Competition is just a matter of quantitative perspective - it’s an arbitrary choice that we continually make and re-make in terms of awareness/ignorance, connection/isolation and collaboration/exclusion: to compete, to communicate, or to collaborate. — Possibility
But if that’s the case, then where did this focus on maximising individual wealth, influence and recognition come from? It’s a reductionist consolidation of natural selection from a limited self-conscious perspective, giving primacy to the individual. — Possibility
it would be helpful if you could say briefly but a bit more clearly your point of view. — Jack Cummins
Can you explain in what way you believe that destructive elements of human nature will be righted. — Jack Cummins
The more awareness, connection and collaboration, the greater our success. — Possibility
Reading through your comments made earlier today it seems that you are concerned about the destructive potential of human nature. — Jack Cummins
Human nature may be regarded as destructive because it has learned how to use nature and control nature to the degree it suits our purposes. — Brett
At our core, we need 4 basic things: eat, sleep, sex, drink. Everything we do revolves around delivering those 4 basic things at a particular combination specific to each individual. — 8livesleft
Your view of “human nature” as something that exists as a “fixed” and “unalterable” structure of perceptual cognition easily falters under the mounting history of a fluidly changing cognitive and societal existence. Our “nature” wasn’t always as it exists today. As such it cannot be “fixed”. — JackBRotten
If human nature existed, then it would imply that there is some part of all of us that our environment does not affect. I fail to see what this part of us is, or even possibly could be, so I doubt it’s existence. — Pinprick
In the way which you speak of ideology you could view ideology and the Kantian system of view. — Jack Cummins
I think that the more all-encompassing term for weighing up the personal and the universal, and the tensions between the two is the term ethics. — Jack Cummins
I still do not understand your concern about ideology over morality . If anything I would say that the possible problem with ideology over morality is that it is abstract and avoids details and particulars. — Jack Cummins
Really? I didn't expect that! Great! I would've liked to hear your side of the story though. — TheMadFool
We are not free, — Mww
Commands of reason inform as to what an act ought to be, but has no power to force the act to be done. — Mww
We make moral choices because our very nature imbues us with moral agency, plain and simple. — Mww
We make wrong moral choices because we, as humans, are susceptible to a plethora of opposing interests, desires, wants and needs. — Mww
The distinction between morals and ethics is ill-conceived. They are both one in the same thing. — creativesoul
So, if anything I would reframe the question in terms of the Kantian categorical imperative: what if one chooses to have relationships with others but abandoning the whole idea of marriage? — Jack Cummins
In that case, you have found a contradiction. The maxim that everyone should marry who they choose, including children, includes a contradiction because it robs the children of that very choice. It cannot be universalised and hence is not moral. — Echarmion
But an ideology never actually has complete control over your thoughts. Ideologies don't permanently turn people into zombies. — Echarmion
but humans don’t use reason, the active procedural faculty, the same universally. — Mww
Proper morality does not choose between outcomes — Mww
but humans don’t use reason, the active procedural faculty, the same universally. — Mww
That seems reasonable, but if we apply it universally then it means an adult male can marry whoever he wants. It doesn’t say anything about age or consent. Nor does it address cultural differences,
— Brett
The categorical imperative does not account for cultural differences — Echarmion
The c.i. Is not an application to the world; it is a command of reason, — Mww
An ideology is a collection of ideas that is weaved so tightly that it becomes an overwhelming framework for everything you think and do. This is usually a bad thing, but equality, freedom, humanity, are also ideas. — Echarmion
Echarmion
But acting in accordance with the CI is something you do, for yourself. It's not framed as a divine mandate you have to follow. Kant invites you to use it as a means to turn yourself into a
moral ... person. — Brett
But acting in accordance with the CI is something you do, for yourself. It's not framed as a divine mandate you have to follow. Kant invites you to use it as a means to turn yourself into a moral, and therefore a free, person. — Echarmion
There is no higher authority here than your own reason. And there is no-one who puts you under any obligation except yourself. — Echarmion
I don’t know if a moral can be based on ideology. Is it still a moral decision?
— Brett
Do you mean here whether the decision happens in a moral framework at all or whether it is the correct decision given a specific framework (e.g. the CI)? — Echarmion
it's supposed to help you make your own moral decisions. — Echarmion
It's fundamentally a personal stabdard, — Echarmion
So I think the proper question isn't between morality and ideology. It's between a morality based on ideas and one based on an ideology. — Echarmion
The most obvious maxim to satisfy the categorical imperative seems to be that, between reasonable adults, one should be allowed to marry whoever one wants. — Echarmion
Kantianism might be an ideology but it’s not a moral.Is Kantianism an ideology? — Echarmion
What defines an ideology in my mind is that it dominates your thinking, your worldview. — Echarmion
A Christian Fundamentalists who is opposed to gay marriage will obviously frame their decision in moral terms. For them it's a moral question with an obvious answer. — Echarmion