I agree with the concept that we have a "sphere of interest", but it seems based on emotion rather than reason. — Relativist
Turn the tables, would you expect someone you did not know to give you money. Would you asking them for it be immoral? — Sir2u
what do you think that means? — Aleksander Kvam
Perhaps, to be more precise, we care most about those closest to us. We reserve a special place, a primacy, to those whom we know best and with whom we interact most often and most intimately. If this is the case, I could understand it since I don't know everyone, and couldn't possibly do so or interact with all the world's citizens intimately even on a monthly basis. — gloaming
I think you meant that I wouldn't think twice. — gloaming
However, you'd be mistaken. With experience and maturity working for me at over 65 years of age, I know better than to act without consideration of ALL kinds. I choose to be careful, to be discerning, late in life. I think it's a duty by now. — gloaming
I can't really argue with that; it seems self-evident. I would want the whole planet to treat my grandchildren and their children as they would each other, with equity, justice, beneficence, non-maleficence, etc. — gloaming
Does classical conservatism restrict to favour only those known to them? If so, and it's not demonstrated in anything you've offered thus far, are they different from liberals in that way? Perhaps you are conflating provincialism with a desire to see one's own flourish by devoting the limited resources each of them has to that end. It doesn't follow that classical conservatives have little or no positive regard for 'strangers'. — gloaming
My sphere of interest is larger than myself, my relatives, and my friends. I have no objection to giving a limited amount of money to persons in this "enlarged sphere". — Bitter Crank
What I object to is other people strenuously insisting that I add their favored group to my list of deserving beneficiaries. — Bitter Crank
I think you know why that is. It is because they matter more to us. And they matter more to us because we have a closer relationship with them. — Sapientia
Yes, to some extent, but there's quite a difference between, say, arguing against cuts to benefits, and arguing that it should make no difference to someone whether it is their own mother asking for a hundred dollars or a random stranger off of the street. — Sapientia
For one thing, vote for the Labour Party, or whatever your nearest equivalent is. — Sapientia
There's a process of desiring? It feels to me like desire is an emotion, or something pretty similar. For that reason, I wonder if there is a process at all, or if it's just something we do - or feel - without process, planning or anything else. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
How can I meaningfully have a desire about a desire? — Pattern-chaser
Suppose I am at best a mediocre husband and father, but I wish I was better, and try to be better. That's a higher desire or volition, no? (Incidentally, are you happy to say that volition is a desire one tries to realise, as distinct from a desire one entertains but does not act on for whatever reason?) — unenlightened
But suppose I am a mediocre burglar, but I wish I was better, and try to be better. You don't want to call that a 'higher desire', though it has the same form, of an ambition to transform myself? — unenlightened
Not what I said. — StreetlightX
As if 'how should one live' is an intellectual issue. — StreetlightX
Oh for fuck's sakes. :yawn: — apokrisis
As if 'how should one live' is an intellectual issue. As if it's a question posed at the level of propositions. This coming from a man who wrote 'on bullshit'. It's unbelievable that this sort of dreck passes for philosophy. — StreetlightX
Symmetry breaking breaks the symmetry of spinning on the spot to produce the local~global asymmetry of hierarchical organisation. — apokrisis
Instead of self-referential circularity, you have the mutual-referentiality of a hierarchically divided organisation. One scale represents the extreme long-term, the other the extreme short-term. — apokrisis
Meno's paradox transposed onto a different field, with all it's attendant problems: an overly intellectualized approach to the issue. — StreetlightX
You can escape spinning on a spot via the asymmetry of a dichotomy. — apokrisis
Call them what you wish, as long as they meet the criterion I'm setting out. The point I'm raising here is that thinking about one's own mental ongoings(metacognition) requires a creature with a common and rather complex written language. — creativesoul
Whatever rudimentary thought and belief consists of, it is not language. It is existentially dependent upon neither our awareness of it, nor our means for becoming so. We can know that much for certain. — creativesoul
I mean, all thought and belief must have something or other in common in order to qualify as more than just a language game akin to Witt's notion of game where the only thing all games have in common is that we call them such. Thought and belief are no such thing. — creativesoul
Games are inventions of humans. Thought and belief are not. The only commonality relevant here is that they are both existentially dependent upon humans. The remarkable difference is that games are created/invented by us, whereas human thought and belief is discovered. Games are existentially dependent upon both, our awareness of them and our existence, whereas rudimentary thought and belief is only existentially dependent upon our existence. — creativesoul
So I think we do have these higher-order volitions, but I'm not convinced that they are distinctive enough to recognise separately. :up: :smile: — Pattern-chaser
