But it is not “my” definition. We call something “good”, if it is beneficial, useful, etc… all the synonyms cover a positive assessment. Likewise the word “bad” is synonymous with harmful, etc… a negative assessment.
That’s irrelevant and untrue. It still needs to be explained, whether it’s *exclusively *‘yours’ or not, and it *is *‘yours,’ even if *not exclusively *yours.
How could these concepts be applied to a rock, or sand, or water, or air, or a planet, a star, a galaxy, etc? I cannot see how they could. If you can make an argument to the contrary, I am here to listen. Just give me an example how could an inanimate object benefit from an action or how could it be harmed by an action?
Well obviously these things come to be and stay in existence (‘attempt’ to preserve their existence) and pass out of existence just like living things. If that is what makes ‘good’ and ‘bad’ to apply to living things, why not also to these non-living things?
For a living object it is obvious. If you break a stone into pieces, they will still be smaller stones. If you cut down a tree, it will cease to be a “tree”, it will become dead wood. If you shoot an animal, it will cease to be that animal, it will turn into rotting meat.
Will the stones just be smaller stones? Maybe, but so what? That is a tiny snippet from the life cycle of stones as such. You might as well say, “You cut a branch off a tree, it won’t cease to be a tree. You shear a sheep’s wool, it won’t cease to be that animal.” Sure, but that’s irrelevant to the bigger picture.
But regardless, what justifies you in saying that ceasing to exist is ‘bad’ for an animal?..
You say: “The point is that all living entities attempt to preserve their existence, propagate their existence, and try to avoid extinction. It is their biological ‘imperative’.”
First, they
don’t really ‘attempt’ to avoid extinction - they just do what they do as members of their species, and this ‘doing’
in fact includes actions which tend towards the propagation of the species, provided favorable conditions obtain; if favorable conditions
don’t obtain, they don’t ‘attempt’ to do anything about it. But in any case, so what? Are ‘biological imperatives’ themselves good, such that their satisfaction is ‘good’ and their frustration ‘bad’? If they are, then why not say the same for ‘geological imperatives’ or ‘astrophysical imperatives’ or ‘hydrological imperatives’?
We, as humans consciously try to avoid the negative experiences, and accumulate the positive ones. We observe the same kind of behavior in other living beings, and extrapolate our behavior onto them.
And this brings us to the big question: Is that
extrapolation from our
conscious experience justified? How?
(Then we might wonder: Why do we extrapolate like this? What does our tendency to do so say about us and about the cosmos?)