Oreo,
Before I continue this conversation, I want one thing to be clear. I am not, nor have I ever been, trying to convince you that my moral position is rationally required of you. If I were, I would offer arguments to that effect. Since those arguments rely partially on revelation, you would consider them unconvincing. Let me say this even more strongly: I do not want you to believe in Christian morality until you come to know the Christian God.
What position am I arguing for, then? Simply this: the Christian viewpoint is a coherent system of ethics that makes statements about right and wrong meaningful. There is no other system that I know of with the same result.
Your comments to me in your recent posts approach the level of hostility (or dismissiveness?), and I don’t understand why. If you think that all experiences a person has that might constitute religious revelation are epistemically worthless, please tell me why. Also, tell me what the principled distinction between veridical (truth-bearing) experience and non-veridical experience is, so I can learn what revelatory experiences to discount.
And this standard of “purity” seems arbitrary. How do you derive the ethic “ethics ought to be pure?” Isn’t making ethical statements about your ethical system a tad circular, if not downright redundant?
All disciplines, insofar as they are disciplines, must have “exclusive content” – that is roughly what I mean by pure. Practical ethics asks the question, “How should we live?” There are at least three possible answers: 1) Live morally and rationally, because morality is perfectly rational 2) Live rationally, not according ethical norms, and 3) Live morally, not according to rational constraints. If you pick #2, then moral rules are irrelevant. If you pick #3, then you sometimes have good reasons not to act morally, and you act morally anyway. Both #2 and #3 make the concept of ethics as a non-sociological discipline nonsensical.
It may be noncontroversial, but I want to know how you objectively determine whether an event is a punishment.
I don’t see how the subjectivity of punishment relates to the conversation – perhaps I forgot. If you torture someone who (unbeknownst to you) is a masochist, you are still guilty of torture. (In fact, though, your point relates to a larger point, quite out of context in this conversation … it is quite likely that those who wind up in hell would much prefer it to Heaven, because they would experience Heaven as a punishment).
Really? How so? If I were to tell you that certain things were permitted in a kingdom and other things were not permitted, and I were to tell you that the King could read his subjects’ minds,
how would the context of permissibility be unclear? And that is what I am telling you, about the Kingdom of all men. You can call it vague all you like, but the statement just doesn’t make sense to me.
When you’re done with the cop-outs, let me know, okay? You CANNOT exempt yourself from providing evidence and still make a strong case.
I am making a case for an if-then statement. All that is needed is an understanding of the terms; you don’t need to look at the world to check on those meanings. Compare the statement “If determinism is true, then we do not have free will”. What *evidence *is needed to agree or disagree to that statement?
It’s just like with mathematics: you can simplify a problem to the point where only “x=x” is left, but the reflexive property is arbitrary.
The reflexive property is arbitrary?
This cleared things up for me a little, from the Wikipedia entry on arbitrariness:
Nihilism is the philosophy that believes that there is no purpose in the universe, and that every choice is arbitrary.
And here you keep telling me you’re not a nihilist! :tsktsk:
When you’ve heard as many definitions of “rational” as I have, you will understand my reservations on using the term. Please define “rational.”
The main issue is that “rationality” pervades many subjects, and most iterations have nothing to do with ethics.
Yes, most applications of rationality have nothing to do with ethics. My very short definition of “rational” is “believing or choosing that which you have most reason to believe or choose, within the constraints of your own epistemological limitations.”
What’s the difference between a hedonistic desire and a regular desire? You admit that we both do what we think should be done because we want to.
But you’re missing the point, I think. A good person does not do what he wants to, but he does his duty. Sometimes his duty happens to correspond to what he wants, which is all to the good. We do not act according to our desires at all times, nor did I ever admit that we did.
What, then, makes your desire better than mine?
I have no idea if my desire is better than yours! For all I know, you talk the talk about subjectivism, but you actually value the people around you because you think they are valuable.
While I may not approve of how others feel, I’m not going to put blinders on and fail to acknowledge the fact that my opinion is arbitrary, as is theirs. It isn’t based on anything but my preference for others’ happiness.
Are any of your actions, on your view, *not *arbitrary? If they are all arbitrary, then why should they be directed at the truth instead of a lie?
…because they desire to be good.
And this is where I would ask you to substantiate the assertion that all action is predicated on desire.
There’s another interesting ethic you’ve failed to derive. How does one derive the ethic “we shouldn’t be calculating?”
From observing politicians.
