If you define y as x and then it becomes impossible to inquire into how x and y may be compared. — TheMadFool
They lack a fully developed sense of self-awareness, right? Yet they can experience joy through many activities I mentioned above. — TheMadFool
However, feeling sorrow to its greatest extent requires a sense of self-awareness. I'm hurting, I'm dying, I'm losing, etc. are all expressions of self-awareness. — TheMadFool
How would a non-conscious being reflect on its own condition? — TheMadFool
Doesn't the term ''zombie'' specifically deny self-awareness of any kind? — TheMadFool
So anything like as stated above but not justice. So to clarify, if there is a net gain, say in the economy of a state, but for this slavery was introduced, you would find this good? Conversely, if justice was gained by abolishing slavery, but there was no net gain in anything else (also no net loss), then you would not find this to be good? — Samuel Lacrampe
Morality is intending for equality in treatment, but one still looks to reason on the foreseeable outcome to make the reasonable choice. — Samuel Lacrampe
Another extreme case is the Trolley problem, where equality in treatment is impossible, but that does not mean the person making the choice is immoral, because the intention for equal treatment remains. — Samuel Lacrampe
I am not sure what you mean about nihilism. — Samuel Lacrampe
As for the will of a deity, you are here using the word 'duty' ambiguously. — Samuel Lacrampe
If the god is unjust, then a religious person may obey it "out of duty", but this "duty" is similar in meaning to how the nazis were carrying out their acts "out of duty", which has nothing to do with moral duty. In that case, we actually speak of an immoral god. — Samuel Lacrampe
this "duty" is similar in meaning to how the nazis were carrying out their acts "out of duty", which has nothing to do with moral duty. — Samuel Lacrampe
I have no sense of moral duty to commit an injustice. Do you? — Samuel Lacrampe
I am fairly sure that nobody wants to be cheated on — Samuel Lacrampe
We need belief because we sometimes give assent to and act on statements that are false. There is a mismatch between what we do or say and what is the case. We can deal with this by using belief. — Banno
Hence belief becomes and explanation for our actions, such that when we act erroneously, we might explain it by noting that we held a false belief. — Banno
What then is the benefit, if not the equality? — Samuel Lacrampe
(1) What if we could give 1€ to two poor people each, or 1 000 000€ to only one of them? In that case, even the one that gets nothing would still likely agree that the second choice is better, as 1€ does not result in much anyways. As such, this choice seems morally good, but also just, because it does not break the golden rule. — Samuel Lacrampe
People disagree only on matters on fact, not on the moral sense in theory. — Samuel Lacrampe
but then would anyone accept it out of duty? — Samuel Lacrampe
I once witnesses a mite that was a whopping 10.8mm. They say it was a myth and I was delusional but I know what saw! We needed a lot of drugs to calm it down enough so we capture it for research purposes. A lot of people died that day. We lost a lot of good men. Eventually it managed to escape and we never saw it again. Has haunted my dreams ever since. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
how would I know that I'm think or what if something is controlling my thinking. — dakota
Yes I agree. And the intended result must be good for the act to be judged as good. And the criteria for this good result in this case is justice, because this is what Martin Luther King Jr. intended to bring. — Samuel Lacrampe
Now, the justice criteria for moral goodness is objective if, for every subject, the moral sense agrees with justice at all times. And this appear to be the case, unless we can come up with a case where the moral sense runs in opposition to justice. — Samuel Lacrampe
Drug addict example: Should drug addicts go to jail, or get rehabilitated? Well, if the law makers were drug addicts, and through not fault of theirs (which can happen), then surely they would want to get rehabilitated, and not go to jail. — Samuel Lacrampe
I am saying that the contextual shift is not sufficient enough to transform the behaviour into a moral issue. — Andrew4Handel
Animals will die whether or not we eat them. We didn't invent death or eating or predation. — Andrew4Handel
In what way?
I am beginning to think that making something a moral issue is always arbitrary because hypothetically we could try and make everything a moral issue. — Andrew4Handel
P1. Ticket 1 won't win
P2. Ticket 2 won't win
P3. Ticket 3 won't win
...
Pn. Ticket n won't win
From this we can deduce:
C1. No ticket will win — Michael
your'e welcome. — Sid
The fact that you are actually able to debate what kind of protein you want to consume says that me and my trigger pulling ancestors did something right — Sid
if we needed to eat meat in order to survive, then, strictly speaking, it would still be possible, with enough determination, to refrain from eating meat. It would just lead to a horrible death — Sapientia
So that if we were carnivores then there could be no moral issue which seems to be quite an arbitrary point at which to invoke ethics. — Andrew4Handel
(1) This does not seem to follow from what you said earlier, that the only rational reason to demand justice is out of selfishness (maybe you changed your mind; and I am just clarifying). — Samuel Lacrampe
(2) So your judgement of people's acts is based on results, not intentions? — Samuel Lacrampe
(3) It seems that you too believe in morality being objective, since you speak of a "net gain" which sounds like an objective judgement. — Samuel Lacrampe
can you find a case where justice demands for a punishment that exceeds prison time? — Samuel Lacrampe
How is the question of the colour of your shirt of any relevance to the question of belief of "eating W"? — MathematicalPhysicist
To your question the answer is "I don't know", while the answer to do you believe I ate or do you believe I didn't eat has a definite answer; while to your question there are more than two options, it's not binary, either 0 or 1. — MathematicalPhysicist
You don't believe I ate W and you don't believe I didn't eat W, then what do you believe: did I eat or didn't I? — MathematicalPhysicist
We have ~Bp & ~B~p, the question is do we have BpvB~p? — MathematicalPhysicist
How can someone believe something and also believe its negation at the same time? — MathematicalPhysicist
In your view, does it follow that such persons as Martin Luther King Jr. were selfish? — Samuel Lacrampe
I am not sure what you mean here. Let's take a step back to the definition of mercy. If mercy is defined as "never harming anyone ever", then it does not follow that mercy is always morally good, because it is sometimes necessary to harm, such as when defending a victim from a bully. If on the other hand, mercy is defined as "not being cruel" or "not giving a punishment that exceeds the crime", then mercy can indeed always be morally good, but also just. — Samuel Lacrampe
Uh, no it's not. The differences matter tremendously. — creativesoul
You mean belief 'a' is falsely confirmed by a co-incidence of fact. — charleton
Like a black cat walked across my path and I subsequently tripped over and broke my leg, falsely confirming the black cats are unlucky?
post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy. — charleton
Plants probably have some sort of conciousness — Robin Pannenberg
death excludes conciousness — Robin Pannenberg
You obviously have a blind spot and have forgotten women AGAIN. — charleton
He did not use this form of definition, which is, incidentally about 40 years out of date. Not "MAN" but men. — charleton
Yes I can: the context. — charleton
which leads to an absolute absence of life — Robin Pannenberg
3. Nothing can’t be described because it is the opposite of anything, this means that no color, not even white or black can describe it because it absolutely isn’t imaginable. — Robin Pannenberg
On any grounds (hence objective). It means that no matter how one may justify wilfully killing an innocent child, it is wrong, regardless of anyones subjective feelings towards the killer. It can under no circumstances, be considered morally good to commit such an act. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
How can the demand for justice rise from selfishness? And if injustice is present, then what becomes the measure of the net gain? — Samuel Lacrampe
This act is no doubt merciful — Samuel Lacrampe
But of course one can always fallibly know about one’s own existence — javra
As to Descartes’ cogito ergo sum, Descartes took the “I think” proposition for granted, without demonstrating its infallibility. In fact, the thought he refers to could conceivably be caused by some given other than himself—the “I” he is addressing—such as by the evil demons we’ve all since Descartes time have become so accustomed to … or else the thoughts could be utterly uncaused in all senses (a block-universe model could account for this). Were any of these alternatives to describe that which is true, the proposition “I think” would then be false. — javra
In these cases, these very same people would disagree on whether or not knowledge is had. My quoted statement states that where knowledge is had it will always be (fallibly) epistemically justified to be true. Where there is disagreement about the validity of justification, however, there will then also be disagreement on there being knowledge. — javra
A good point. Poorly worded on my part. Here I meant that truths are always justifiable in principle. For example, if a teapot floats in space between the Earth and Mars, it will be capable of being evidenced to so be given a sufficiently large body of acquired information and analysis of this information. So too with there being a needle in a haystack. — javra
But, in retrospect, my bad for bringing this up. — javra
Why would you say that? We can always make those claims, and often do. — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, but I don’t endorse the term of “infallible knowledge” in this case for the reasons I previously tried to provide. If knowledge is not a lucky guess, then one cannot have infallible knowledge—not unless one infallibly demonstrates it to so be "infallible belief that is infallibly true and is infallibly justified as being true". — javra
Whenever we believe things--and are not then uncertain about them--we then hold a subjective certainty that our beliefs are true. — javra
To the individual and the cohort, justification will always be fallible — javra
Longwinded but this serves as a background to this conclusion: Wherever knowledge is upheld, relative to the individual(s) who so uphold, knowledge will always be factually justified to be true. — javra
The property of truth doesn’t follow from the property of being justifiable; rather the reverse applies. If a belief is true, it will then necessarily also be to some extent justifiable. — javra
So—while one can try to argue that knowledge is beliefs believed to be justified and true irrespective of whether or not they are in fact justified and true (this from an omniscient perspective?)—I’m maintaining that in practice knowledge will always be justified and true to the best awareness of the knowers … and will be so maintained to be until evidenced otherwise.
If an individual stubbornly maintains an irrational belief to be true and justified as true (e.g., the belief that Earth is hollow … believe it or not, I’ve heard this one before), while it will be considered knowledge to the individual, it will not be knowledge to us. That it is a “belief that is believed to be justified” is insufficient to make it knowledge to us. What would make this belief knowledge to us is a justification for this belief that would evidence this belief to be true (this in light of the many things we already (fallibly) know, such that gravity requires mass, thereby entailing that a hollowed planet would be devoid of the gravity we experientially know our planet to have). — javra
So you're saying that if a person has reasons for one's belief, even if those reasons involve falsities, then that belief is reasonable? — Metaphysician Undercover
If those reasons include falsities then clearly my belief is unreasonable — Metaphysician Undercover
If I hold evidence that makes your belief unreasonable, then it's very clear that it's not reasonable for you to hold that belief. — Metaphysician Undercover
If I had the attitude that it was reasonable for you to hold false beliefs, then I would never be inclined to convince you of the reality of the situation. It is through confronting such unreasonableness that beliefs get justified. — Metaphysician Undercover
Not only is John being unreasonable but so are you. John is committed to a belief which you know is false, and is proceeding in activity which you know is wrong. You are claiming that it is reasonable for John to hold such a belief, and therefore reasonable for him to be proceeding in a wrong activity. If you do not designate his actions as unreasonable you will not be inclined to prevent him from proceeding with the wrongful actions. If you designate his actions as wrong, then to prevent him from proceeding, you will need to back this up with reasons, showing that his beliefs are unreasonable. If you truly belief his beliefs are reasonable, you have no recourse. So it is completely counterproductive, and unreasonable to think that John is being reasonable by committing to such a false belief. And I don't believe that anyone can honestly say that committing to a false belief is a reasonable thing to do. — Metaphysician Undercover