But the creative process needs a conclusion. — javi2541997
Why I am not deserve to see your works? Am I worse than you?
Who are we to judge the world doesn't deserve our works and art? — javi2541997
We are lucky this amazing writer never destroyed his works! — javi2541997
But I still see it as a waste of time. What is the clue of writing a poem if I will burn it down? I would understand it if you vanish the works because you don't like them. — javi2541997
I demand a more significant place in the myth building. It were me and Hanover who originally battled against the evil Pharaoh Porat, leading the first sheep from Egypt PF into exile. Yeah a few goats followed later and Jamal built Jerusalem PF, whatever. — Baden
LESS TALKING MORE SHOUTING1!1 — SophistiCat
However much one may like sausages or David Bowie. — alan1000
I think many believe things have deteriorated, but unless you can offer a before and after comparison, you can't describe what that deterioration is. — Hanover
So every time you complain about the lack of X in our world and make efforts for others to see that, you move the world in a positive direction, so you defeat your argument by making it. — Hanover
I don't want to argue with you further along these lines though, especially because the argument is not personal to me. It's not an original pet theory or anything and I fully expect it not to resonate with everyone. — Baden
But part of my point is that the potential for rebellion is quashed through the creation of people who consider themselves happy enough in a benign way not to rebel but are still too paralysed or weakened by inner conflicts to develop their potentials. — Baden
I think you’re making my point for me again here, to be honest. — Baden
Maybe. Although I would like to think there are better options than spending 9 or 10 hours getting stressed out in an identity that’s forced on us for practical reasons, just so we can consume mass media to de-stress enough to do it all again. Maybe you’re the pessimist and I’m the optimist here. — Baden
I don't, to be fair. I did spend a couple of years primarily as a financial speculator though and that was a mask that I found harder to remove and less compatible with identities I value far more than I would have liked. — Baden
I'm suggesting that if someone says 'that painting is good', they probably don't mean 'that painting is any 3 or more of advantageous, pleasant, helpful, or accommodating.' It seems unlikely. What advantage would the average person find in a painting? What would it help them to do? What wishes would it accommodate? They might find it pleasant, — Herg
I think someone could find a painting unpleasant (think of Francis Bacon's Screaming Popes) and still think the painting was good. — Herg
I Googled 'definition definition' (that was fun), and it said 'a statement of the exact meaning of a word, especially in a dictionary.' That will do for me. — Herg
I think that what you have provided is a list of reasons why we might want to call something 'good' — that it's advantageous, or pleasant, or helpful, or accommodating — which is not the same thing as a definition. — Herg
Excuse my stupidity, but how is it possible to give a property properties without first considering goodness to be an an object in itself? — NOS4A2
Ethics is not about what you want. — Banno
Yes, Bert, ethics is about what we ought do. And I guess it's clear, so far as it goes, that we ought do what is right, and we ought do what is good. — Banno
Certainly an individual living multiple roles is not necessarily doomed to internal conflicts. Cannot a famous skier be also an effective physicist, while also being an attentive father and husband? — jgill
The freedom of identity a technically advanced consumer society facilitates (identity commodified / personal paralysis packaged as endless novelty) contains within it the anaesthetic that neutralizes a more valuable freedom, the freedom of resistance against an orientation towards the self that dictates that a self must consume even the self and in as many flavours as possible in order to fully experience itself. — Baden
The freedom of identity a technically advanced consumer society facilitates (identity commodified / personal paralysis packaged as endless novelty) contains within it the anaesthetic that neutralizes a more valuable freedom, the freedom of resistance against an orientation towards the self that dictates that a self must consume even the self and in as many flavours as possible in order to fully experience itself. — Baden
The difficulty with “good”, I think, is that it describes someone desiring certain qualities or properties in another thing, but is not itself a quality or property, and so is unavailable for any analysis that excludes good objects and the people who say they are good. — NOS4A2
The allusion to Thrasymachus was just to draw an analogy that what you're saying is similar to what he said in The Republic -- not exactly so, but given the above scenario, can you see the parallels? — Moliere
Did you somewhere indicate how good is more or other than just what benefits an individual relative to their needs? — Joshs
180 never takes responsibility for the clarity of his own posts. — bert1
Suppose someone comes up with an example that they claim debunks your definition. How can we tell whether their claim is true? — Herg
I am sorry, 180 Proof, that you expect the impossible.I'm sympatico with
I don't see that your definition [of good] is of much help in working out what we ought do, which is, after all, the point of ethics.
— Banno — 180 Proof
As Thrasymachus pointed out, what is just is what the powerful say. To even have an opinion on the matter, one must first be powerful. — Moliere
:naughty: :rage: :down:↪Banno :fire: — 180 Proof
In more philosophical terms, your account is that the extension of good is the very same as the extension of any of advantageous and pleasant and helpful and accommodating.
Moore's point is that even were this so, the open question shows that the intension is different.
And that's the problem with the open question - if there were such an extensional equivalence, then as you might say, who cares if it is not intensionally equivalent?
So Putin's invasion of Ukraine is, for him, advantageous and helpful and accommodating, if perhaps not altogether pleasant. And hence by your standard, a good.
So I don't see that your definition is of much help in working out what we ought do, which is, after all, the point of ethics. — Banno
Assuming bert1 is a Kantian, does it follow that which is willed, is the good?
— Shawn
Kantian or not, it's clear that bert1's account leads quickly to incoherence...
From a rapist's point of view, raping someone is fab, if a bit sweaty.
— bert1
He can't say for sure if even rape is not a good.
While Bert may have trouble seeing it, I'm sure most here would agree that what someone wills is not the very same concept as what is good.
— Banno
Please don't juxtapose something that is good now but will be not good later, or something that is good for Mr. X but not good for Ms. Y. Those violate the rule in the definition, "at the same time and in the same respect." — god must be atheist
I'm sure most here would agree that what someone wills is not the very same concept as what is good. — Banno
What a mess. So far every contribution to this thread has used circular terms to ‘define’ the good. — Joshs
The first thought I had was justice.
Justice is generally considered good.
And yet justice is not...
...a thing that is advantageous and pleasant and helpful and accommodating OR at least three at the same time and in the same respect of the aforementioned qualifiers.
— god must be atheist
because sometimes justice must deal with rule-breaking. So while it is disadvantageous and unpleasant and unhelpful nor accommodating to punish people for breaking the rules, it's a part of what makes justice just: That the rules are fairly applied, even if inconvenient. — Moliere