I'm just trying to give a type of an example. — schopenhauer1
fallacy of Appeal to Extremes — schopenhauer1
So where seems to be the problem? — baker
It's when people don't know yet how to properly formulate a syllogism, when they don't know much about informal fallacies, and so on. So they express their thoughts and their concerns in a pre-philosophical way. Hence all the "it seems to me" mixed with all those expressions of certainty.
A person could rightfully be accused of the conceit you mention if they also demonstrate that they are able to think and write philosophically, but that in some instances, they characteristically refuse to. — baker
I don't think the UK's medicine regulators would agree with you that they took a gamble.. — Tim3003
I don't understand where you're getting with this. — baker
He immediately answered the Covid-19 pandemic and, as a 12-year old, was happy that he had experience something really historic in his lifetime. — ssu
I think most of the conversations at forums like this are about people, ie. the people directly involved and the way some particular idea is relevant or irrelevant to them. — baker
Like I've been saying all along, but your not payng attention, you can only claim what us right or wrong for yourself. Are you saying it is right for you to infringe on other peoples rights? — Harry Hindu
Pfhorrest's assumption that what they consider right is right for all, is actually wrong? — Harry Hindu
I suppose it comes down to how much education a person has and how much reading and thinking they've done so far, so considerable differences among individuals are to be expected because of that. — baker
Given that the EU has taken a month longer to come to the same approval of the Covid drugs as the UK did, they have probably allowed thousands more deaths than if they had started vaccinating when the UK did... — Tim3003
Would you actually go out to the building site and interfere? — baker
To learn, and to teach. — Pfhorrest
I'm talking about social harmony on the local scale. Anything that privileges some over others, any impositions on individual autonomy and freedom to do whatever does not impinge on the freedom of others, is obviously antisocial and not supportive of social harmony. — Janus
individual autonomy and freedom to do whatever does not impinge on the freedom of others — Janus
The slow, bureaucratic - and now bitter - efforts of the EU have made the UK's quick regulatory approval of the vaccines and swift ordering look very impressive. — Tim3003
There should be some element of respect to keep the conversation from devolving into a brawl. I dont buy the idea that all arguments must get personal and that using condescension and ad personum attacks count as anything resembling phosophical discourse. If you resort to that, then its poisoning the well right off the bat. Who wants that except a bunch of asshole types that get pleasure at complete conflict mode. — schopenhauer1
To my way of thinking an ideology is an overarching formulation of how everything should be. — Janus
social harmony — Janus
principles which are held for their own sakes — Janus
because they are based on the ideas of freedom and equality — Janus
promoted not for any consequentialist reasons — Janus
are necessary for social harmony — Janus
Any strong consequentialist motivations are based on mere speculation because no one knows the future, or is able to understand the human situation adequately due to its complexity. — Janus
Of course, but then the criterion "Giving all ideas a fair consideration, at one's discretion" becomes moot, and there is, for all practical intents and purposes, no difference anymore between a philosopher and an ideologue. — baker
It would be more profitable to try to delineate what makes for love of wisdom, as opposed to what a lover of wisdom would/should be like. — baker
You can't have true premises and a false conclusion. — emancipate
It's not the same as Benatar's argument. — Bartricks
Given that there are no real advantages over never existing for those who are brought into existence, it is hard to see how the significant risk of serious harm could be justified. — David Benatar - Better Never To Have Been
Then, again, you've forgotten that you were the one trying to make the case for what is right for all, not just one (objective vs. subjective morality). — Harry Hindu
Remember that you were the one asserting the existence of objective morality, not me. — Harry Hindu
My point is that even if the two occupants of the vehicle can come to an agreement about where to go, that doesn't mean that that is the right conclusion for everyone in every situation where the occupants of a vehicle can't agree on where to go. — Harry Hindu
Does carrying a hammer make you want to bash people's heads in? — Harry Hindu
Taking away the rights of everyone based on the actions of a few is what I consider wrong as it infringes upon the rights of innocent people. — Harry Hindu
How do you know that what is true in this instance is true in every instance? — Harry Hindu
It's just that the identity of man isn't given by the presence of the biological state of a penis (as seen in all those expectations who pretend don't have relevance), but rather through the identity itself. — TheWillowOfDarkness
even if they did, that would only operate to exaggerate the badness of the suffering they undergo, for the better one behaves, the more unjust it becomes that one suffers. — Bartricks
It's not that simple. There can be different import tax rates for different countries, and the right rate depends on the country. So there isn't only one import rate. There are numerous rates dependet upon the needs of the country and it's relationship with other particular countries. — Harry Hindu
Whether you go left or right depends on where they want to go. What if they want to go to different places? — Harry Hindu
you are confusing the distinction between carring a weapon and using one on innocent, unarmed people. — Harry Hindu
If that were the case, then why all the political disagreements, wars, ethical dilemmas, etc.? — Harry Hindu
That would require me to know what it is like for every individual - what makes them happy and their preferences for obtaining happiness. I know that you haven't been really reading what I've said, but I'll say it again: That isn't knowable unless you ask them first. It's not something that you assume. — Harry Hindu
Can you give me an example of a moral conclusion that can be applied in all instances for everyone person in the same way that gravity works for every person? — Harry Hindu
Someone who is willing to give all ideas a fair shake, if and when he decides to do so, occasionally decides to do so. — baker
The right way home for you is not the right way home for others, nor will it be the right way home all the time as traffic, accidents, and other obstacles can change which way is the best way home from day to day. — Harry Hindu
Some people are by default opposed to consider any other views than their own (some religious people are like that, some politicians, some psychologists, for example). So that's one group of people who aren't willing to give all ideas a fair shake, ever. — baker
A philosopher is willing to give all ideas a fair shake, if and when he decides to do so. — baker
There's a difference between having strong opinions and voicing strong opinions in a particular social setting.
It seems to me that people typically have strong opinions, but they often don't voice them. — baker
So, you're suggesting that it could be arguable that consuming all the unnecessary shit they fatten us up on, taking over responsibility for other people's lives, not taking care of those who are unable to take care of themselves, imposing all these solutions 'from above', ignoring corruption, and not codifying values which support social harmony are examples of measures based on pragmatics, common sense and decency? — Janus
Why? — Isaac
Because most people do not live morally superlative lives (nor ought they, of course). Kind of obvious. — Bartricks
Why not? — Isaac
I explained. It's the wordy bit that followed-on from that quote. — Bartricks
it's not going to tip the balance in any particular case. — Bartricks
the goodness of a deserved pleasure is greater than that of a non-deserved pleasure, it is not going to be better than not having suffered the undeserved suffering — Bartricks
why knowingly creating undeserved suffering that deserved pleasure may come of it is wrong, at least in most of the cases I can conceive of. — Bartricks
All you have here is bog standard antinatalism. — Isaac
How? — Bartricks
they are not based on ideology but on pragmatics — Janus
it is unreasonable to suppose that one's offspring will live morally superlative lives. — Bartricks
That may well operate to make many of their subsequent pleasures deserved (though not necessarily - desert is not a simple matter), but it's not going to tip the balance in any particular case. — Bartricks
knowingly creating undeserved suffering that deserved pleasure may come of it is wrong, at least in most of the cases I can conceive of. — Bartricks
If everyone refused to consume the unnecessary shit they fatten us up on, that action by itself would bring immense change. — Janus
's really up the individual to take responsibility for their own lives — Janus
common decency and compassion dictate that we should also take care of those who are unable to care of themselves. — Janus
Nothing imposed from "above" is ever going to solve the problems we face — Janus
the imposers are always prone to corruption. — Janus
the law should codify values which support social harmony — Janus
People who don't have strong opinions one way or the other and just try to give all (non-dogmatic, non-ideological) ideas a fair shake:the critical thinkers, the fair-minded, the realists, the anti-idealogues. Cleave to them, for they are the only hope for humanity. — Janus
Relative to my current state of knowledge and understanding. — baker
If you were at a concert, yes. — Pantagruel
what if he was "objectively" out of tune, but so was the entire band, uniformly? Then he would be objectively in tune. — Pantagruel
its usual use and here "being objective" in the sense of "trying to minimize one's personal biases to achieve a more collectively consistent perspective" — Pantagruel
I don't have a study to support this, but it seems to me that this sketches out best an explanation for why people are the way they are when they are together and how they can take their joint pursuits seriously. — baker
if "being objective" means adopting a certain type of perspective oriented towards agreement with others, then a lack of objectivity certainly has to, at the very least, limit the extent to which commonality can be realized. — Pantagruel
