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  • Objective Morality: Testing for the existence of objective morality.
    I firmly believe things are right or wrong apart from who does them. But, I can't account for how this could be; because every case seems to be about an observer. An early apology for not making a firm case. I thought of some questions and wondered how they would be answered.Cheshire

    Whether or not an action is objectively wrong is different from an action being right/wrong independent of the actor/situation. Moral absolutism says an action is intrinsically wrong regardless of the ends or actor, whereas an objective morality entails that ethical norms are not up to interpretation; they are laws like any other that one can simply point to.

    why would it matter if morality was objective or not? Objectively wrong, or subjectively wrong, they don't care either way. Neither force people to do what's right.Isaac

    Yes, but allowing for moral relativism no doubt allows for beliefs that cause actions that then cause unnecessary suffering. While beliefs don't force evil people to do evil things, beliefs often times influence good people to do bad things - something that could be more easily avoided imo.

    An attempt at an exploration in search of objectivity, because relativism causes so much harm. Is there anything that can be said about the different answers to the same action?Cheshire

    What you are searching for is an absolute morality, not objective morality.
  • Poll: Definition or Theory?
    Mine was; the sentence should be a definition, if it unambiguously equates a word with an object or process or otherwise sets out how a word is typically to be used, I'll call it a definition. If it's doing anything else, I'll call it a theory.fdrake

    Same here.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics
    The goal justifies only those means which are consistent with the goal.180 Proof

    Unless I'm mistaken, act utilitarianism doesn't rule out much of any means at all. Whatever action produces the best outcome is right.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    Excuse my error; I meant the net amount of pleasure, not suffering/pleasure.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    I have read some of that stuff. How is weighing the happiness derived from an act against the suffering caused by it inconsistent with the goals of utilitarianism? I'll make it really simple. One is greater than nine, and the amount of pleasure derived from the act of raping someone could be greater than the suffering the rape victim incurs. If the greatest amount of happiness for the greatest number is the goal (nine is greater than one) then the act of raping someone could be justified because the net amount of pleasure derived from the act could be greater than zero.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    But it could have some utility in the crappy, narrow hypothetical posed.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    Yes, but you have to weigh the pleasure gained from an act and the suffering incurred against each other to justify it. If the act provides more pleasure for the rapists (it could, maybe), and there are also more rapists (there are nine of them) then the act could have utility. Yes, it creates suffering, but it also creates happiness/pleasure. I acknowledge that if there is a net increase in suffering it isn't justified, however, and that it realistically wouldn't be because of the reasons Dingo gave.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics
    Given the goal (i.e. highest good) is "the greatest pleasure for the greatest number of people", by definition this is inconsistent with "pleasure for some derived from pain of others"; therefore, "rape" is not justified (i.e. moral) in utilitarian ethics.180 Proof

    I disagree; according to the greatest happiness principle more people in this example (the rapists) are potentially deriving more happiness than if they hadn't raped the person. The principle does not say that one cannot derive happiness from the suffering of others - it just follows that the rapists would need to, in total, derive more happiness than the person being raped suffers in order to justify it.

    Of course, none of this says anything about whether or not gang-rape should be allowed.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    The OP. I think he is just fishing for certain answers or is trying to be inflammatory.
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics
    I'm not talking about a liscensce to rape i'm talking about a one time thingGitonga

    If you mean that maybe one person should be raped for the pleasure of gang-rapists without considering what allowing such a thing in general would do to the greater number of people then maybe I guess. But how is that even salient? Ethics is usually concerned with norms, not one-off hypotheticals (unless the hypotheticals help us understand ethical questions better, and I don't see how your hypothetical does that).
  • Flaws of Utilitarian ethics


    This seems like bait to me.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    If we are talking about distinct beliefs and not duplicated beliefs then what I said applies I think.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    It can, but it doesn't result in an infinite number of beliefs is what I mean. You just keep adding the same elements over and over again with each new proposition. You treat them as if they are distinct when they aren't. Or am I wrong?
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Not to mention how is the entire set B1 a singular proposition? It is a collection of elements - the elements God, Self, and Set.

    B2 = {God, Self, Set, B1} is the same thing as B2 = {God, Self, Set, God, Self, Set}

    You are representing a duplication of elements with each new proposition. It makes no sense.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Yeah, I understand your post now and see what you are saying. But why on earth is god necessary?

    edit: the belief in god I mean
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Although I will get a book on set theory when I can.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    I know next to nothing about formal set theory; I'm working at a very basic level here, and I'm just going to go with the orthodox view that infinite sets exist.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    I see no reason to get god involved, and whether or not there is an infinite set of beliefs is also not relevant, which you would know if you had read the relevant posts. Please post things that are salient, or create a new thread.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Apparently it is indeed pretty dubious, Deepak Chopra uses the term, and while that does not immediately discredit it, it goes a long ways towards raising suspicion that it is bullshit.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Obviously I don't know much about it. It sounded smart to me.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    But, if you just want beliefs to be in some reasonably constructed sets, then letters and words clearly can makeup sets, and it seems a very reasonable premise that people really do make decisions based on words (though, not exclusively; so, if this isn't a requirement, it's certainly a starting point).boethius

    No, it doesn't have to be the case that decisions are made based on the words but rather that the words accurately express a belief that can be readily understood to have caused someone to act in such a way as to break a law.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    I need to specify: my idea is that if one is complicit in the forming of a belief and act on it then they are morally culpable; if they were not complicit in the forming of the belief they are not. Whether there are degrees matters, but at its base if one is complicit then they can be held accountable in some way, even if it is hard to say to what degree, and if they are not complicit then they cannot.

    You might need to read part of my essay to fully understand what I'm trying to do here.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    I'm not sure what you're asking for here. Are you wanting criteria? Because surely we have the means of selecting a belief from a set. All we need do is point to it! Or, if we want to be more formal, we could set up a map between two sets and then whenever you input whatever it is we're mapping to you output the belief.Moliere

    I just need a way of expressing beliefs as a set that can be selected from.

    What's the puzzle?Moliere

    I'm trying to axiomatize the chain resulting from someone's beliefs that they are complicit in forming to the breaking of a very specific law, going from belief -> choice -> action breaking the law.

    if we want to be more formal, we could set up a map between two sets and then whenever you input whatever it is we're mapping to you output the belief.Moliere

    Can you explain this? It seems to me I only need one set representing beliefs that can be drawn from and if a certain belief is known to have been formed at least partially by one's own free actions we can map that onto a very simple causal model determining moral culpability (in its most simple sense; I know there are degrees of moral culpability).

    My main issue was the starting point, how to represent the collection of beliefs.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    But I'm not sure the total number of possible beliefs, even in a context, is countable. Given that beliefs can be false, and can incorporate numbers (since beliefs are just statements which will be assented to), it seems to me that you could not separate beliefs into sets if the sets are thought to contain a finite number.Moliere

    That doesn't matter; I just need to have a means of selecting beliefs from a set. Whether that set is finite or infinite doesn't matter, and whether they express quantities or can be false doesn't matter either; all that matters is that the belief is held and can lead to people making choices.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    I thought about your linguistic solution and it seems pretty good - elegant even. But how could we know which beliefs (collections of words) are the result of freely interacting with the environment?ToothyMaw

    That actually doesn't matter; one can simply find out the conditions under which a belief is formed by a person.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    That is all very interesting stuff. Never would have thought of postulating a consciousness field (but of course I'm not a physicist; I don't know how such things work). That being said, I don't count myself as a philosopher either.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    I knew of the mind-body problem, yes.

    To say particle interaction "causes consciousness" is to say some particle description we can write down describes to us consciousness; that you can give me some paper with some descriptions of particles and, after review (even very lengthy) I (or any other diligent reviewer) would say "ah yes, these particles / field equations / whathave you, would be conscious in this description.boethius

    I grant all of that, but I think belief is different. Unless I'm mistaken we can actually model belief in the brain, whereas, as you say, we cannot mathematically model consciousness and do not know if it even can be modeled.

    I thought about your linguistic solution and it seems pretty good - elegant even. But how could we know which beliefs (collections of words) are the result of freely interacting with the environment?
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    I actually thought we were getting somewhere.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    If beliefs don't exist in the brain then where do they exist? And whether or not brains are conscious seems to be a different problem.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    Say I have a box of apples. The apples are separate from each other. I can pick them up, eat them, count them. I don't think ideas or beliefs are separable in that way. It seems much more artificial to me. More open to disagreement.T Clark

    Okay, that makes things clearer. I don't think that beliefs need to be separate in such a way in order to count them as a brain state, or a quality of a brain state. We know that people have beliefs and that they exist in the brain, so even if the brain state isn't separately countable and can't be extracted we know that said person's belief is the result of a brain state - even if said brain state might never be repeated.

    Not everyone would have to have the same brain state to believe the same thing, but those beliefs exist as brain states nonetheless.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs


    Furthermore, if there is a finite number of brain states brain states could potentially repeat I think.

    edit: Actually even if there is an infinite number of brain states I think they could still repeat.

    another edit: the possible number of brain states has nothing to do with whether or not they will repeat it seems to me.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    I doubt they exist as separate brain states. I'd guess, without any specific justification, that no brain state ever repeats itself.T Clark

    What exactly do we mean by separate? Separate from other phenomenon in the brain? Or never repeating and identifiable? I used the word because you did.
  • (mathematical) sets of beliefs
    I don't think beliefs actually exist as separate things that can be counted in any realistic sense.T Clark

    If they exist as part of the mind I would see the beliefs as existing as a brain state or change in brain structure. Sure - maybe the brain states are the result of and cause things but if they exist in people's brains they could be separately analyzed at a point in time it seems to me. I don't even need to know how to describe the objects (beliefs as brain states): all I need to know is if they can be put into a set.
  • Free Speech and Censorship
    Many posters here, who I agree with a lot, I would never want to trust to make this decision.Judaka

    Who would you trust?
  • Free Speech and Censorship
    I don't really buy that leaving a website running that promotes hate of oppressed minorities is less harmful than removing it. I've heard this argument many times, but experiment, measurement, can and has put it to the test. Social media is proof positive that platforming vile crap just makes more suckers that believe it.Kenosha Kid

    Studies?
  • Free Speech and Censorship
    In my view to seek an irrefutable and timeless guideline to all present and future societies is simply futile and plain silly.ssu

    When did I say I was aiming to do that? I am just trying to start a discussion, if only to see where people's "common sense" lies.
  • Free Speech and Censorship
    Since the emergence of the idea of "Free Speech", the limits and the abuse of this right has been debated and thought about. It's shouldn't come as something new.ssu

    I was specifically referring to death threats. I don't quite know what I think about them yet (other than that they are horrible).
  • Free Speech and Censorship
    Defending free speech as a principle sounds nice but what is actually being defended? There are consequences on both sides of the issue and it's an evolving issue because technology evolves and changes the game. You use slippery slope fallacies to defend a hardline stance which doesn't actually make much sense.Judaka

    But in this case I think the slippery slope arguments are valid. Consider a left wing nationalist. Such views exist but are really not all that common. This potential radical is about as left of center as a radical libertarian is right of center - and both views could be prone to censorship if we left such decisions to the social media company executives/politicians. I think left-wing nationalism is actually potentially not that bad, whereas radical libertarianism is ridiculous; these two views are not equally valid but are equally dangerous to the establishment. So yes, I agree - the main issue is who is to decide what is harmful speech. And the speech that will go first is the speech that is critical of the establishment.

    And if it is limited then it isn't even free speech anymore. I agree - there are downsides to the absolutist position - but limiting speech deemed offensive/harmful is just too risky imo.
  • Free Speech and Censorship


    Yeah, I'm having trouble with this one. Maybe death threats should be allowed some of the time. And all speech communicates meaning, yes. I would say, with regard to the president threatening to bomb a country or a people for no good reason: that just sounds like a terrorist threat, and so by our own laws said president is a terrorist and should be tried.

    I suppose one could say that death threats inspire terror more than most things, and thus is different from abusing one's wife. If one person is issued death threats then others may begin to fear the same fate.