Phenomena as “the undetermined object of an empirical intuition” went on to become determined.
— Mww
Could you explain some more what you mean here? — Janus
Or if we count metaphysics as a disciple which consists in something more than phenomenology (as, for example, Heidegger and Merleau Ponty do not) ... — Janus
If they are said to be "undetermined objects of empirical intuition" would this not be to say that they are "things in themselves", since it would only be what we might think of as their "absolute nature" which remains indeterminable? — Janus
It seems contradictory to say both that conscious entities arose and that their non-existence is impossible, unless perhaps you are invoking some spiritual process — Janus
I'm not seeing what you are driving at here? — Janus
the danger will always be, as Kant indicated, unwarranted reification if we allow ourselves pretensions to knowledge. — Janus
if we count metaphysics as a disciple (...) then we might speculate about how we come to be conscious entities in a physical world. — Janus
I do think of philosophy as being a matter of achieving clarity, rather than knowledge. — Janus
Still....metaphysics of the normative human condition on the one hand, psychology of the deranged human condition on the other. Not sure how much they should overlap.
— Mww
It doesn't seem to me to be a matter of metaphysics, but of phenomenology. — Janus
the only truly selfless act (one that it is impossible to personally gain from) is sacrifice of ones life in order to protect another. — Benj96
There are no certain rules which cover all cases — Janus
The basic thing is that you have to care.....(...).....the point is merely that morality involves caring about how my actions affect others. — Janus
One can often right a wrong. — Olivier5
As I see it morality is concerned with how we ought to behave in relation to the impact we think our behavior will have on others. — Janus
This seems like a meaningless formulation to me. — Janus
Ambiguity is the stuff of philosophy and singularly ethics..... — Olivier5
These two points are enough to show that an exhaustive and objective analysis of all the implications of our actions is not something upon which we can based our decisions. — Olivier5
The human condition is about making choices -- including choices about what is relevant to consider in a given context, and what is irrelevant.
These choices are always made with insufficient information, e.g. no one knows how things are really going to pan out if one does A rather than B. — Olivier5
So not only are the future outcomes of our choices unpredictable.....
The future is inaccessible to knowledge in any domain, so has no business being a legislative consideration for what effectively is a vast array of personal choice possibilities.
......even our motives (our "appetites") are not totally transparent to ourselves.....
If not totally, it must be the case they are transparent, that is, present to our attention, enough to know what they are, such that there is some ground for whatever choices we do end up making. Otherwise, it becomes possible to never make a motive-based choice at all.
.......Hence the need to get counsel from others, and for some rule-based ethics. — Olivier5
What do I want to see happen?", and then to work toward that goal.
— Avery
Which seems to put it squarely as a form of egotism. — Pfhorrest
Why ought you do anything? — Bert Newton
All oughts can be reduced to the belief they will lead to wellbeing. — Bert Newton
We ought to find the best ways to be. This means checking our beliefs. — Bert Newton
There is only one ought: you ought to do what gives you and others the most wellbeing. — Bert Newton
we can get an ought from your belief about what is. — Bert Newton
I think he’s equating deontological ethics with individual rights, and equating utilitarianism with the greatest good. — Pfhorrest
An ought can be gotten from an is. — Bert Newton
It draws on the conflict of Kant’s categorical imperative, the rights of the individual, and utilitarianism, the greatest good for the greatest number. — Bert Newton
“mind” being a concept of explanatory convenience
— Mww
Yes. "Mind" is a term of convenience to label the non-physical Function of the Brain. — Gnomon
If we look in an entirely external realm to social contexts for a validation procedure for our moral conduct, we're no longer attending to the nature of moral conduct. — fdrake
The agreement isn't about her mind or my mind, it concerns how I treat her. — fdrake
Mind is an emergent holistic property of Brain, not a sub-system of the neural net. — Gnomon
That helps me to clarify the old Brain/Mind conundrum. — Gnomon
How is that possible? — RogueAI
There is a definite scientific vocabulary when it comes to brains — RogueAI
My argument doesn't work against dualists. — RogueAI
”moral universalism”, which is just the claim that, for any particular event, in its full context, there is some moral evaluation of that event in that context that it is correct for everyone to make, i.e. that the correct moral evaluation doesn't change depending on who is making it. — Pfhorrest
I am genuinely interested in what you mean by "false practice". — Luke
if I were able to forgive myself for an act of killing someone, then I think I would have little trouble being able to forgive myself for an act of hypocrisy. — Luke
why is being a hypocrite such a terrible thing? — Luke
We, as a social group, don't agree - or, at least, we aren't acculturated to accept/believe - that psychopathic serial killers should be allowed their own individual moral frame of reference. — Luke
I want to begin by establishing "gut thinking" is not my idea.
Noun. gut feeling (plural gut feelings) idiomatic wiktionary — Athena
I do not believe, as Mww does, that my ancestors had to bother reasoning whether escaping a sabre-tooth tiger was efficacious or how to do so — Kenosha Kid
It's not tangential, it's fundamental to the arguments about moral realism. — Isaac
Morality, as a single measurable property of behaviours/characteristics is a fabrication of philosophy — Isaac
Similar objects of the same kind are just examples of the thing in question.
— Mww
What I'm asking is what your justification is for saying this. Taking Wittgenstein's 'game' example, there is no 'thing in question' with regards to the word 'game' we apply it according to some rules, but the rules do not together represent 'game' because they do not all need to be applied at any one time. — Isaac
What I'm saying is that words do jobs, they don't always refer to some 'thing' even if they appear to. — Isaac
The same word might do a different job in different contexts. — Isaac
So with a word which appears to refer to some thing, we might be looking for one thing, several things or no things at all. — Isaac
I think a moral realist would have to be someone who thinks that moral 'goodness' and 'badness' are universals. — Isaac
Back to our bodies and thinking- how do you feel about what I said? — Athena
Does your gut tell you this is ridiculous or maybe something that should concern us? — Athena
While the brain plays a part in our thinking, it does not play the most important part. Our bodies play the most important part. — Athena
What about several different objects? Like several quite different things are 'games' but my teacup here definitely isn't one of them. — Isaac
There is not some reified concept 'the good' which we then go about finding out which thing belong in — Isaac
The human animal is imbued with several things common to all its members (....) Some varying collection of these things are referred to by the term 'moral good' at different times, in different conversations, to different effects. — Isaac
The idea that our word 'good' picks out exactly one unified and inviolable concept identical in every mind which conceives it seems ludicrous. — Isaac
