Developing a moral theory as a "pipedream, unlimited" ...When talking about how the world should be, saying "but it's not that way" is non-sequitur. — Pfhorrest
But people at a forum like this typically are not friends or family. We're not a community.However the philosophy forum is filled with people with just that, but even seem to be happy to continue butting heads for exactly that reason. If a community exists with only irreconcilable differences in opinion to bring them together, I don't see how they can't be accepted by friends or family. — FlaccidDoor
Humans also have a social dimension; they are epistemically dependent on other humans; they have internalized and have access to knowledge accumulated by other humans, which can help them navigate individual deficiencies.So the premise of hedonism that pleasure and pain determine what is good and bad seems to me inherently flawed. Our senses are simply too easy to fool. — Tzeentch
How do you think this can be put into practice?To sum it all up, we need to move on/away from what, by my analysis, is a rather superficial understanding, perhaps even a total misunderstanding, of happiness/sorrow which is to think that happiness/sorrow are themselves objectives either to attain/avoid and arrive at the truth that the state of wellbeing is the real goal. With this realization we can perhaps get rid of the go-betweens viz. happiness/sorrow and all the complications/paradoxes/problems/dilemmas that go with them. — TheMadFool
But your moral objectivism amounts to the same thing.So like I concluded, the alternative is “because someone said so”. — Pfhorrest
In Early Buddhism, they speak of the six senses, with the intellect being the sixth. And if you look at the suttas, they talk about taking pleasure in ideas/thoughts as being simply yet another pleasure, like the pleasure of eating or engaging in sex. They do talk about gross and refined pleasures (and gross and subtle forms of suffering); but the point is that these pleasures (or sufferings) are considered as being on a spectrum, not different categories.Eudomonia in Aristotelian philosophy is linked with virtue and with fulfilling your life's purpose (telos). I don't think it's difficult to differentiate those kinds of aims from the hedonistic pursuit of pleasure. Nor do I find it difficult to differentiate the faculty of reason from that of sensation. — Wayfarer
Who decides whether a person is male, female, or whatever?I don't understand how your mind works, Harry. THis seems to me to be a non sequitur. — Banno
My issue is not with whether people choose to identify as non-binary, but with the projection of expectations upon others based upon this choice. Language evolves as a function of collective use, not selective pressures. And it is a slippery slope. What is to prevent me from identifying as a completely unique gender, and applying all kinds of linguistic constraints which other people then not only have to respect, but follow in general usage? If a minority of a few thousand has this authority, why not a minority of a few hundred? Or one? — Pantagruel
Exactly. There are ways to make oneself seem special and thus demand to be given special status and to be allowed not to play by society's norms. In a culture that has a strong tendency toward political correctness, such people who demand such special status can do very well, as the politically correct majority tries to accomodate them.Great question. It seem obvious to me that there are people that can identify as something that they are not. — Harry Hindu
Good question.What makes sex/gender so special that people that identify as something that they are not and then their assertions simply accepted without question? Take, for example, my assertion above that I am a Dark Sith Lord. Why do you question my self-identification, but not a man who says that they are not a man, but something else?
*sigh*This sounds like you're lashing out at me suggesting you being scared of non-binary people is a psychological problem of yours, not a social problem of theirs. — Pfhorrest
Well, this explains everything then. Empathy and moral objectivism are mutually exclusive.Do you believe in objective morality?
— baker
Objective as in universal, non-relative, yes. — Pfhorrest
But what would justify this difference?Seems to me that hedonism always wants to avoid this conclusion - to say there’s no real difference between pleasant sensations and eudomonaic happiness (which is the happiness that comes from the pursuit of virtue.) One can, for example, attain happiness in the contemplation of verities, which surely can’t be reduced to sensation alone, and which only a rational mind can entertain. — Wayfarer
No. It's a difference in stances. It is to be expected that people holding different stances cannot be friends or form a harmonious family.What do you guys think? Is a difference in language an accurate way to perceive this divide? — FlaccidDoor
The obvious example is from monotheistic religions: moral is that which is in line with God's commandments. Acting in line with God's commandments can lead to (other) people's happiness or suffering. But making (other) people's happiness or suffering the reference point for what counts as moral or not would be a grave mistake in the context of monotheism.What makes conduct moral, if not refraining from hurting people (not inflicting suffering), and helping them (enabling enjoyment)? — Pfhorrest
Yet it's an idea that can be found in some major religions. Like when Christians say that believing in God and following his commandments has nothing to do with your happiness. In fact, doing the morally right thing is possibly going to or is even supposed to make you feel crappy (a burden you should gladly accept, given the massive sacrifice God has already made for you).I find myself just flabbergasted at the notion of reckoning something as good or bad regardless of (or even in spite of) whether it makes anybody feel good or bad. — Pfhorrest
IOW, Socrates' brother appealed to might makes right, and apparently had the wealth and the power to back up his challenge. No surprise there.One of my favorite parts of the Republic is when Socrates' brother stares down Thrasymachus and assures him that any wager made would be satisfied if he should lose.
Thrasymachus left the room shortly afterwards. — Valentinus
And further, how do you make sense of being the loser/victim/underdog in such a situation?I agree with you, but how do you argue the case against someone who doesn't accept the power of rational persuasion? — Wayfarer
Might isn't limited to brute force. Might is everything that other people can use as leverage against you, and that can be anything from brute force to blackmail.There is a wide body of literature in the foreign policy and security studies fields that shows that norms (e.g. rule of law, honor culture, etc.) shape and constrain the use of force. Even when there is total state breakdown and no monopoly on force, not every battlefield regresses into the maximum apocalyptic scenes of say, the Liberian Civil War.
Philosophy shapes thoughts, which in turn shapes actions. Might makes right isn't necissarily the case even in warfare. I'd argue it's generally not the case in day to day life. Otherwise, after a lifetime of weight lifting and martial arts practice, I wouldn't wait in lines anymore. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Might makes right is the doctrine of modern Western capitalist countries as well, given that the pursuit of justice costs a lost of money. For many people, it is prohibitively expensive.Cases of 'might makes right' are clearly discernable in cultures without the human rights background of the West, conspicuously the People's Republic of China, where individual rights are held to be subordinate to the requirements of the State, as well as in other authoritarian and one-party states. — Wayfarer
The one that pretty much everyone I know lives by. And they are doing well!Judgement is about power, not truth? What kind of shitty philosophy is that? — ToothyMaw
And this exonerates you when others treat you poorly?That's one of my favorite maxims, Baker. But you can't teach the whole world. — Tom Storm
But this doesn't address the "big picture". There are several assumptions in "putting things aside" and "moving on". If these assumptions aren't elucidated and if they aren't the right ones, "putting things aside" and "moving on" can do more harm.I have a similar story to move kids past things that are obsessing them - an ill parent, an incident of bullying. I tell them that they will carry the problem, but they have a choice of holding it in their hands so that they cannot do anything else, or putting it in their pocket or backpack so that they can get on with the stuff before them. — Banno
Another popular maxim says that we teach others how to treat us; and that if they treat us poorly, it's because we have taught them to do so.The popular maxim that we can't control what others say to us but we can control how we react is also similar. — Tom Storm
Not at all. They get pleasure when judging others. This pleasure, the gratification of moral indignation is a motivation for judging others. To withold judgment would be to deny oneself this pleasure.Then I suppose most people live a pretty sad existence. — ToothyMaw
No, it's how ordinary people are: they love to judge others, in matters big and small. It's how they exert power.Maybe for an authoritarian regime that murders people for speaking their minds. — ToothyMaw
Judgement is about exerting power, not about truth.my point is that judgement should be withheld until we find out if it is indeed false. — ToothyMaw
Because for a psychologically normal person, the Why is supposed to go without saying, be something that the person takes for granted.When we're setting out to do anything, there's two things to ask ourselves: why to do it / why should something come to be the case, and how to do it / how does something come to be the case? We've got all of the descriptive sciences, including the ones you're talking about, investigating the second type of question, the "how does", to great results.
But we barely have any systemic investigation into the first question, the "why should". — Pfhorrest
Then you wouldn't be "walking in his shoes" to begin with. You wouldn't be empathizing, you'd be projecting, following your own agenda.Yes, but not to agree with him, but to understand his deeper motives and find alternate ways of satisfying them that don't so deeply dissatisfy others'. — Pfhorrest
No. For one, this is not how the world works.Extreme egalitarianism?
— baker
Yes, otherwise known as altruism. Everyone matters. Everyone.
You're not answering my question.And what would such extreme empathy have to do with finding out what's good or bad??
— baker
What do you think "good or bad" even mean? Because this just sounds like a bizarre question to me.
That's just nihilistic quietism.As I have attempted to counsel him on several occasions, I told him that learning to let things go (good and bad) is the most important lesson in life any of us can learn, that carrying feelings (particularly anger) can have devastating effects not only on the quality of your life, but the lives of those around you. — synthesis
Why on earth would anyone do that???To find out what's good or bad, walk some miles in other peoples' shoes, put yourself in their places, experience for yourself what it's like to go through what they go through, and if necessary figure out what's different between you and them that might account for any differences that remain in your experiences. — Pfhorrest
No. What children are taught isn't empathy, it is projection under the guise of empathy.It seems like this is simultaneously a principle that everyone must have already learned as children,
Could you sketch out the difference, please?But again, 'critical thinking' in the original Platonic context, started with very different background assumptions to critical thinking in the current day and age. — Wayfarer
And to tie this with the OP question: Would you say that philosophers advocate for critical thinking in an effort to seek dignity and decency?Culture and society allow people to accept their impulse to seek dignity and decency. — Wayfarer
That description by authority becomes the norm the masses are expected to obey.These domains barely tolerate restriction by rule of law.
What would be the general motivation to adoption? — Pantagruel
Consequent pessimism is paralyzing. You're at most, talking about occasionally having some pessimistic thoughts. I'm talking about real, consequent 24/7 pessimism. That's the kind that makes one see the futility of every human action, 24/7.merely dilettante pessimism.
— baker
You'd have to explain that. Pessimism doesn't mean an utter inability to do what one doesn't want to. — schopenhauer1
But since, if the antinatalist is successful in convincing other people not to procreate, the potential future people will not exist anyway, so no compassion or empathy for them, so the point is moot.Antinatalism is about empathy or compassion for the future people that would be created by the procreators. — schopenhauer1
It's empathy and compassion for existing people -- such as for those who are burdened with looking after orphans or the defective. Social norms are there to protect and serve the normal, the majority.This actually seems unempathetic.. being more akin to eugenics and nefarious programs in the past. I also don't see how shaming people is compassionate.. Rather, it's just more social pressures to see a certain outcome- ends justify the means.
But there are not going to be any future sufferers!The motivation is to prevent future sufferers from suffering.
It looks more like the final drop of pleasure that the antinatalist is trying to squeeze out of life.That seems pretty egoless being that the antinatalist has nothing themselves to gain from it, since they already exist and all.
IOW, you haven't consistently practiced pessimism.Have you ever consistently made an effort to have a pessimistic attitude to life, yet were able to dilligently get up every morning and do your work well?
— baker
Much work gets done because it has to be or X will happen. — schopenhauer1
Yes, we've been over this. I'm not seeing anything special in this. You need to break eggs in order to make an omelette. Most people don't cry over the eggs being broken.One of the points of the OP is not only do we survive, we can evaluate any given task needed to survive (in the socio-economic-cultural superstructure). That's why I see this situation as a negative. Here we are, being able to negatively evaluate the very tasks needed to survive (and find comfort and survive).
What do you mean by "find comfort"?(and find comfort and survive).
But proponents of antinatalism are doing the same thing: they want to see other people stop procreating because they (ie. the antinatalists) have a vision that just needs to happen for the other people.I am very concerned people want to see X from another person because they have a vision that just needs to happen for the other person. — schopenhauer1
