to me that I can mull over and evolve my own thoughts with. I don’t care to fight interminable fights with people who are saying nothing new to me and who find nothing I’m saying new to them, when there’s nothing on the line that we must reach agreement on soon. — Pfhorrest
if you want to prevent any condition where suffering will occur for another person, ..., then yes antinatalism would be the best claim. — schopenhauer1
Kant denies the accusation — Pfhorrest
In this case, it's liberalism vs authoritarianism — Pfhorrest
we should be here because we're interested in figuring out what it is — Pfhorrest
nobody is obliged to prove themselves right — Pfhorrest
You seem to be here just to throw a supposed burden of proof at anyone who dares to have any opinion and shut them down — Pfhorrest
you don't seem like you just want to know what people think and why they think that, you seem like you want them to 'know' (to accept your judgement) that they have no good reason to think it and should therefore shut up. — Pfhorrest
we're only exchanging thoughts about things, not verifying actual empirical experiences. — Pfhorrest
in practice, it's not worth the effort of trying to figure out how I might just not be "replicating your observation" properly; you claimed to see something, I looked, I didn't see it — Pfhorrest
Say I'm doing something that effects only me — Pfhorrest
encouraging others to share it — Pfhorrest
you can prevent b by not causing a. — schopenhauer1
If computers became self-programming, why would they have any reason to write programs that benefitted humans? — Wayfarer
I don't believe this. Humans write software. Computers execute it. — Wayfarer
It is a common assumption that as an institution, criminal punishment serves to deter crime, but that is actually a questionable thesis. It is far from clear whether, how much and in what circumstances punishment has that effect. And what about private, non-institutional retribution? — SophistiCat
Well, one could say that doing what one believes is right satisfies an "appetite" and thus falls under the hedonism, but I wouldn't want to interpret Pfhorrest so uncharitabl — SophistiCat
Two common critiques of Kantian ethics are, on the one hand, that it does actually appeal to hedonistic criteria even while it claims it doesn't (Mill himself argued that), — Pfhorrest
You've not quoted a single philosopher who doesn't agree with the basic points you take as premises here. That suffering (when assessed hedonically at the affect level, and in the long term, recognising that it might change over time, and including future generations, plus an afterlife if there is one, including any 'higher' senses like art and music and love...) that long and complicated definition of 'suffering' is a bad thing and we shouldn't impose it on others. Find me a philosopher, scientists, any public academic who disagrees with that. — Isaac
My total ethical view is the intersection all of my four core principles as applied to ethics. Phenomenalism is one of those principles, and applied to ethics that's hedonism. Universalism is another one of those principles, which narrows in to only a specific subset of hedonism. Criticism and liberalism are two more principles, which narrow in on an ever more specific subset of hedonism. — Pfhorrest
What makes your argument style bad faith is that you don't seem to be engaging in a cooperative pursuit of the truth with anyone, since you never even state what your own stance is, much less look into whether or not it might be right. — Pfhorrest
Looking for ways that a position might be wrong is not in itself bad faith, but if you're just here to tear other people's views down no matter what they are, and (act as though) you don't actually have any views of your own and aren't engaging in the same figuring-out-what-might-be-right mission as others — Pfhorrest
Yes, analogous to convergent evolution in biology. — James Riley
For one who believed the law were a matter of convention irrelevant of morality, it seems they would have a challenge to explain (or argue against) the general concordance of, say, the "Thou shalt nots" with laws over legal systems. — fdrake
By which I mean that if law is the reinforcement of morality, what is the mechanism by which that connection is made? — Isaac
When people believe that might makes right. — baker
we need to put necessarily moralism inner laws to reinforce the development of ethical/moral issues — javi2541997
the purpose of searching with jurisprudence the most morality solution to the law dilemmas. — javi2541997
There are cultural systems where "sense indulgence" can mean a great variety of things, from overeating, getting drunk, to never sitting down or holding up one's arms for years. — baker
No. It is not. I guess law is literally the reinforcement of morality... — javi2541997
Kant's ethics make no appeal to divine commands, nor to any experience, but to some kind of abstract reasoning. — Pfhorrest
Just agreeing that people feeling good rather than bad is all that matters doesn't tell you anything about, for example, whether or not it's okay to cause a little suffering now to spare a lot of suffering later — Pfhorrest
whether or not it's okay to cause a lot of suffering for a few people so as to spare the suffering of a disproportionately huge number of people. — Pfhorrest
do you get to take that responsibility into your own hands? Do they? — Pfhorrest
How it's permissible to actually get to that state, and who's responsible for ensuring that that happens, are additional questions on top of that. — Pfhorrest
We can imagine where that might lead — Pfhorrest
I already foresee that you'll reply "What if all moral sentences are categorically like that?" — Pfhorrest
that's why I have an account of moral semantics that defends a kind of cognitivism and explains what moral sentences categorically mean — Pfhorrest
I wouldn't think you would. I would think you would drop out as soon as it became clear that we're not going to reach a resolution on something that will be foundational to everything else to come. — Pfhorrest
I don't think it's worth the time trying to convince you about them — Pfhorrest
I still don't think you're arguing in good faith. (You only ever adopt a position so as to argue against someone else's and never positively endorse any position yourself, making you always playing offense and everyone else always play defense, which is a classic type of bad-faith argument style). — Pfhorrest
Yeah. I know. Move on. — Pfhorrest
I said that one could try to argue that retributive punishment is conducive to the reduction of suffering, but it wouldn't be a perfect fit, even extensionally (it doesn't always reduce net suffering), not to mention intensionally (it isn't aimed at reducing suffering). — SophistiCat
Being a naturalist about morality, i.e. believing that moral intuitions and norms are the outcome of biological and cultural evolution, social dynamics, and other such natural factors, it seems reasonable to expect that common moral principles would be at least somewhat aligned with the imperative to reduce suffering. But by the same token, it wouldn't be reasonable to expect the alignment to be perfect. — SophistiCat
It wasn't, by the way. I actually googled "trail data". lol
There was a website about national parks. — frank
If we plant the trees and get out of the way (i.e. don't cut the down again because our numbers demand the resource) then yes. No doubt. — James Riley
You were thinking of trees metaphorically, as a representation of all our damage/repair. I was talking about trees. — James Riley
if we bring our population back to a sustainable level (I suggested, above, 35 people per 10k square miles) then the repair would take care of itself. — James Riley
I'd say the burden is upon you and your next generation to show the continuation of the current spree is not inevitable. — James Riley
There isn't a good reason, at least as far as nature is concerned. — James Riley
The only reason is our own subjective reason, and that has yet to be proven as an objectively good reason. — James Riley
the risk of these events is very low and not more than one would expect by being a member of the general population and certainly lower than one would expect if actually infected with the virus. Since the frequency of occurrence is known and so low — aporiap
It will definitely take more than one generation. — Isaac
No, it will not, not for trees. — James Riley
If we'd simply do nothing except get out of the way, nature will both resew and tend itself. But if we want to do a favor for succeeding generations of people, then, rather than sewing the succeeding generations of people we could sew succeeding generations of trees in the areas that we've destroyed and then get out of the way. — James Riley
extinction of homo sapiens might be an attractive option for nature, — James Riley
That population will be way more than enough to tend, and even more effective in doing so, if it isn't saddled with the teaming hoards. — James Riley
Actually, it is trivially false that all commonly held moral beliefs can be construed as being aimed at minimizing suffering. (I am including the "commonly held" qualification in deference to your social/semantic take on ethics.) Take, for example, the imperative to punish offenders. While it can be argued that just punishment, on the whole, tends to reduce suffering (by way of deterrence, for example), this is not so in every particular case. And in any event, minimizing suffering is not what motivates the imperative in the first place, even if it happens to have that side effect - on the contrary, what matters to those who adhere to it is that the offender does suffer. — SophistiCat
Because there are supposedly rational people (thousands of years of professional philosophers) who give arguments for why that's supposedly the right way to do things — Pfhorrest
Lots of supposedly smart, reasonable people believe some really wacky shit.
SEP also has a list of arguments against hedonism with names if you like. — Pfhorrest
someone who was philosophically unsure could agree in general that people feeling good rather than bad is probably the only thing that really matters, as an end in itself, but be undecided about whether the ends justify the means, or whether we should trust authority, etc. — Pfhorrest
I think my novel contribution to the problem is mostly in taking parts from those different well-known views and connecting them together into a form that escapes their common arguments against each other — Pfhorrest
suppose a starting point of absolute radical doubt where you don't even know what there is to know, or how to know it, or if we can know it at all, or if there is even anything at all to be known — Pfhorrest
there is some such answer or other to whatever question is at hand (because if you assumed instead to the contrary, you'd have no reason to try out any potential answers) — Pfhorrest
Elaborating the chain from those core pragmatic assumptions to every other specific position is what all the text I've already written in all those other threads is for, so I'm not going to repeat it all here. — Pfhorrest
It may be true that capitalism doesn’t have the best way of responding to this crisis, but what alternatives are there. — Wayfarer
They will if we get the F out of their way. But since we've trashed X% of the worlds lungs, we could replant with the 7 billion parasites currently killing the host. Then, when we've scaled back to a sustainable level, like 35 people per 10k square miles of temperate zone, they'll have some descent shade and air. — James Riley
This doesn't make the COVID-19 vaccine 'a tool for extracting money from the population' — Wayfarer
Excluding the religious (and similar) views on morality is the point of this facet of my ethics. The people who object to this ethical view pretty much just are religious people. They’re the ones I’m arguing against. — Pfhorrest
If you trivially agree with my points, great! Others don’t. — Pfhorrest
Endorsing hedonistic altruism doesn’t have to mean endorsing consequentialism or authoritarianism or anything like that. It’s just an answer to one little question: what criteria to use when assessing what is moral. The methods by which to apply that are another topic (and on that topic I’m anti-consequentialist), who is responsible for applying such methods is yet another (and on that topic I’m an anarchist), etc. And those are topics I’m getting to. — Pfhorrest
It seems like you want me to start with the big picture conclusion (“hey everyone lets be less authoritarian and hierarchical and work together independently but cooperatively to realize all of our dreams”) and then go into the reasons for that conclusion and the reasons for those reasons etc, going backward through the argument until we get to the deepest premises. I get it, you’re used to psychologically analyzing like that. And that could be a way to do it, sure.
Except then anyone who doesn’t like that conclusion on the face of it is going to dig in their heels and reject any premise that might lead to it no matter how trivially true those premises.
...The point is to first get agreement with those no-duh obvious things, and then build up to things nobody wants to believe (like the rejection of all religions and states), on the grounds of those very same trivial obvious things.
— Pfhorrest
False equivalence. — tim wood
This the best I can do here. — tim wood
What's trail data? — frank
They tested it the same way the always test vaccines. You said it was lacking normal safety precautions. — frank
The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines didn't take any short cuts in testing. Three phases, same statistical approach they always use. — frank
Seems that on a philosophy site at least folks would make explicit their understanding of the difference between not getting/being vaccinated and being anti-vaccination. Explicit because there seems to be both confusion and conflation on this. — tim wood
Do you decide therefore to go unvaccinated? — frank
The trees will tend themselves. — James Riley
Better to plant trees than to add more people. “A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit." — James Riley
So for you there are impositions that are simply “too much” and having children is one of them.
You could’ve just said that. — khaled
