I'm a moral relativist. More specifically, I'm a subjectivist/noncognitivist/basically an emotivist on morality/ethics. — Terrapin Station
I'm a moral relativist. More specifically, I'm a subjectivist/noncognitivist/basically an emotivist on morality/ethics. In other words, I believe that moral stances are simply ways that individuals "feel" about interpersonal behavior. A la emotivism, it's more or less "yaying" or "booing" behavior. — Terrapin Station
No many moral relativists would answer that way. The problem is that you're seeing relativism from an absolutist/objectivist context. You see it as if relativists are acknowledging that ethics is objective, but we just can't know the answer to ethical questions. That's not what we're saying, however. We're saying that ethics is a matter of how people feel about behavior. So when someone asks "Was fascism bad," they're asking how people feel about fascism, and why they feel that way. — Terrapin Station
If we're talking about certainty in the sense of whether something "can not possibly be incorrect," we'd simply say that's a category error. Moral claims are not correct or incorrect. They're rather reports of how people feel about things. — Terrapin Station
But it's also the case that many of the questions sorrounding the nature of 'true goods' such as real knowledge, virtue, bravery, etc, are often left open - many such questions are explored in the dialogues, but they often end in aporia - they don't present a final definition so much as explore various possibilities. — Wayfarer
It is precisely the absence of that sense in modern and post-modern philosophy that has undermined the background necessary for a so-called 'objective' morality (although the very term 'objective' is problematical, because the relationship that dictates morality in theistic religion is not 'subject-object' but 'I-thou'.) — Wayfarer
The essence of something is that which if you took it away, the identity would change to something else. Identity is usually a convention of language. Humans being the only animals with language, we create identity based on certain measurements/distinctions. Once the convention is established as to the definition of a thing, we can then determine at what point a thing is no longer a thing. Interestingly enough, once a thing has been a thing, it's parts can still be referenced to the prior situation of that thing. A smashed table, can still have legs that once were a part of the thing, but are now its own thing. So oddly, the trace of a thing can not be taken away once it has already been established. The thing can have residual existence beyond its presence as a reference. — schopenhauer1
Identity is usually a convention of language. — schopenhauer1
A smashed table, can still have legs that once were a part of the thing, but are now its own thing. — schopenhauer1
Alienation of labor cuts the worker off from the goods he makes, and relieves him of any necessity (or even the point) of thinking about the products his workplace produces. (He doesn't need to think about it because his thoughts on the matter are irrelevant.) — Bitter Crank
What the alienated worker needs to think about is how to change his relationship to production, from being an unthinking cog in the works, to directing the works himself (along with his fellow workers). Maybe they will continue to produce computers when the workers are in charge, maybe not. They need to think more deeply about this than the owners of capitalism have--which is to say, barely grazed the surface of the question. — Bitter Crank
"Philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point, however, is to change it" Karl Marx said. What the worker needs to delve into is how to humanize work and it's products, rather than to continue in an alienated and alienating regime. — Bitter Crank
IN a capitalist economy, the primary reason for technological innovation has to do with earning profit from manufacturing or from service. Innovative (not necessarily better) products are continuously needed to replace products which are presently being consumed. Style drives clothing purchases, for instance, among a large portion of the market. One can not be seen in clothes that represent last season's discards. Similarly, one is encouraged to think that one needs the latest smart phone. In fact, for most people, the $10 Trac Phone (which makes and receives calls) will be perfectly serviceable. Or, the $100 smart phone will serve where a $10 Tracphone will not.
The 'consumer' also needs to think about products, and whether they need to exist. Does one really need a smart light bulb? 99.999% of the population have no real need for a smart lightbulb, let alone a house full of smart lightbulbs, smart stoves, smart refrigerators, smart furnaces, smart rugs, smart toilets, and smart vacuum cleaners. Much of what we consumers buy has very little potential for increasing our sense of happiness. — Bitter Crank
Because I see life as worth living and others commit suicide. — Harry Hindu
We can be in pain and not dying. So pain isn't something that informs us of our mortality. Seeing others die informs us of our mortality. Pain informs us of damage to our body which could be life-threatening or it might not. — Harry Hindu
I would ask why are there only two alternatives (life and death). — Harry Hindu
I would also want to know why life is worth living for some and not for others. — Harry Hindu
Why does death often come with the experience of pain that precedes death to the point that we have created a whole industry (hospice) to avoid that pain? Why would a bad experience precede something that some claim to be peaceful? Does the pain before death mean something about where you are headed? — Harry Hindu
Suicide is one of those choices that you can't change. You can often change your choices in life. Maybe it's the fear of making the wrong choice that keeps us from committing suicide. Many people refuse to make choices for fear of the outcome and then the decision is eventually taken out of their hands. — Harry Hindu
The question of suicide masks the real issue, which is our own temporality. It's true we want to be happy, be at peace, but it this is not always possible, and living a temperate life might alleviate some pain, but in the end it is all the same, death sooner or latter. It's not meaning which counts, it is the ability to accept what is, to will what is, inspite of what is. I think that is only possible by finding something transcendent, beyond one's self. — Cavacava
It's not meaning which counts, it is the ability to accept what is, to will what is, inspite of what is. I think that is only possible by finding something transcendent, beyond one's self. — Cavacava
Good parenting sets children on the path of learning, proper behavior, and hope. Later in life the child-become-adult has to decide whether what he learned, what was proper, and what could be hoped for is now adequate. Maybe the parents taught that the child should hope for eternal life in heaven or a fortunate reincarnation. The adult may decide that he can not know about heaven or reincarnation, and toss that hope out the window. Maybe the adult concludes that there is no hope for human progress, or conversely, that there is much hope. What people think they can know, what they should do, what they may hope often changes over time. The child may have been taught that he should make a lot of money. The adult may decide that he should not do that. — Bitter Crank
I hope pursuing these questions makes like meaningful. — Bitter Crank
This is the important sentence. Elsewhere Kant argues that all philosophy ultimately aims at answering these three questions: “What can I know? What should I do? What may I hope?” I have no idea whether Camus was familiar with Kant's "ultimate question" formulation. — Bitter Crank
The question of suicide masks the real issue, which is our own temporality. It's true we want to be happy, be at peace, but it this is not always possible, and living a temperate life might alleviate some pain, but in the end it is all the same, death sooner or latter. It's not meaning which counts, it is the ability to accept what is, to will what is, inspite of what is. I think that is only possible by finding something transcendent, beyond one's self. — Cavacava
The question is not well-defined. In the first sentence he says it is 'suicide', by which I presume he means the question 'Shall I commit suicide?'. In the second sentence he says the question is 'Is life worth living?', which is a correlated but different question. — andrewk
It seems to me that one would just support this as the one truly philosophical problem by saying: "If you answer in the affirmative, then all the other problems of philosophy are never addressed, and in the negative, then you may take up the other problems knowing that life is worth living" — Moliere
(Beware that this is not a theology but a philosophy. I use God for lack of a better word. Spinoza uses the word God as well as (maybe more fitting?) Nature, Shankara uses Brahman/Atman, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche use Will. I use the word God simply as a word for something that is omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent. — Miguel
I arrive to the conclusion that there is this ‘God’ because of the fact that we are all connected—not only connected, but one. If all things are one, then that One is omnipresent, because it is all things. Furthermore, if you add up the knowledge of all things—every stone, plant, animal, human, planet, star, molecule and atom—then you will have all knowledge, therefore that One is omniscient. And if that One is everything then it is all-powerful, because it has all power over itself and there is nothing outside of it: omnipotent.) — Miguel
And in fact, can the universe not be seen as an organism, growing and developing until it’s grown old, then shrinking again and ‘dying’? But then many things can be seen as organism—the Earth alone, for example, though I would argue it is more like an organ within an organism—and there may be an even larger system that we do not know of. Also that is God. All is God. All is one. — Miguel
We ARE everything around us and everything around us is us! This includes our thoughts and emotions, our convictions, hopes and dreams. We can affect our surroundings directly but also with our thoughts, because they are just as much a part of God. If we WANT something enough, hard enough, loud enough, even if it’s almost a subconscious kind of longing, then we will begin to affect our surroundings. — Miguel
The world bends to our deepest wants. Not because we are on a pre-destined path and it is simply accomplishing its role in that path: but because we are shaping a path with our mind and our surrounding reality with it. Of course, that said, God has free will: we have free will. That we have shaped a path does not mean that we must walk upon it, or walk it to the end. So then the two most important things to gain from this are these: we must want something so badly that that the world has no choice but to help us there, and: once that path in our life has begun to form, we must be fearless and confident enough to take it. — Miguel
In the end, then, we must always believe in ourselves, for to believe in ‘signs’, to believe in the world, is still to believe in yourself, for you ARE the world and you have created the signs. ‘Believe in the world: it will take you where you must be’ and ‘believe in yourself, do what must be done’ can be seen as equal statements and for maximum effect must be combined. The prerequisite, of course, is to believe in something and want something so strongly that you ‘bend reality’ with your longing. — Miguel