I think you are correct in where we do not have free will; see when we are born we have to construct a reality from our surroundings and therefore receive a biased view on our world and of people. So, we base decisions based on our experience and environment growing up. We do have the ability to choose though, you are correct.
But that is all we have. No one on this earth or in history has free will. I argue it doesn't even exist. — Fruitless
I notice everything has such elaborate infinite detail. It doesn't matter if you increase or decrease the scope - the universe is detailed with solar systems and leaves are detailed with cells. What is the point of having so much detail?
It's all very strange if you think about it.
So why is detail necessary? — Fruitless
Every single person on this earth has the capacity to feel as much as the next. Everyone on this earth may or may not have the same brain. I like to assume we all have the same brain just each has different thinking processes from their environment. But aren't we all physically wired to feel to a certain extent? — Fruitless
The amount of love we can feel...is it the same as Love? Hate, what really is hate? Is it possible to generalise emotions so much? — Fruitless
Futuristically, could we enhance the ability to feel. I'm not talking about drugs because that already makes use of what is already in our body. But to biologically enhance our capacity to feel. Different emotions never felt before. — Fruitless
I have noticed, within all generations, there seems to be an overwhelming amount of gossip. I've distanced myself from numerous people to avoid getting caught in it, and I wonder as to why. Why do they gossip? Why do they talk ill of others or talk about everyone else's life? What is so good about it that it must take up your precious time on this Earth?
I understand it makes you feel nicer, that you are somwhat above other people, but why is that so important? It's such an empty investment I don't see why everyone keeps on with it? Why can't they do something practical rather than gossip? — Fruitless
There's not just one reason for it. Some of it is just curiosity about other people and what their lives are like.
Sometimes it's a way to live vicariously through that person, who might have a life that's unlike any you'll ever have--a lot of celebrity gossip is of that nature. — Terrapin Station
I see hatred as based on projection, infantile rage and unconscious self-loathing. When people conclude that it's ok for them to hate, they also feel justified to do whatever they want to those they hate. There's a lot of self-righteousness that characterizes hate behavior, which creates a catch-22: I don't have to stop hating because I am right to hate. I'm "protecting Southern womanhood" or I'm "keeping the world safe for democracy." Of course, that's not what's really going on at all. — uncanni
Anyone can choose to live without a moral code or can pretend to follow a moral code while not doing so in reality. I think those are the folks who tend to hate with the most impunity. When people feel no sense of responsibility in terms of how they relate to others, it's like an anti-ethics of anything goes--which is no ethics at all. It's fundamentally anti-social. Those who believe they have a moral responsibility to refrain from doing hateful things to others are practicing ethics. Practice is good! — uncanni
Exactly. A negative reality, while our love biases push us to what we see as a better loving reality. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
that we would support a government initiative to ‘wish them away’.
— Possibility
Which we do not. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Our hate biases are there to protect us and you would discard them. Tsk tsk. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Notice though that our nature, its evil side, causes us to make prohibitive laws - you can't do this, you can't do that, etc. Nowhere have I seen a law that enforces good which I infer to mean that goodness is a choice rather than a compulsion unless you happen to be like the OCD patient I met who couldn't pass a temple on the street without feeling an intense irresistible need to enter it. — TheMadFool
When I started the discussion I was confused by the existence and wide-spread practice of normative morals which implies necessity but it seems these apply only after a choice has been made on whether to be good or not. They tell us what we should do based on some principles but this sits in contrast with the widely-held belief that goodness must be a choice rather than an enforced code of conduct. — TheMadFool
There seems to be an implicit premise that choice comes first and that negates all moral philosophies which expound necessary moral actions. It's still hazy to me but moral philosophies and the moral norms derived thereof are about what to do and can never really tell us why we should be good. The choice is ours it seems. — TheMadFool
Too fundamental for 'intention'. Minds are billions of years into the future. — PoeticUniverse
It wouldn't have a little mind from which to intend to develop a larger system of mind. — PoeticUniverse
It wouldn't have a little mind from which to intend to develop a larger system of mind. — PoeticUniverse
It is not a factor herein that the Biblical and thus necessarily fundamentalist ‘God’ has been demolished by evolutionary science, cosmology, and self-contradiction, leaving no ‘Divine Inspiration’ in Genesis, because it still remains for us to size up what’s left for a ‘God’ who is still a Person-like Mind/Being as the basis of All or is All, with the Biblical myth-takes no longer being relevant. — PoeticUniverse
1a. All that we observe proceed from the simplest realm of tiny events/things/processes to the larger composite to the more and complex, where we exist, which cascade can continue into the future, where/when we can expect beings higher than ourselves to become.
1b. The unlikely polar opposite of (1a) is an ultra complex system of mind of a ‘God’ being First as Fundamental; however systems have parts, this totally going against the fundamental arts.
2. (1) gets worse, for ‘God’ being, given that there can be no input for any specific direction going into the necessary Fundamental Eternal Capability—the basis of all, this bedrock having to be causeless, with random effects, due to no information able to come in to what has no beginning. It thus appears that it could be everything possible, although not anything in particular, which is also the way it shows, in its constant transmutation at every instant, this according to what we call the laws of nature. — PoeticUniverse
You cannot justify hating murderers, rapists, Hitler etc., and allowing your hate to move you against such vile characters. Ok. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hating Hitler and his ilk is what has us go to war. It was effective. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Having no regard for the consequences counts as intent in my book. It is, after all, an intentional disregard of the safety of others. — Echarmion
How is that supposed to work, practically? And why are you now qualifying the intent as genuine? What's an example of a non-genuine intent? — Echarmion
Optimally, one should of course take as much evidence into account as possible. But I don't quite see what option I have, when judging the morality of an act, apart from making the judgement myself. At best I can refer the case to the court of popular opinion. — Echarmion
If that wasn't the intent though, why would we call it "mean"? At worst it'd be careless. — Echarmion
Uh, why not? It's a fairly basic feature of human interaction to judge intent. — Echarmion
The totality of the physical world or domain just is usually defined as the Universe Even if there were another separate "ideal" domain (and how would we know there was since all our means of detecting anything are physical) it would not be thought to be part of the universe, but something transcendent. — Janus
What if, after all, the Universe isn't actually physical? Then what?
— Wayfarer
How could that ever be tested? What could it even mean to say that the physical world is not physical? It is physical by definition. — Janus
Note that to know what to do requires some guiding principles. We may call these "norms" or "prescriptions" of moral standards but free will is one step before that - whether we should be good or not and not what we should do which I presume is the domain of the philosophy of ethics.
Good is Unnecessary. — TheMadFool
It's a matter of right epistemic judgment on what is mean. I dont see causing undue pain as necessary. — schopenhauer1
Hate is created by our feelings
— Possibility
Correct. Yet you deny that it is the feeling of love that creates the hate. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Rather, a more reasonable line of thinking is people from an early age should be taught to take any mean action with a grain of salt, ignore, get away, keep in mind what NOT to do, etc. However, the mean person is at fault here for trying to inflict some sort of pain on someone. They don't get a pass just because people should be taught to ignore mean people as much as possible. As I was saying, it depends on several things, so it is a situation by situation thing- things like intent, duration, intensity, context, place, etc. Also, as I stated, not everything is as easy as "Target can move away from Aggressor". Life isn't that simple sometimes. — schopenhauer1
None of what you write here justifies your judgments of strong emotional reactions. Reason has been used to justify all sorts of horrible acts. Emotions are not only natural, but part of what motivates us to do good things. Both reason and emotions can be part of processes that turn out to be negative. But there is nothing per se negative about emotions or what you judge as animalistic - empathy is also animalistic, love is, playfulness, taking care of our young and so on because we are social mammals with all that entails. — Coben
I wouldn't say that. One thing I said was that I don't consider any speech immoral. That doesn't imply that I think there's no need to ever take anyone else's feelings into consideration when speaking, however. — Terrapin Station
I also said that I think that sometimes negative feelings in response to speech are a problem with the person with the negative feelings, not a problem with the person who said whatever they did to cause the negative feelings. That's always the case in my opinion when it comes to offense, for example. — Terrapin Station
I mean, hate.
hate noun, often attributive
\ ˈhāt \
Definition of hate (Entry 1 of 2)
1a : intense hostility and aversion usually deriving from fear, anger, or sense of injury
b : extreme dislike or disgust : ANTIPATHY, LOATHING
had a great hate of hard work — Coben
We are social mammals. Our limbic systems are inextricably involved even in our rational thinking. — Coben
When someone is described as being mean or as a mean person, intent to be cruel in pretty much implicit. And it is certainly in no way a contradiction.
He was mean to me, but didn't intend to be seems rather off to me.
He was blunt and it hurt my feelings, but he didn't intend to be makes sense to me. — Coben
You may think they were motivated by something other than hate for the reality they lived in, but I do not think so because hate is created by our love biases and love for the good comes before the hate for the evil that threatens that which is loved.
Equality in the cases here. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
And yes, hate has degrees, just as love has, so using the various degrees in discussions is kosher — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If we talk about Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights movement, we are not talking about being motivated by frustration. Of course there was frustration in there. And of course there was yearning for something better and other motivations. But there was a lot of hate in there also. — Coben
It is perfectly natural when one is treated as a rule in a hateful manner, over long periods of time, and this includes treatment of your children in this way, to hate back. The problem is not in that responding hate. — Coben
Yes, sometimes this hate can lead to actions that are not ok. But the problem is not the hate, it is the cognitive elements - that revenge is good or even will help you, for exampe, is one cognitive element that can lead to acting out in certain ways. To tell those blacks that if they hate it is unhealthy and wrong, is just adding more oppression on them. — Coben
And MLK himself was extremely pissed off towards the end of his life. Listen to his last speech in that church where he keeps saying 'If I should die...' There's rage in there. He got frustrated with the government and whites and since he was not just anti-racist but socialist he has a lot of issues that had gone from frustration to at least very strong anger. — Coben
Hate begets hate; violence begets violence; toughness begets a greater toughness. We must meet the forces of hate with the power of love... Our aim must never be to defeat or humiliate the white man, but to win his friendship and understanding.
The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy, instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate.
Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. — Martin Luther King Jr, ‘Strength to Love’
It's a reality that we respond to certain kinds of treatment with strong anger. That is a reality. We are social mammals with limbic systems tightly involved in our reactions to treatmetn by others. THAT IS REALITY. Many people tell us that we must accept the reality of what is outside us, but the inside we must suppress, detach from, radically control, judge. But the inside is real also. I can't see how I can come to love others if I hate parts of myself as my starting point, especially in the face of mistreatment. — Coben
I agree that hate is likely not the only factor, but it would be one. I don't think frustration would be the main reason either. I was contrasting hate with frustration in relation to slavery. — Coben
If you stick with any emotional reaction it isn't healthy, even the so called positive ones. — Coben
It is understandible that people will hate sometimes. It is not healthy to be mistreated with regularly, but the problem is not the hatred when it arises. The problem is that we are in that situation. Of course there are unhealthy patterns of hhatred. — Coben
Come on, one of his examples was slavery: slaves did not feel just frustrated with slavery, though I am sure there was much frustration. They hated their treatment by the slave owners, quite naturally. Perhaps not all of them, but most of them.
Oh, I got so frustrated with being a slave
sounds absurd to me.
I got frustrated with a dead end job or with a boss who didn't let me engage in more creative projects, sure.
Any laws or systems or practices that as a rule dehumanize and mistreat a group are going to lead to hatred. And that hatred would be a perfectly natural and healthy response. Of course there is likely to also be fear involved and great sorrow. — Coben
So you would have told Rosa Parks to not hate having to sit at the back of the bus nor act on that hate.
How about the hate against slavery in the Civil war? Would you tell the north not to hate slavery or go against it?
Ignore evil if you want. I will encourage its hate so that those who can will fight evil. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Oh my. The hate of slavery ended slavery in the U.S. and you seem to think that a bad thing.
How about Rosa parks?
Did her negative energy against segregation lead her the wrong way? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Hate, like evil, has a good and an evil side and like Yin and Yang, compliment each other. They are not in opposition.
If you look around, you will see a lot more good going on than evil and a lot more love than hate being expressed. In fact, we are too good to each other. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
As the Christian hymn says, Adam's sin was a happy fault and necessary to god's plan.
Strange that Christians call furthering god's plan as a fall.
You seem to be doing the same with nature. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Ok, but waste of time because the people are known already to respond a certain way. Your posts are probably less confrontational.. People on the forum tend to like conflict, which possibly is why people tend to ignore your posts. — schopenhauer1
Makes sense but the natural human tendency is to not be in a lower position, thus retaliation to gain the upper hand. So while this ideal makes sense, it's easier to respond in kind rather than taking the higher road. There's very much a "you first" mentality when meanness is responded to with meanness. Thinking about the bigger picture is lost. — schopenhauer1
You don't think there is at least some intentional malice going on with certain incidences of meanness? Though, I would agree that there are other factors that may weigh more heavily- win at all costs, avoid humility, relative superiority, etc. It may be simply stress. When one is stressed, and has too much going on, one tends to lash out. So there are many causes here, and many of them are not from malicious intent. — schopenhauer1
Yes, I think there is a certain discomfort confronting in general. But depending on the situation, it may be a waste of time, or just unpleasant to deal with. The mean person is hoping this will override any admonitions. — schopenhauer1
Here's a question though, if someone thinks they are far superior (as you stated earlier), and that the person they show contempt and meanness to is considered incompetent, ignorant, etc. what is the proper response from this person? — schopenhauer1
Let's raise the stakes.. How about a manager at a job who expects a certain level of competency from their employee? Is the manager not entitled to show the worker to see their disapproval so that they can change their habits or competency level? What engenders contempt or conceit? What are the appropriate responses to situations involving competency? Is firing a "mean" event, or just something that should be taken in due course? Most people would say if the worker was not competent that indeed, firing is just an appropriate action to ensure the job is efficiently being carried out. — schopenhauer1
Something about that other person has triggered in the mean person a response or a way of relating that involves ridiculing, demeaning, isolating, or acting with condescension towards another person. The intent is to probably hurt, and the hope is that the meanness is received negatively the target of the meanness. — schopenhauer1
What is the appropriate response to the mean person then? Is it pointing out that meanness is taking place? Is it just ignoring it? Is it getting an apology? Silently just know that the other person is being an asshole but not letting them know? What would be the just way to handle this sort of asymmetry of attacks? — schopenhauer1
exactly. Because it is a delightfully abstract concept that contains everything within it, and we really don't have a clue as to what everything is...
But I have concluded that it contains evil as well. I'm pondering what that means to me. — uncanni
So, does this mean that hidden in the definition of God is a clue that morality actually has no justification? Even an omniscient being, God, can't find reasons to be good and therefore goodness is an additional requirement to make God good. — TheMadFool
