drugs will always retard the development of a well functioning society or community. — Wallows
Read more closely and you mayg realize that what I mean by "serf's perspective" is the opposite of direct democracy, which would be "Serfs Up!" — TheSageOfMainStreet
My use of "serf's perspective" is a condemnation of those who surrender their political identity because others, who impose a republic on them, force them, by devious methods of thought control, into lacking the confidence to assert their will. — TheSageOfMainStreet
Those who preach the scare stories of "mob rule" and "tyranny of the majority" want to impose snob rule and the tyranny of a self-appointed vanguard. — TheSageOfMainStreet
I have independently concluded that all republics are elitist, decadent, and insulting to their own citizens. — TheSageOfMainStreet
Evolution ISN'T dog eat dog.
Interspecies rivarly is generally where things get violent (dog vs rabbit, jaguar vs ape, etc.) — YuZhonglu
My point in this tangent is that I was wondering what the evidence was for "At a physical level, morality is not a unified concept yet free-will seems to be" — Terrapin Station
But isn't the vicarious sense of victory when "your" team wins a continuation of this primitive negation, through substitution, of self-identity? More important, doesn't representative government satisfy that serf's perspective? — TheSageOfMainStreet
What do you mean an aesthetic assessment?
Of course we can work to condition ourselves for various objectives but since we’re talking about morality we might assume that I was referring to the morality relevant sort. — praxis
Say what? I was asking you what the evidence was for something that was claimed. — Terrapin Station
So we could say that there's a generally agreed-upon definition in the community. — Terrapin Station
So first, what's the evidence that that's the case for "free will" but not for "morality"? — Terrapin Station
We can consciously endeavor to condition ourselves so that our responses or subconscious predictions are of a desirable quality. At least in that way we are responsible. — praxis
Even if moral thought and feeling is mediated and elaborated by human cultures and languages, those latter have their sources in biology. But it doesn't not follow from this that you can directly justify any moral stance by appealing to what is or has been the case in human evolution, or in other words by appealing to what is thought to be merely "natural". — Janus
I think that, considered through the lens of certain perspectives, individuals may be seen to stand alone from the collective. One such perspective is Christianity, the faith wherein we stand naked before God, to whom the faithful find their ultimate responsibility belongs. — Janus
I don't believe that individuals "in essence, stand alone from the group". — Janus
Once an indivdual becomes aware of the possibility of such a choice, she may choose to act contrary to the tribe or more be more circumspect and conform. I think it also depends on the gravity of the action that is being considered. — Janus
I don't think "choosing the latter" is the doorway to the ethical sphere, I think that threshold has already been traversed with the lucid realization of the actual possibility of choice. — Janus
Do you think that aesthetic judgments are deterministic? — Terrapin Station
[. . .]Each of these acts is termed “immoral,” but at a physical level, morality is not a unified concept yet free-will seems to be. With conscious free-will and its bearing on legal and moral responsibility, we normally excuse people whose acts are not caused by their conscious choices, such as sleepwalkers who murder and those with neoplasms who have committed crimes.
Surprisingly, recent research suggests that conscious choice plays a smaller role in our actions than most people assume. In particular, it often comes after brain activity that initiates bodily movements, and many researchers conclude that the conscious choice does not cause the movement (cf. Melillo and Leisman, 2009a,b). That conclusion raises the disturbing questions of whether and how we can ever really be responsible for anything. Known for a while is the necessity to automate as much as possible which arises from the need to reduce information overload on the nervous system due to its relatively limited capacity for instantaneous information processing (Leisman, 1976; Melillo and Leisman, 2009a,b). This is precisely the reason why we neither look nor need to do so when walking down a flight of stairs. The issue of responsibility is both scientific and moral. Freedom exists within a deterministic universe. Our knowledge surrounding consciousness is incomplete, and it may ultimately transpire that brain activity does not cause conscious decision-making or vice versa, but rather a variety of cognitive processes occurring almost simultaneously (Leisman and Melillo, 2012).
and no matter what we do, they're fundamentally "caprice." — Terrapin Station
explaining them more broadly is a more advanced topic that we shouldn't move on to until we've mastered the basics, and no matter what we do, — Terrapin Station
The processes that amount to moral judgments/preferences occur in brains, and only in brains. — Terrapin Station
the fact that consciousness is created by a bunch of cells — Anirudh Sharma
The data is data. How we feel about us irrelevant. That’s all I was saying. The aim of the scientist is to approach the data free of emotional bias. — I like sushi
When I light a match, the chemicals on the end are the source of the flame — DingoJones
It's not just the chemicals at the end of the match, but processes, too, and the chemical changes that happen due to those processes. That is the source of the flame. — Terrapin Station
Why does a cause have to be identical to what it causes? This makes no sense me, what is the utility of thinking about it that way? — DingoJones