Comments

  • The Concept of Religion
    Sure, we can be absolutely opposed to rape and treat it as if no person can question its immorality ever, but why we suspend our reason and afford it absolute evil status when we know it's really just a subjective preference just means we've arrived at an interesting coping mechanism in order to navigate this godless world.Hanover

    What makes you think god/s are against rape (have you read the Old Testament/Tanakh)? What makes you think a god's moral positions are useful, if they can even be identified?

    Theistic morality does not escape any of the questions secular morality faces. Theistic moral systems have no foundation for their beliefs.
  • The Concept of Religion
    "Free pass" just according to you, or are you invoking the idea of higher authority? If it is just you; I have to say the idea of an individual disapproving of nature seems somehow absurd.Janus

    As a criterion of value, be it personal or social. I'm not the only person who has pointed to the horror that is nature and felt a repugnance for some of it. Darwin's faith was tested severely when he learned about the hatching behavior of a wasp.

    I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent & omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidæ [parasitic wasps] with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars…”

    Charles Darwin
  • The Concept of Religion
    You've just presented an objective basis for determining morality. You're not arguing relatavism any more.Hanover

    Yes, I made that point earlier - that this is as close to 'objective' as we can get in my view.

    If "flourishing" is the objective goal, you've got to offer some reason why. If it is just because it is, that is equivalent to "god says so."Hanover

    Why flourishing? I've already said that this is a presupposition. No one has to accept it. There are those who think that people don't deserve to flourish and thrive. That a failed state is perfectly fine, that misery and suffering and warfare are satisfactory conditions for life.
  • The Concept of Religion
    So you accept a law from a higher power?frank

    Digression - Even if we were to accept a law from a higher power as theoretically possible, how would we demonstrate what that law is and what that higher power is? Is this view of any use? Cannot any position be justified as the will (or law) of some higher power?
  • The Concept of Religion
    Are you taking the position then that morality is determined by time and place and that slavery was good when it was accepted?Hanover

    Who are you, Matt Dillahunty?

    See answer above.
  • The Concept of Religion
    So then a guy comes along celebrating the joys of rape, and you can't tell him rape is wrongHanover

    Yep, this is a frequently made argument (as you know) and there are probably just two responses.

    1) Yes, you're right. There is nothing objective. Sorry about that. It is simply an individual/culture holding subjectively derived values. But humans, in the interest of cooperation and peace, tend not to commit crimes against each other. We are a eusocial species. We build social harmony. And we have prisons for those who don't care. (heavily simplified answer)

    2) We can set the goal of the flourishing of conscious creatures as the overarching ethical principle for human behavior. Now we can evaluate our actions on the basis of how this goal can be best supported. No doubt with endless debate.

    In both instances we have reasons to condemn the rapist. And with more powerful arguments than 'god says so.'

    Can you demonstrate an objective morality?
  • The Concept of Religion
    We all have intellects, but by no means all of us have a capacity for atrocities; at least not self-motivated atrocities.

    Do chimps murder others of their own troop?

    Eating others is necessary; it is part and parcel of the natural order; so I don't see it as disordered; it is, I think, by mere definition, not disordered.

    I am not very familiar with the idea and tenets of virtue ethics, so I am probably the wrong person to ask about that question. I will say that I think all our principles and beliefs are pretty much examples of cultural values being interpreted by individuals.
    Janus

    I think almost everyone has the capacity for atrocity. It simply takes the 'right' situation or triggers - war; holocausts; dictatorships, extremes of poverty, prison...

    Yes, chimps beat, kill and sometimes cannibalize from their own tribe.

    Eating other living things may be 'necessary' (although people overlay ethical veganism) but I think a 'creation' wherein animals torture prey and eat it still living appears disordered and perverse to me. The fact something is natural doesn't give it a free pass...

    I think you are right about cultural values.
  • The Concept of Religion
    Other options? Perhaps, since we don't see other social animals murdering their fellows, there is also, at least in regard to murder, an instinctive anti-disposition. Should we think of anyone capable of murder as being somehow radically disordered?Janus

    I wonder if our capacity for atrocities is simply the shadow side of our intellect.

    It's understood chimps murder. They also patrol their boundaries and tear apart intruders. Dianne Fossey documented this and it shocked her.

    Nature itself seem radically disordered - a suburban backyard is a bloodbath - insects and animals eat each other alive. Even the idea that food means eating another living thing seems perverse.

    In relation to virtue ethics, I was pondering if this might be a third option as a source of ethical behavior or is it just an example of cultural values being interpreted by an individual?
  • The Concept of Religion
    I think that's a fair summary. I certainly struggle with the idea of people claiming to have some kind of innate knowledge of the numinous. And it seems to me there isn't a position going you couldn't justify using such a claim. So as a way of uncovering truth or reliable knowledge, I consider it fairly dire. But I am not saying it is false... :wink:
  • The Concept of Religion
    Indeed. Ethics are either a code of conduct set by a culture, based on values, traditions and evolving attitudes, or they are handed down by a transcendent source - (deity or idealism).

    What are the other options? Does virtue ethics operate in the context of cultural values interacting with those of the individual?
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    Seriously, can you answer that?

    And is it even possible to answer that without sounding like yet another patronizing bourgeois?
    baker

    Of course. Not everyone is a bitter cynic :wink: The question was to Joshs, who provided an answer which was not a patronizing bourgeois response. People are committed to growing and learning, Baker - even people from poor working class backgrounds like me. Or do you advocate a culture of low expectations for people from disadvantaged origins?
  • The Concept of Religion
    Murder doesn't fuck up order unless people can't be convinced it's necessary.

    Societies of all sorts clicked along with slavery, with its dissolution fucking up everything.
    Hanover

    Sure, the social order is set by what the culture determines as valuable. If a rights based view, or a religious morality predominates, the order is likely to reflect those values. And those values may shift as the culture changes.
  • Achieving Goals Within Time Limits
    So time limits for goals, as part of the very goals themselves can be set by the individual who wants to achieve said goals, at least I often set time limits for myself in which to achieve certain goals, anybody else?HardWorker

    I don't set goals.
  • The Concept of Religion
    I suspect whatever reservation you have in condemning rape in other nations exists only in your inability to articulate a reason why your cultural values should predominate, but your conscience leaves you no doubt as to the immorality of it.Hanover

    I'm happy to condemn it. I didn't give you a full answer.

    I generally take an imperfect secular humanist view that actions which cause harm to human flourishing are bad. We can even set up 'objective' criteria relative to this basic goal. But I guess you must agree on this presupposition of 'flourishing' to begin with. You refer to conscience. Yep, most people are socialized to hold certain values and these are often shared across cultures and are strongly felt.
  • The Concept of Religion
    Even if one presumed that some given creed is the indubitable word of god, and that it sets out what we God proposes we ought do, it remains open to us to reject that proposal.Banno

    Yes, what evidence do we have that god is a moral being - other than in the fan fiction (scripture), which by most accounts seems to suggest the opposite is the case.

    And if we separate our notion of god from any old books, how do we determine what god wants us to do anyway? It's all very well to argue that god provides a foundation for morality in theory, but what is that morality if god/s are not present to share their views? We are still left to our own counsel on these matters, to guess or intuit god's values.

    In any event, is this not a nod to subjectivism? If the world goes mad and finds virtue in rape, is not rape virtuous?Hanover

    Are not some cultures insane by the standards of others? Can we demonstrate that we have access to virtues that transcend human perspectives?
  • The 'New Atheism' : How May it Be Evaluated Philosophically?
    especially the Ukrainian situation...Jack Cummins

    Yes, especially the role of Christian nationalism in Putin's actions. There are media stories now about how some Trump supporters are pro-Putin because he is understood to be working to spread Christian values across Europe... If this continues to go sky high, expect best selling books about the cultural values of the Eastern Orthodox church.
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    Gene Gendlin’s Focusing offers a pretty cool way to learn to tap into the generating process.Joshs

    Thanks, I will mull over this. I am slightly familiar with his work and with Focusing.
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    Probably best to understand me as a skeptical moderate...or a practical skeptic. I believe there's some kind of 'real world' out there in some never quite finally specifiable way. What is a body really and finally?jas0n

    Indeed. I tend towards anti-foundational skepticism to use a rather grand term for my mostly quotidian outlook. I often find what Joshs writes absolutely fascinating but I don't really have a way to make use of such notions in life. Perhaps it seems overly academic to me.

    Like a lot of people here, I generally hold that people come from a perspective that makes sense to them. The important question is how committed are they to reflecting on their presuppositions and how can this best be done?

    As guide, he doesn’t want to dissuade you from these claims , only to invite you to see if you can experience a mobile flow of change underneath your claims, not invalidating them but embellishing them in such a way that what you previously took to be simple, solid and self-identical now shows itself as harboring within itself a vibrant flow of change. Either you see this added downtime within the laws and facts or you don’t. If you don’t , your view is still valid and useful from the relativist’s perspective.Joshs

    How do you see the average person taking on greater philosophical nuances and self-reflection? We live in a world of great dogmatic divisions - big question - is there are approach which less educated folk can employ to enlarge their perspectives?
  • The Pure Witness / The Transcendental Ego
    'Why is there something rather than nothing?' is not an empirical question. It might just be a lyrical expression of wonder, like a wolf's howling at the moon...jas0n

    That's a nice line.
  • The 'New Atheism' : How May it Be Evaluated Philosophically?
    New Atheism came out of the post 9/11 era where the West to some extent rediscovered how dangerous theism can be. A market popped up - perhaps further energized by Christopher Hitchens's charismatic appearances. Mostly the focus was practical - the impacts of religion on the world - Aristotle, Aquinas, even Armstrong were mostly superfluous to the project.
  • The 'New Atheism' : How May it Be Evaluated Philosophically?
    At the time, I was not even aware of the movement of new atheism.Jack Cummins

    I don't think it is a movement, it was a time and place publishing phenomenon mainly. It probably also includes Michel Onfray who wrote, 'The Atheist Manifesto'. Taking down religious literalism is not really evangelism, but perhaps this is in the eye of the beholder.

    We can easily criticize their work as insufficiently philosophical but the the point is they were writing polemical works, for the average reader, they were not engaged in serious philosophy. If they had been writing philosophy, they would have struggled to sell books.
  • Sophistry
    But there are technologies that can help users discern intention and deception. Those are the kinds of solutions I'm interested in.Bret Bernhoft

    Interesting. I wonder how. Apologies for misunderstanding.
  • Sophistry
    The answer/solution to defending against sophistry (in my opinion) are better media technologies. As another way of looking at this, imagine that there is an Internet Browser plugin, add-on and/or extension that could automatically collate references to/from/for any given statement, in an effort to help you determine its truthiness. That's the kind of approach to combating sophistry that would get my attention at the very least.Bret Bernhoft

    The issue isn't always truth, it's intention and deception. The content of a sophist and a truth teller will often look much the same.
  • What is Philosophy?
    reasoning to better, more probative, questioning180 Proof

    reasoning to better, more comprehensive, conjecturing180 Proof

    Poetry.
  • What is Philosophy?
    Philosophy begins with the abstract and moves toward the concrete. "Here is the question, now what is the answer?"
    Science begins with (what it considers) the concrete and moves more toward abstract explanation. "Here is the answer, now what is the question?"
    Yohan

    For me these would be a definition of mediocre philosophy and even worse science. Philosophy spends significant time and energy on working to clarify what the actual questions might be. This is not always apparent.

    Science is frequently a creative enterprise that begins with an imaginative hypothesis and tests it. Answers are a tentative model based on the best available evidence at the time. As you'll note, science is an ever changing iterative pathway to the best available models and is frequently limited or wrong. Then there are all those moments in science where discoveries are made by accident - like penicillin and lithium and the germ theory of disease.
  • Belief
    A very considered answer, thank you.

    One should avoid, at all costs, seeing any kind of foundational view of psychological systems as anything other than a story. A pragmatic narrative on which to hang the various results. And yes, that too is just a narrative. It's narratives all the way down - as the expression goes.Isaac

    Nicely put.
  • The Concept of Religion
    This is an intoxicating story....jas0n

    I like what you write here.

    Quick question however -

    I think the way we live now is alienating and unreal ('society of the spectacle,' etc.)jas0n

    When did humans last have a culture that did not contain its share of unreality and alienation? One of the other great intoxicating stories is the notion of paradise lost or, in internet comments language; 'Everything today is worse that it used to be...'
  • The Concept of Religion
    I'm at pains to point out that it's not exactly 'theism' that at issue.Wayfarer

    Yes and no. The idea of god being dead, with all foundational values collapsing, is on the table in this discussion. And Weber's idea of disenchantment also springs from theism's gradual diminution from Western cultural life. But of course we can locate foundational values in idealism and mysticism too.
  • The Concept of Religion
    And I would obviously not agree.Wayfarer

    Exactly and a good illustration of how theism offers no objective basis to morality. It simply allows a believer to cherry pick or intuit what they think a god would want. It's entirely down to the subjective interpretation of the theist. Which is why religions can't agree upon moral beliefs in the first place - they are all over the place when it comes to war, gay rights, the role of women, capital punishment, euthanasia, abortion, tax reform,... you name it.
  • The Concept of Religion
    It's a question of reason, meaning, and purpose - and the absence of it. 'In social science, 'disenchantment' is the cultural rationalization and devaluation of [the spirit] apparent in modern society.Wayfarer

    I think this is a questionable trope. There's not a bigotry or human rights violation going that theism didn't enthusiastically enact or participate in. Nothing could be more disenchanting than religious wars and hatreds brought about by god beliefs.

    The residue of Christian-inspired virtues remain,Wayfarer

    Putin would agree with you and claim he's restoring them.
  • Are there any scientific grounds for god?
    Good point! That's why I have concluded that the potential for Life & Mind, must have been "programmed" into the evolutionary scheme that we now call the Singularity.Gnomon

    The beginnings of life on earth are mostly irrelevant to my experience and I have a dislike of systems and theories. :smile: I am more concerned with what I am going to do tomorrow.
  • The Concept of Religion
    If there is a reason, then it must apply for the act to be immoral. That is, if the slaughter of an innocent is necessary for the maintenance of order, then it is moral, correct?Hanover

    Obviously humans are creatures of empathy and caring which are a significant part of our nature - often limited or shaped by tribalism - in and out groups. Our sense of order also pivots on what we consider 'sacred'. I'd imagine very few cultures would sanction child sacrifice, but they have existed over the millennia and we sometimes come close during wartime.
  • The Concept of Religion
    These types of threads typically comprise an attempt to elicit arguments from defenders of religious ideas. The aim of the game is then to successfully knock as many of the coconuts off the pole as possible - at least to the throwers satisfaction, which in such cases is not as objectively defineable as in the actual game.Wayfarer

    And visa versa, surely?

    You seem to be arguing in favor of a foundational or transcendental guarantor for 'goodness' which you might consider to be an almost meaningless term without one.

    Surely there must be a reason not to murder, else what makes it wrong?Hanover

    Leaving aside empathy, morality seems to be created by humans to facilitate social cooperation in order to achieve their preferred forms of order. Murder fucks up order.
  • Are there any scientific grounds for god?
    Actually, he did speculate on how life began in terms of his evolutionary theory : the warm puddle hypothesis. And other biologists have attempted to find hard evidence to support that notionGnomon

    But this warm puddle (or whatever theory one chooses) is not evolution. Abiogenesis is a separate matter. Abiogenesis may lead to evolution but evolution does not lead to abiogenesis.
  • Belief
    I now prefer a slightly more cognitive approach, but I'm still extremely leery of allowing theoretical constructs to gain too much concreteness, so don't really fit well in that field either. Fortunately for me, I'm now old enough to no longer need to.Isaac

    Interesting perspective. What are your thoughts on phenomenological approaches?
  • The eternal soul (Vitalism): was Darwin wrong?
    You're preaching reductionism, whereas I'm saying there's a (warning: philosophical terminology) ontological distinction in play.Wayfarer

    And here we have the essential question that seems to be at the heart of every second thread. :wink: