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Galen's Soul (SYTO's thread [Fine, "Philosophy Thread"])

Discussion in 'Miscellaneous' started by Sytoplasma, Nov 5, 2014.

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  1. Dargona1018

    Dargona1018 Ballista Bolt Thrower

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    Well, I believe good is too general of a term with its definition and application to actually be judged whether something is better or worse, comparitively, using the static definition.

    After all, these other words are adjectives that usually alter words in a simplistic way, but can't truly be put into comparison when you are speaking only of the main word.
     
  2. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    I think yes? It's early in the morning and I'm trying to do without coffee. :QQ:
    [1] - you, swagbot, were correct. :potato:

    [2] - iirc, maxims are a philosophical position boiled down to an essential position regarding circumstance X to allowing for the pithily encapsulation of one's position re: X. An axiom, otoh, is a premise or starting point of reasoning; one that (preferably) a) can be seen to be true without any need for proof, or at least b) gets assumed for the sake of argument.

    [3] - It's possible we're both getting at the same thing here via differing nomenclature. I have a very specific meaning I assign the term "values"
    {{{
    Briefly: ethics [systems/codes of thought/belief] impact upon morals [the standards a society develops through an ongoing process of people, as a group, applying ethical models while filtering them through the practices of every-day-life] impact upon values [the standards an individual develops through an ongoing process of applying ethical models while filtering them through the practices of every-day-life-- a process which is mediated to a grater/lesser degree by the morals present in that individuals society].

    Thus we may critic an ethic for being poorly constructed; we (often do) critic people for being "immoral" (i.e. failing to adhere to a socially negotiated norm); however, it is rarer that we critic a person's values-- we might say "I don't agree", but there's generally a recognition that values are the prerogative of an individual's conscience (unlike morals, which are, in essence, the sum of the "conscience" of the group/society as a whole) and hence outside the scope of the group/society to comment on.

    More succinctly:
    • Ethics are what you find in texts like the Bible or the Humanist Manifesto
    • Morals are what laws (both judicial and social) are enshrinements of
    • Values are what individual people like you and me base our everyday decisions off-of
    • Ethics inform morals, ethics and morals inform values
    }}}
    which I'm almost positive isn't what you mean by the term. By "principles" I mean those things that are held forth to be of worth, significance, or concern. Is that what you're meaning? On a personal note, if that's in fact what you do mean, fwiw I pick the term "principles" over a term like "values" both because I've already assigned a meaning to values ::P: and, more's the issue, I feel that "values" has connotations with the kind of slippery, slidey, overly hermeneutical, 'negotiability' of subjectivism and "personal opinion" (of the school of thought where "opinion" and prejudice trumps careful reasoning. ugh), whereas "principles" (to my mind at least) is more suggestive of solid, non-negotiable things like 'truth', 'justice', 'liberty', and 'hard-boiled egg' -- the important things in life that everybody needs and are the kinds of things that most ethics champion (even if only in a half-arsed fashion bc the creators of said ethic refused the veil (of ignorance, yes, I hadn't forgotten that part of the question, and yes am familure. Is good work. :>)). Ofc, this is all personal taste; but I guess I just wanted to lay out ma reasons!

    [4] - Social creatures. Probably. I suspect there's some minor semantic inflections I intended when I wrote "communal", but I can't think of them atm. Silly no-coffee days. Grr.

    Oh, "relationality" is a Christian theological concept that's derived from (or, at least, I first encountered it studying) the essential nature of God.

    First, you have the nature of the Trinity. While there's an (actually wonderfully fascinating, might break it out some time) idea about how to conceptualise the whole "three-in-one" deal, the crux of the matter is that the Trinity is essentially relational in nature. i.e. the single best trait for describing the Trinity is relationship-- such that you get "three persons in such perfect relationship that they are also one being".

    Second (bonus fact) the idea is that when you have an infinite God, who's basically self-sufficient in every conceivable way, leads to the question: what the bleeding hell does he need us (or the rest of creation, for that matter) for??? The answer is that God desires something not directly Himself who can: experience Him, enjoy their experience of Him, glorify Him through their expression of their enjoyment of Him, and thus close the loop created by Him being infinitely excellent in the first place (see some of the Transcendentalism commentary on "the necessary response to encountering the sublime" for more on why excellence requires admiration). Thus the whole God-and-man dynamic is one with relationship at its core.

    Apologies for the high-end theology if it did anyone's head in. I'm fine with it, but that's bc I've been studying it for years. Tried my best to compact things down without taking too many explanatory short-cuts, but don't know how well I succeeded. ::P:

    [5] - I'm going for the direct thing of 'personhood as exemplified by people'. Humans. Of the live persuasion. Ofc there are debates to be had as to where "life begins" (and the same with death), but those are really topics for another day. Implicit in personhood (as I imagine it) is moral agency and capability; non-sentient organisms (animals, microbes, plants, etc.) are thus disqualified from personhood due to lacking (afaik, correct me if there have been recent findings to the contrary) the dual capacity for sensation and self-awareness (animals, ofc, have sensation, but self-awareness was still a 'no' last time I checked; sorry PETA). Ofc, technically, children and some mentally ill adults also lack the necessary "pre-reqs" for sentient; however, they are also afforded personhood bc to do otherwise would allow room for slippery-slope arguments about "when is a person not a person"-- plus, I suspect there's some measure of courtesy of a similar vein to when we say "Ladies and gentlemen", despite the fact that not all gentlemen are, in fact, gentlemen (although, ofc, all ladies are ladies); it's a courtesy grown from the recognition of an undeniable similitude between the first and second party-- that of their common humanity.

    Forgive me if I'm reading this wrong, but it looks like Ferne
    is making a subjectivist argument based on perceptions of "the good" in things. Which is fallacious. You can (and would be wise to) recognise that all human observations are, due to the nature of the observers, subjective in nature; but it is unreasonable / unproductive to assert that there is no objective "object" upon which these subjective observations are made. Moreover it follows that if objective objects exist, then A can be compared to B, and the comparison can be made in terms of any of its characteristics-- including things like height and moral worth (i.e. its "goodness").

    I get the point about
    but I guess (as I think more on it and refine my question) what I'm looking for here is not so much the definition of good, but rather the nature of good. An analogy might be how, depending on who's calling the shots, the standard unit of measurement will change (cubit, inch, cm, parsec, etc.); however, regardless of the "model & philosophy of measurement" employed, the nature of what is being measured (distance) remains the same.

    What we're after, lads, is some term or concept (X) that could be spoken of in terms of "A is more/less X than B" such that anyone (regardless of religious background) familiar with the subject could say "ah, they're talking about the comparative moral worth (the "goodness") of A relative to B".

    This, my friends, is the Holy Grail of ethics. A way to define "the good" in any situation! That's accessible irrespective of ideological assumptions! I'm pretty damn sure it's out there. Tallyho! :smug:

    {edit}
    Also: loooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool that was a long post. I want my coffie. :QQ:
     
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  3. PUNK123

    PUNK123 Hella wRangler Staff Alumni Tester

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    Why hasn't someone quoted Lord of the flies yet...........(or is that not relevant are we talking about good itself or are we good as a family(homo sapiens))
     
  4. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    Good itself, not whether people are intrinsically good (something I'd have to answer in the negative, bc assuming anything else gets you into a Maslowsian quandary)).
     
  5. Sytoplasma

    Sytoplasma Haxor

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    Most of the people here are freeloading non-admission-payers. Read the OP.
     
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  6. Dargona1018

    Dargona1018 Ballista Bolt Thrower

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    [​IMG]
     
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  7. PUNK123

    PUNK123 Hella wRangler Staff Alumni Tester

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    [​IMG]
    (if it helps I honestly did try to find a picture that represents my soul but google images sucks)
     
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  8. Superblackcat

    Superblackcat baideist baide Staff Alumni Tester

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    Pls view the picture on the left. That's my soul climbing out of its shell.

    Also, I would like to discuss the relationship of values/ethics/morals/w.e you call em, and logic. In my tiny brain, it would seem that the former idea is an idea used for identifying 'good', the 'right'. This is obviously done with logic, with the idea of what happens, what doesn't, cause and effect, consequences, etc. However, when does the brain decide the logical thing to do is not the right thing? Where does that line come in?

    Next time on KAG-Philisophy Channel: Where the Blue Baron flies.
     
  9. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    You'd need to speak to @SAcptm about that. I, as a filthy non-physicalist, would suggest that those moments are when your conscience is kicking in; but I'm sure he has a very interesting answer involving chemical-imbalances or something. :dance:
     
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  10. SAcptm

    SAcptm Haxor Staff Alumni

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    I was gonna give this thread some breathing space free from my autistic terminology naziism but since I was tagged I'll hazard a reply. Disclaimer: I've had quite a lot to drink.

    Basically I think your question is best answered by correcting the way you framed it, SBC. Logic and morality are not distinct approaches to the same thing. Morality is a system of values, application of values, or prioritisation of values (depending on your relevant metaethical position). Logic is... well, fuck, its a difficult concept to describe succinctly, but suffice to say it is concerned with how we examine ideas rather than the actual content of those ideas. They are not opposed to each other, or even separable from each other. The whole point of ethics and metaethics as academic studies is to apply logic to morality. You would be wrong to think that this in any way undermines morality - precisely the opposite. Moral philosophers generally hope to create a stronger and more universally applicable understanding of morality through logical examination. Thus most moral philosophers with an ounce of conviction would tell you that the right thing to do is generally the logical thing to do, since being able to assert that proposition is basically the end goal of our entire field of study.

    Further disclaimer: it might not always seem like this is the case, since a lot of recent academic ethics is concerned with dismantling the logic uber alles approach of Kant towards ethics, but the fundamental approach is still to show that A) ethics is worthwhile, and that B) it can be understood logically, albeit in a different way.

    Since I'm back in the thread anyway, to say something quickly about the age-old discussion of "what is 'good' anyway": there has been a great improvement in the clarity of this debate recently by making a couple of concessions to linguistics. "Good" as a term is most helpfully understood as a goal-based concept which is seen more broadly and not limited to ethics. I.e. if my goal is to make a cup of tea, then it would be good for me to put the kettle on. If my goal is the fulfilment of human social harmony, then it would be good for me to e.g. treat other people nicely and refrain from murder. In modern academia the focus has shifted from examining metaethical questions about "what is good" to examining metaethics as just one part of a wider field of what we call "normativity". Normativity includes basically any area in which there is a question of 'should', 'ought', 'best', 'good' etc. Thus it also includes aesthetics (what makes good art), epistemology (what is a good reason to believe something), so called "common sense norms" (what is a good way to make a cup of tea or achieve any practical aim) and ethics (what is a good way to behave socially). One thing we have finally started to learn from the past couple centuries of philosophy since the enlightenment is that it is hard to make progress in any one of these fields if you consider it in isolation. Norms as modes of thinking are clearly interrelated, and any theory which helps elucidate how we approach morality clearly has to say something about epistemological, aesthetic, and common sense norms too.

    I appreciate that this might be an incredibly dry and uninteresting field to get involved with discussing, so I would advise instead that you at least shift discussion from the broad "what is good" ("good" is anything which viably achieves your valued aim without compromising other valued aims) and start focusing instead on what your moral aims actually are, how you came to value these aims, and whether you have any external reason to consider these aims valuable. To pre-emptively soothe FBB's fears I will say that personally I do think we have external reasons to consider typical moral aims valuable, even if I don't attribute any spiritual content to them as he (might) do.
     
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  11. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    This is why I'm not good at discussing philosophy.
     
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  12. Sytoplasma

    Sytoplasma Haxor

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    This is sad; I truly thought fewer forum users were bots, but seeing as there are no souls for certain individuals, they must all be bots.
     
  13. SAcptm

    SAcptm Haxor Staff Alumni

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    Not that I want to undermine the old Socratic adage of self-doubt being the path to wisdom or anything. Just that if you are involved in the process of justifying ethics then you probably believe that ethics is justifiable.
     
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  14. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    And thus you prove your mettle as a philosopher. :noburu:
    Out of interest, do you have any comment (positive, negative, otherwise) on my own semantic pedantry re: ethics, morals, and values? It's something I personally cooked up over years of theological studies, but I'd be interested to know what someone with actual formal schooling in philosophical endeavours thinks.
    I'd have to agree, but might I also be rude and add the note that living and operating in a highly pluralistic society it's also not uncommon to occasionally find oneself "split", as it were, between the 'logic of present circumstance' and the 'logic of held conviction'.

    For example, I might find myself in a situation where action A would be materially advantageous (say, siding with X over Y in a political struggle) but it also would be immoral (or even unethical) according to my beliefs-- thus creating a situation where I have two "reasonable" choices, each in opposite directions.

    Ofc, this dichotomy is merely on the surface; once you've stepped through all the implications of action A it becomes apparent that I'm not simply choosing between "logic 1" and "logic 2" but rather I'm faced with choosing between: a) sticking by my convictions [good], or b) ignoring my convictions because they're not currently convenient [bad], or c) allowing my present circumstances to change my convictions [could be good/bad/better/worse than either of the previous two choices, depending on a number of factors; the key thing to remember being that this third choice has a very real risk of turning into a slippery slope-- so tread carefully, grasshopper].

    In theological terms we call this apparent dichotomy between reason and goodness: "the temptation to sin". :potato:
    Damn, Sac. I'd never actually heard of / thought of it in those exact terms, but you've basically given voice to some unspoken intuits that have been floating around in my brain for a while now. I'm currently experiencing that "mind r beautifully bork" feeling when several loose-ends / stray puzzle-pieces suddenly, unexpectedly, click together in one's head. :ehh: Thank you for that. Really. Remind me some time when I've recovered my composure to ping you some of my thoughts on the nature of an infinite God; I think you might appreciate, even if you don't agree with the premise. ::P:
    Nope. Might actually be coming to you for reading recommendations after I get my head clear of my current summer course.
    Mmm. Will need to think about this a bit in order to re-frame things...
    :heart:
     
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  15. SAcptm

    SAcptm Haxor Staff Alumni

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    New disclaimer: I'm very hungover :rektlord:

    Depends what you're doing with it. It is absolutely fine to lay out your own stringent meanings for terms before you start using them to construct an argument. As long as you are saying "this is what I mean by these terms when I use them in the following argument" rather than "this is what these terms mean generally and how everybody ought to understand them at all times". Obviously each of those terms get used pretty interchangeably in general discussion so I wouldn't say there's any factual reason to distinguish them like that, but if you want to do it for the sake of your own clarity of argument then it's fine to do so.

    Again I think it's easier to understand this sort of situation not in terms of a conflict of two different things, but rather as an ordinary application of reason-based decision making. For any decision you make you have an enormous heap of reasons either in favour of or against whatever action you're considering. Some of those reasons will be moral reasons and some will be practical reasons, probably with varying measures of each counting in favour on each side. The considered mental process is something like adding up your various reasons, deciding which you give the most weight to, and going from there.

    You may get cases where seemingly all of your moral reasons are heaped on one side and all of your practical reasons are heaped on the other. I don't think this makes it a uniquely weird case, it just makes it a normal decision-making case which might have particular implications for just how highly you value each of your reasons (which makes it morally interesting).

    As an approach it's very tied in with the discussion of "reasons" I just went into. Basically all norms (ethical, aesthetic, epistemological and practical "oughts") can be considered in the form "X is a reason to Y", and this is immensely helpful for levelling the field and allowing you to consider all different kinds of norms at the same time. When I was doing my final Master's thesis, originally on metaethics, I was heavily encouraged to adopt the language of reasons and consider metanormativity at large instead. As I said before, this has become a common approach in the last few years and I really really like it because of how much more clear and useful it is when arguing for anything in the field.
     
  16. Beef

    Beef ก็็็็็็็็็็็็็ʕ•͡ᴥ•ʔ ก้้้้้้้้้้้ Global Moderator Forum Moderator Tester

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    Speaking of good, morality and goals, is there any reason to consider the continuation of our species a goal, beyond providing a basic level of comfort and satisfying the desires of the population (which often involve reproduction but that seems to be happening less and less anyway)?

    Given how birth rates have collapsed in the Western world and are collapsing everywhere else (except Sub Saharan Africa), despite the best efforts of countries to enact pro natal policies (to a certain extent. More could be done but what's been does so far hasn't helped Germany or Singapore at all), I'm starting to think planning for a comfortable phasing out of humanity would actually be a decent long term goal.

    According to all the data I've ever seen, the collapse in birth rates is irreversible in a post industrial culture. The only ones that haven't collapsed (Amish, Sub Saharan Africa) are poor, uneducated, and with low levels of technology. Given wealthy, educated, and high tech societies are desirable by humans, and it can be assumed will be the long term goal of any group (in the form of comfort advancement rather than being like us), then Sub Saharan Africa and niche exceptions like the Amish will eventually develop to at least current Western standards as well.

    Once they do, the birth rate collapse will hit them too. They need not be just like Western civilization with all it entails for that to hit either; North Africa, India, East Asia all have collapsing birth rates too despite radically different cultures.

    Immigration isn't a solution as that requires there be other places to draw people from; in a low birth rate world it's very much so a zero sum game, so on a species level isn't worth considering.

    Another potentiality is we just need to last long enough to find some mythic aging cure, or cloning/birthing vats, or super computers into which we upload our minds and become AI with a fleshy past.

    Ideally we'll reach one of those sci fi style fixes (Personally hoping for the super computer one), but they don't look very likely at the moment. There may be some new trend that will kick in that will halt the birth rate collapse, but we can't rely on faith there.

    Given all that, planning for a comfortable extinction should be the long term goal of the world. Plan for the worst, hope for the best, and all that.

    Ignore for the moment the low chance of any power taking that seriously.

    tl;dr extinction should be comfortable
     
    Last edited: Jan 23, 2015
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  17. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    I've never liked the idea of being uploaded into a super computer. Whilst I reside in my fleshy meatbag, I'm comfortable in the knowledge that I have some form of physical contuity, which may or may not house my non-physical 'personality'. As much as I resign myself to an apparently purely material world, which indicates that my body is what makes me me, losing my precious meatbag feels like losing the me part, even if all the worrying memories and dirty thoughts are uploaded and perpetuated by my new improved mechabag.
    MechaHella would feel like FleshyHella, but FleshyHella would surely have been discontinued and therefore MechaHella =/= FleshyHella?

    I have a fundamental distaste for the concept of MechaHella from the perspective of FleshyHella.
     
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  18. Galen

    Galen Haxor Staff Alumni Donator

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    well this escalated quite a lot
     
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  19. Fernegulus

    Fernegulus Bison Rider

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    Oh Sac
    Obviously, the right thing to do is the logical one. The thing is, that you overgeneralized. Logic is a fancy bancy machine, with multiple inputs and outputs. And different, programmable by the context of a discussion, ways of working. The output of your logic machine depends on many factors, mainly - on your morality, which has nothing to do with logic in most cases.
     
  20. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    I think we should just destroy an MechaGalen's before they can come to fruition. Maybe the Fleshy models too.
     
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