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Well, So Long As They Are Not Just Any Old Preferences

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This will be my last post on this subject.  In the comments to my prior post, groovamos wrote a comment that contains a personal history followed by a gut wrenching story (which is in bold):

I am in no sense as qualified as most on this thread to debate philosophy. However as one who embraced materialism TWICE in my youth, separated by a 3 year period of interest in mysticism, I’ll have a go.

At the end of sophomore year I had converted to the typical campus leftist stance of the day, cultural zeitgeist being the driver, sexual license sealing the deal. Not outwardly religious as a kid, I quickly gave up belief in a supreme being. And just as naturally I gave up any belief in ‘truth’ as something relevant to all human activity, and sure enough out the window was any belief in ‘evil’ as a concept. Soon enough I found that lying was acceptable as long as it was me doing it. Especially since I was self assured as one with a degree in a difficult discipline (hip too, self-styled). And who enjoyed hedonistic pursuits and shallow short term relationships. And lying sort of fit into the whole picture.

But here is the interesting part looking back on it. Whenever I would read in the news of acts of insane depravity and wickedness, I would go into a mentally confused state and would feel like I had no bearings in order to process what I had just encountered. It was extremely uncomfortable. I’m talking about the acts of Jeffery Dahmer, and others. One of these I remember that particularly caused me disorientation as if I, the atheist, were the one that might risk insanity just thinking about it (in the early ’80′s).

In this particular case the police arrived at a house where a man had just dismembered and sliced up his mom, her screams having been heard by neighbors. The man did not notice the police had entered and was found masturbating with a section of rectum he had excised. When asked how he had disposed of his mother’s breasts, he said “I think I ate them”.

Congrats to any atheist on here finding the story ‘unfavorable’. Congrats on your faith that someday ‘science’ will discover every event in the long chain for that experience. ‘Science’, answering all questions, will describe for you every neural, synaptic event, every action potential, every detailed cascade of chemical analogues and concentration gradients in your visual system and brain. And you will know EXACTLY the complete ‘science’ behind your disfavoring the story, so it will fit like a glove over your materialist philosophy, and maybe even reveal why the guy did it. And if you are a little disoriented, like I seriously was, you may be saved from that in future by ‘science’.

In the very next comment Mark Frank writes (Mark added the bold, not I):

The OP quotes me but omits a paragraph which I think is important. Here is the complete text:

As a materialist and subjectivist I agree with Seversky:

A ) Personal preferences can be reduced to the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain.

B) There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

C) Statements about good and evil are expressions of personal preferences.

(I would add the proviso that these are not any old preferences. They are altruistic preferences that are deeply seated in human nature and are supported by evidence and reasoning. They are also widely, but not universally, shared preferences so they are often not competing.)

Now, of course, the point of this entire exercise has been to demonstrate a truth, which I will illustrate by the following hypothetical dialogue between Mark and the man in groovamos’s story (let’s call him “John” for convenience):***

Mark: John, dismembering and eating your mother is evil, and by ‘evil’ I mean ‘that which I do not personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

John: But Mark, I preferred to dismember and eat my mother. Otherwise I would not have done it; no one forced me to after all. Therefore, under your own definition of good and evil it was “good,” which you tell me means ‘that which I personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

Mark: Not so fast John, I would add a proviso that my preference is not just any old preference. It is an altruistic preference that is deeply seated in human nature and is supported by evidence and reasoning. It is also widely, but not universally, shared. And your preference is none of these things.

John: Are you saying that your preference not to dismember and eat your mother, which preference resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of your brain, is objectively and demonstrably good, and that therefore my preference to dismember and eat my mother, which preference also resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain, is objectively and demonstrably evil?

Mark: Of course not. There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

John: Well at least you are being consistent, because we both know the electro-chemical system in your brain just is. And as Hume demonstrated long ago, “ought” cannot be grounded in “is.” Your preference just is. My preference just is. Neither is objectively superior to the other.

Mark: Certainly that follows from my premises.

John: You can say your preference is “good” but if good is defined as that which you prefer you are saying nothing more than “my preference is my preference.” Your little proviso, Mark, does not make your preference anything other than your preference; certainly it does not demonstrate that it is in any way more good than my preference. So, my question to you is, why do you insist on the proviso?

Mark: _____________ [I will let Mark answer that]

I will give my answer as to why Mark insists on his proviso. He has the same problem Russell did: “I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values, but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don’t like it.” Russell on Ethics 165/Papers 11: 310–11.

Russell was incapable of believing the conclusions that followed ineluctably from his own premises. Dissonance ensued. For most people materialism requires self deception to deal with the dissonance of saying they believe something that it is not possible for a sane person to believe. Thus WJM’s dictum: “No sane person acts as if materialism is true.”

So why does Mark insist on his proviso that in the end makes absolutely zero difference to the conclusion that must follow from his premises? He is trying to cope with his dissonance.

If my premises required me to engage in acts of self-deception in order to cope with dissonance, I hope I would reexamine them.

___________
***I am not saying Mark has said or would say any of these things. I am saying that the words I put in his mouth follow from his premises. If he does not believe they do, I invite him to demonstrate why they do not

Comments
F/N: Prof Wm B Provine, at the 1998 Darwin Day keynote at U Tenn:
Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . The first 4 implications are so obvious to modern naturalistic evolutionists that I will spend little time defending them. Human free will, however, is another matter. Even evolutionists have trouble swallowing that implication. I will argue that humans are locally determined systems that make choices. They have, however, no free will . . .
Without responsible freedom, of course, neither credible mind nor morality have foundation. The point is, this is reductio; we are responsibly free, we do have real ability to freely and soundly reason though we do err; so, an ideological/worldview scheme that profoundly runs contrary to such truths of consciousness simply cannot be true. It undermines itself. Never mind the lab coats. KFkairosfocus
April 17, 2015
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Eigenstate: is a a rock a bolt of lightning, given that they are both just “matter and energy moving around”?
If 'matter and energy moving around' cannot accommodate 'agency', 'free will', 'choices', 'responsibility' and other prerequisites of morality, then there is no relevant difference between a rock and a bolt of lightning. IOW your question may very well be irrelevant.
Eigenstate: Matter and energy occur in different configurations that we can distinguish, measure and assess via higher levels of description. It is at these higher levels of description that moral and ethical semantics get grounded. Just as an “atom cannot walk”, and “atom cannot empathize”. Certain configurations of atoms can and do walk — they exhibit physical dynamics that map nicely and practically to our use of the term “walk”, even though not a single atom comprising the animal can walk. By the same principle, certain configurations of atoms can and do empathize, even though not a single atom comprising the “empathizer” can empathize.
The difference between 'walking' and let's say 'choosing' is that the latter implies downward causation. By definition a choice cannot be wholly upwardly determined. The same goes for 'person', 'agency' and 'free will'—they all imply downward causation by definition. In order to accommodate downward causation a worldview must allow for the existence of phenomena independent and distinct from matter. It goes without saying that materialism does not allow for the existence of such things.
W J Murray: Under materialism, if mind and morality are “emergent systems”, they are still nothing more than systems entirely generated by natural law and mechanical probability. Under materialism, emergent systems are not separate from physical laws and probabilities, but are necessarily expressions of them in certain conditions. Under materialism, physical processes cannot produce something that is independent of them and thus could intervene in them.
Box
April 17, 2015
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Me Think:
Evolution is about population, not an individual.
Really? Populations don't reproduce and evolution requires it. Natural selection, ie evolution, is all about individuals.Joe
April 17, 2015
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@Barry,
Empathy is not a physical force like gravity. It is not a causal agent. It is an abstraction. It is a description of a feeling most people have, a feeling of understanding for the feelings of others. It is most assuredly not “physics.”
Most assuredly? What? This can only be said over and against the witness of science. You admit as much a few sentences below when you refer to empathy as a "chemical reaction". Chemical reactions are physical processes -- physics in action, Barry. Whoops.
Therefore, if, as you say, the processes are all, at the core “just physics” (and of course that is what the materialist must say), when you say “empathy informs this” or “empathy drives that” you are talking blithering nonsense based on your own premises. That feeling you call “empathy” is a chemical reaction in your brain. To say “empathy” caused this or that is to say “chemistry reactions caused this or that.” It does not help your case. Those chemical reactions follow the laws of physics like everything else. Chemistry does not “inform” a choice. There is no choice.
Just so I understand you going forward, pick one of these mutually contraditctory statements you just offered: 1. [Empathy] is an abstraction. 2. Empathy is a chemical reaction in your brain. If 1), then necessarily not 2. If 2) then necessarily not 1). Which is it, or maybe you want to withdraw from both? On the matter of choice, for our purposes here, arguendo what does it matter if I say Chemistry informs choice, or that there are not choices at all. For my purpose here, I don't think it matters. Do you? If so, why?
You are arguing in a great big circle here while you try desperately to have it both ways. Your ability to deceive yourself appears to be almost boundless.
This is just self-indulgent fluff, Barry. No substance here.
You say it is all just physics. The materialist must say that. We are amalgamations of chemicals. Amalgamations of chemicals operate according to physical laws. They do not choose. As you say, they have no more choice than mass has with respect to gravity. On materialist premises the physics compelled John to murder and eat his mother. John had no choice in the matter. Similarly, the physics compel John to eat chocolate ice cream and shun vanilla. Again, he has no choice in the matter.
Let' grant, again, arguendo, that he indeed has no choice in the matter, none whatsoever. How does this make these instincts any less social or moral? I suggest such a stipulation does not affect the sociality or morality of human wiring in the least.
You distinguish what you call a “moral question” (whether to murder and eat your mother) from a question that is “not a moral question” (whether to eat chocolate ice cream and shun vanilla). But there is no “question” at all in either case. A question implies the ability to answer in alternate ways. But there is no such choice. In both cases particles are merely acting in accordance with the laws of physics. There is absolutely no ground on which to distinguish between physical forces causing particles to do what we call “murder and eat your mother” and physical forces doing what we call “eat chocolate ice cream and avoid vanilla.”
Irrespective of any conclusions we may come to about free will or determinism with regards to choosing and choice, the criterion for morality remains in any case. If the actions are social and interact with the interests of the self and others around you in your community, they are to that extent moral. That's just a simple tautology -- it's what we mean by "moral" and "social". If I stipulate for the purposes of argument here that there is no choice and the world is rigidly deterministic, "moral" and "social" are just as meaningful and carry the same semantic freight as if it were otherwise. Empathy in a completely deterministic universe is just as much a moral dynamic as a empathy in universe with "libertarian free will", allowing for the moment that that concept is not logically incoherent.
Any attempt by a materialist to suggest there is a something called “morality” or “flourishing” or “well being” that somehow allows him to distinguish between the two acts is engaging in self deception on an epic scale. He is doubtless trying to cope with the dissonance caused by Russell’s dilemma.
Hmmm. Would you say we could assess the general "flourishing" of a human population in health terms? Let's start there. If we can do that, then I think your claim falls apart; we would use a similar means of assessment for moral decisions. What are the effect of such an action, at the individual and population levels? You say that as if “murder” and “social impacts” are categories that particles obeying the law of physics take into account in deciding between two courses of action. On your own premises, you that is blithering nonsense. There is no choice. That would only be true if the "Barry Level of Description", which is the most basic and fundamental, were the only one available. Happily, that's not the case, and this is easily demonstrated. See my suggestion to ebenezer that a rock is not a lightning bolt (specifically chosen to avoid any moral dimensions, and focus on your problem with levels of description). Can you distinguish a rock from a lightning bolt? If so, how do you achieve this magic. After all, on your own grounds, they are the same thing -- just energy and matter moving around, yeah?
Utterly irrelevant as to whether the acts are in any sense anything other than “just physics.” So, saying “it’s just electro-chemical processes” is both technically true, and deeply ignorant. You say the processes are all, at the core “just physics”. I make an equivalent statement, and I’m deeply ignorant. OK.
I say the assertion sticks if you are not able to recognize and interact with higher levels of description. Of course you can, you could not communicate and function day to day without doing so, so it's apparent to anyone looking that your "ignorance" of higher levels of description available to is just a means to avoid distinctions that obtain at these higher levels of description. Unless you really do think a rock is a bolt of lightning, you are stuck.
A brain is just atoms, yes, but that is to misunderstand wholly what a brain is, even and especially when that brain is nothing more than matter and energy. This may be the stupidest thing I’ve ever read. A brain is just an amalgamation of particles obeying the laws of physics. It is nothing more than that. Indeed, on materialist premises nothing else exists that it can be. But to say what a brain is, is to wholly misunderstand it. Breathtaking in its stupidity.
Ok, so you are committed to the idea that a rock is a bolt of lightning, then. They are both "just matter and energy moving around", after all. Really, Barry, these are pretty basic concepts.
it’s no problem for choices to be profound and mundane, complex and simple, inspiringly creative or hopeless banal, all coming from the same platform, the same evolved machines we call humans.
What choices. We have already established that particles obeying the laws of physics don’t have choices any more than mass has the choice of conforming to the inverse square law.
This fully misses the point being made. I could just as well have said: it’s no problem for actions to be profound and mundane, complex and simple, inspiringly creative or hopeless banal, all coming from the same platform, the same evolved machines we call humans. See what I did there? No choices, but the point remains as it was. Being "just physics" at the most fundamental level in now way diminished or discredits the distinctions and assessments we can make, objectively or subjectively, at higher levels of description. A human's more actions -- forget whether choice is applicable here or not for the moment -- are in no way diminished by being whole natural, or the product of impersonal physical processes.
You seem to think using flowery language somehow changes that. Of course that is part of the self deception you need to deal with your dissonance.
This is more self-indulgent fluff, Barry. No substance.
The words “meaningful” and “profound” and “trivial” “choices” are all meaningless on materialist premises. Particles operating in accordance with the laws of physics do not make choices at all. It makes no sense to say that particles in motion are “meaningful” or “profound” or “trivial.” That you do not understand the obvious conclusions logically compelled by your premises is nothing short of astounding.
At this point, the intransigence here on levels of description is just tedious. Does "walking exist", Barry? After all, if humans are just made of atoms, they necessarily cannot "walk", on your position. Or do you suppose an atom can walk, Barry? If you don't think atoms can walk, then humans cannot walk, as they are nothing but atoms! I can come up with examples that show your error by the hundreds, Barry. To say "X is just [Y at a lower level of description]" does not eliminate the higher levels of description, or the distinctions, semantics and concept we can put to effective use at that level of description. That's why we can understand that "humans are made of out atoms", "an atom can't walk", and yet, mirabile dictu!, "humans (and other beings) can walk" all as true at the same time, and without any logical contradictions. If you grant the coherence and compatibility of those three statements, your protest is surrendered, Barry. Matter and energy occur in different configurations that we can distinguish, measure and assess via higher levels of description. It is at these higher levels of description that moral and ethical semantics get grounded. Just as an "atom cannot walk", and "atom cannot empathize". Certain configurations of atoms can and do walk -- they exhibit physical dynamics that map nicely and practically to our use of the term "walk", even though not a single atom comprising the animal can walk. By the same principle, certain configurations of atoms can and do empathize, even though not a single atom comprising the "empathizer" can empathize. My question for you, then, is the same simple one I put to ebenezer: is a a rock a bolt of lightning, given that they are both just "matter and energy moving around"? There's not dispute about free will and choices in this to distract or complicate, there's no moral or ethical questions to bother with either. It's a question that just looks at the problem you are struggling with, which is applying concepts at different levels of description. If you say "yes, a rock is a bolt of lightning, and they cannot be meaningfully distinguished", I will be happy with that, and the discussion goes one way. If you say "no, a rock is not a bolt of lightning, and they are meaningfully distinguishable", then you will have shown all ready the disingenuous nature of dozens of your posts here in the past few days.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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Hi Barry, You have said that materialism has implications for morality that render its adherents unable to meaningfully talk about right and wrong, and that anyone who is a materialist must believe that mere personal preference is the only guide for right action. I have responded to and demolished every point you've tried to make, repeatedly (e.g. in post 8 in the previous thread). It is you who steadfastly has refused to respond to a single point I've made. You pretend I haven't responded to your argument, but the truth is that my answers are directly responsive - you just don't like my arguments because you can't defeat them. Since you know you can't defeat my arguments, you simply insult me like a scared schoolyard bully, while judging and castigating others for insulting you. That makes you a blatant hypocrite, something that both I and your own religion consider to be wrong (Romans 2:3). And most disgustingly, you are a religious bigot, making moral judgments against atheists purely because of their beliefs about religion. I'm quite done with you. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
April 16, 2015
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ebenezer,
Ah… no. No one might is guaranteed to want what another might does, so we don’t get objectivity from this.
Well, of course. That's just one of many problems one will run in to if one seriously argued that "might makes right". I don't believe that "might makes right" because while the mighty can enforce what they believe to be right, that doesn't mean that what they believe to be right is objectively right. I'm not going to change my mind on what I believe to be right based on who's in power.
Again we are bringing this back to “increases survival value” as “right” and “harms a species” as “wrong”… when will this ever end?
Umm, no. I said "traits that we prefer". I don't prefer homicidal thieving rapists. Do you think I'm assuming too much to believe that most of the people here would agree?goodusername
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 65:
“Poor” in what sense? I don’t understand what you apply to arrive at “poor” or “not poor”, here.
Maybe I should have used “not” in place of “poor” here. Are we really to accept that our “morality” is as easy to forgo as the law of gravity?
No, there is, and my post above showed the grounds for the semantics of “good” and “evil” in human nature. Man as a natural product of impersonal evolution produces objective realities that ground terms like “good” and “evil”, but the meanings of these terms cannot be reconciled with religious superstitions about “moral absolutes” or “laws from a (personal) law-giver”. That means there is no “good” or “evil” as theists typically conceive those terms. They are terms rich in meaning and attached to our natural biology for those that do not insist on religious superstition as the grounds for their semantics.
For “those that do not insist on religious superstition” (hey, all I’ve been doing here is refusing to insist on anyone else’s religious superstition) they are terms with an embarrassment of riches as regards meaning: they mean anything anybody wants them to mean, and therefore they mean nothing. I don’t see how having every potential meaning in the world strengthens any case against a view which can assign them each one unchanging meaning which we won’t need to go over our own feelings about in order to clarify.
Any “impulse” is only as qualified, objectively, as is it prominent in human wiring. That is, “empathy” is “right” for humans only insofar as it is is an objective impulse or instinct. Perhaps its just clearer to say it is “more central our human nature”. Is “desire for sceintific knowledge” a pervasive feature of human instinct. I’d say it’s more an aberration, especially reading this blog. ;-) But in any case, it’s not ubiquitous in the way empathy is, if it is even the same kind of disposition at all.
So it’s all a matter of which instincts seem to be most widely accepted? The minute we realize that there are such things as headhunting tribes we lose any objective morality that a materialistic worldview can offer, then…
It hardly need to be said, but if you are unclear on this, it’s because our psychology and cognitive process are not driven by the rock. Our psychology is driven by our instincts.
How do our psychology and cognitive process boil down to something less material than the rock? Is that particular material… special? If not, at what point does it graduate into something which we deem worth taking orders from (e.g. psychology and cognitive process)?
This will be easy for you to answer to your own satisfaction: what level of description is needed to distinguish a rock from a bolt of lightning? Is this a distinction you feel capable of making? If so, how do you do it, if it’s all just ‘physics being physics’. That’s not a rhetorical question, by the way. I’m genuinely interested in your answer to that as I see that answers as likely to be “self-convincing” for you on this issue.
A decently-low level of description is needed there—not too low, but below “does not possess spirit or soul.” Of course they’re fundamentally different things—yet they’re things, in a sense that no person we would want to be around would call a human being.
At the most fundamental level of description, a rock is a bolt of lightning, right?
Again, they’re clearly different things. What they’re not is moral agents; we can agree on that, and yet a non-materialistic theory can logically say why not, and a materialistic one, it seems from reading the comments thus far, cannot.
Not at a fundamental level of description, at the “Barry Level”. They are the same, just matter and energy moving around in various ways!
If we’re trying to refute the OP’s argument, this is a silly distinction. Mr. Arrington, using logic, shut this line of reasoning down in 63. Call the level what you like; the plain truth is that neither of us will hold rocks responsible for anything we don’t like. We likewise refrain from accusing killer whales of moral wrongdoing when they attack their trainers. It seems that we just somehow have to peer deep into the inner workings of (we’re to believe) purely material substance in order to obscure such a (yes) fundamental difference.
I think I can just point to this last sentence of yours as a kind of “tap out” on this matter! It’s almost sig-worthy.
Well you’d need to quote a bit from before it in order for it to make sense grammatically, but have at it. By the way: what I said (which I said would have to be quoted) was that those two lack something which we all clearly agree humans possess. I’m not the one trying to delve deep into the intricacy of fundamental differences between rocks and lightning by way of cop-out on the OP’s argument, which (if it could be refuted) could be refuted without reference to either! Maybe we agree that it’s getting comical at this point? And yet… where is that refutation?ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 62 "If it’s as simple as the cartoon sketch you’ve offered, I don’t think we do. There’s a lot of misconceptions packed into just a few sentences there, but if the world worked like your cartoon, we should be surprised to see empathy arise as a candidate for fixation in the trait set, let alone a successful one." The sketch was a simplification to make a point, it is not meant as a description of what happened. I don't believe in any of the evo just so stories of how we got to here. They don't add up when you look at detail. "First, greed, murder and rape are not heritable traits. The biological dynamics are such that the most cruel and aggressive father may produce a docile, kind and gentle son, at least in terms of disposition (upbringing and training arre influential on kids’ development, too, etc.)" Flowery words but what evidence. By what magic does an aggressive father produce a docile, kind and gentle son? In my worldview, this is easy to answer as DNA and genetics are NOT all there is and the "kindness" is a built in reflection of Gods design. The materialist only has DNA, errors and reproductive success. If it's not in the genes (the predisposition to be aggressive for instance) then where is it? CheersCross
April 16, 2015
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goodusername @ 64:
It all boils down to “might makes right”.
That would imply an objective morality.
Ah… no. No one might is guaranteed to want what another might does, so we don’t get objectivity from this. What we get is: as long as you can get rid of me, you can do whatever you want. This is pretty much as far from objective morality as one can get…
If you mean traits that we prefer, I think the example we used helps to show that. The violent rapist isn’t going to last very long. The social males who work together I think will do much better.
Again we are bringing this back to “increases survival value” as “right” and “harms a species” as “wrong”… when will this ever end? Evidently not as soon as someone points out that there’s nothing objective about that… all we can have are speculative theorizations to try really hard to show that, had we not “evolved” to “have empathy” and other such hard-to-deal-with-materialistically virtues, we’d have all been so much worse off, don’t you see, because… This is spinning in neat circles around the OP’s argument, marking it as correct.ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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@ebenezer,
Whatever we’re calling “moral” here makes a poor natural law when compared to gravity. (You may have heard of a person being in the business of “law enforcement”, which is how humans deal with the crucial difference between the law of gravity and “our evolved nature”.)
"Poor" in what sense? I don't understand what you apply to arrive at "poor" or "not poor", here.
So… there’s no such thing as “good” or “evil” in a materialistic worldview? This, confirming as it does the OP’s argument, does not go very far toward refuting the OP’s argument.
No, there is, and my post above showed the grounds for the semantics of "good" and "evil" in human nature. Man as a natural product of impersonal evolution produces objective realities that ground terms like "good" and "evil", but the meanings of these terms cannot be reconciled with religious superstitions about "moral absolutes" or "laws from a (personal) law-giver". That means there is no "good" or "evil" as theists typically conceive those terms. They are terms rich in meaning and attached to our natural biology for those that do not insist on religious superstition as the grounds for their semantics.
You’re trying to say that a particular class of “feelings about” or “reactions to” actions should be set up as the decider of right and wrong. You’ve failed to explain why that class has any objective qualification that any other feeling or reaction on the face of the earth does not possess in equal amount.
Any "impulse" is only as qualified, objectively, as is it prominent in human wiring. That is, "empathy" is "right" for humans only insofar as it is is an objective impulse or instinct. Perhaps its just clearer to say it is "more central our human nature". Is "desire for sceintific knowledge" a pervasive feature of human instinct. I'd say it's more an aberration, especially reading this blog. ;-) But in any case, it's not ubiquitous in the way empathy is, if it is even the same kind of disposition at all.
Certainly you didn’t suggest that either was. You also didn’t explain why either wasn’t as valid a source of moral input as any human reaction or belief or feeling or…,
It hardly need to be said, but if you are unclear on this, it's because our psychology and cognitive process are not driven by the rock. Our psychology is driven by our instincts.
What level of description is going to rescue us from “they’re all just matter” if we’re in a materialistic worldview? “No, but see, conscious beings are really special”?
This will be easy for you to answer to your own satisfaction: what level of description is needed to distinguish a rock from a bolt of lightning? Is this a distinction you feel capable of making? If so, how do you do it, if it's all just 'physics being physics'. That's not a rhetorical question, by the way. I'm genuinely interested in your answer to that as I see that answers as likely to be "self-convincing" for you on this issue.
It’s laughable to me that one would want to solemnly declare a rock and a human being both “just physics being physics” while asking special treatment for or consideration of the human being…
At the most fundamental level of description, a rock is a bolt of lightning, right?
Rocks and lightning share a common lack of something.
Not at a fundamental level of description, at the "Barry Level". They are the same, just matter and energy moving around in various ways!
The materialistic dilemma has something to do with that not being the case and yet neither rock nor lightning bolt being responsible for anything.
I think I can just point to this last sentence of yours as a kind of "tap out" on this matter! It's almost sig-worthy.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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Cross,
And here comes the evo pop psychology.
A loner male is being incredibly antagonistic and threatening towards all the other males and females, and you think that saying he isn't going to fare well is "evo pop psychology"? Uh, if you say so. I have no idea what evolution has to do with that conclusion, and to me saying that it's playing "psychology" is like saying 2 + 2 = 4 is playing "mathematician".
So those upset weaker males form a gang and kill off Hominid A, so now we pass on gang mentality?
Yeah, those darn hooligans, taking out that poor violent homicidal psychotic thieving rapist. Well, you could call it a gang mentality, I guess. I would call it a social mentality. What do you think they should do instead regarding the pycho running around? Call the police?
It all boils down to “might makes right”.
That would imply an objective morality.
Where and how do the good traits get to pass down? As a materialist, you only have reproduction success to work with.
If you mean traits that we prefer, I think the example we used helps to show that. The violent rapist isn't going to last very long. The social males who work together I think will do much better.goodusername
April 16, 2015
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Eigenstate @ 33 and 37. Statement Group 1:
The processes are all, at the core “just physics”.
It’s [i.e., a person’s moral disposition is] “binding” in the sense that gravity is “binding” on mass.
Statement Group 2:
Our choices are the products of multiple competing values.
Again, you are confusing the drivers for our preferences with the preference (or choices) themselves.
My God man. Can’t you see how deeply confused these statements are? At first you say it is all just physics. Then you talk as if there is some person in your head choosing among competing values. Physics does not have values. Mass does not choose whether to act in accordance with the inverse square law. Your next ploy is to reify empathy. To “reify” is to act as if something abstract is concrete. Consider this statement:
Empathy may inform my preference for doing nice things for friends, neighbors or complete strangers, but empathy itself is not a preference, not in any sense of the term.
No “argument” is needed, or even appropriate, the reaction can be traced to empathy (and possibly other drivers) that obtain objectively in our nature
Empathy is not a physical force like gravity. It is not a causal agent. It is an abstraction. It is a description of a feeling most people have, a feeling of understanding for the feelings of others. It is most assuredly not “physics.” Therefore, if, as you say, the processes are all, at the core “just physics” (and of course that is what the materialist must say), when you say “empathy informs this” or “empathy drives that” you are talking blithering nonsense based on your own premises. That feeling you call "empathy" is a chemical reaction in your brain. To say "empathy" caused this or that is to say "chemistry reactions caused this or that." It does not help your case. Those chemical reactions follow the laws of physics like everything else. Chemistry does not "inform" a choice. There is no choice.
Insofar as that choice has consequences for interests, well being and flourishing of myself and others, it’s a moral question.
You are arguing in a great big circle here while you try desperately to have it both ways. Your ability to deceive yourself appears to be almost boundless. You say it is all just physics. The materialist must say that. We are amalgamations of chemicals. Amalgamations of chemicals operate according to physical laws. They do not choose. As you say, they have no more choice than mass has with respect to gravity. On materialist premises the physics compelled John to murder and eat his mother. John had no choice in the matter. Similarly, the physics compel John to eat chocolate ice cream and shun vanilla. Again, he has no choice in the matter. You distinguish what you call a “moral question” (whether to murder and eat your mother) from a question that is “not a moral question” (whether to eat chocolate ice cream and shun vanilla). But there is no “question” at all in either case. A question implies the ability to answer in alternate ways. But there is no such choice. In both cases particles are merely acting in accordance with the laws of physics. There is absolutely no ground on which to distinguish between physical forces causing particles to do what we call “murder and eat your mother” and physical forces doing what we call “eat chocolate ice cream and avoid vanilla.” Any attempt by a materialist to suggest there is a something called “morality” or “flourishing” or “well being” that somehow allows him to distinguish between the two acts is engaging in self deception on an epic scale. He is doubtless trying to cope with the dissonance caused by Russell’s dilemma.
A choice to murder has profoundly different social impacts than choice to eat vanilla ice cream.
You say that as if “murder” and “social impacts” are categories that particles obeying the law of physics take into account in deciding between two courses of action. On your own premises, you that is blithering nonsense. There is no choice.
Scale it out . . .
Utterly irrelevant as to whether the acts are in any sense anything other than “just physics.”
So, saying “it’s just electro-chemical processes” is both technically true, and deeply ignorant.
You say the processes are all, at the core “just physics”. I make an equivalent statement, and I’m deeply ignorant. OK.
A brain is just atoms, yes, but that is to misunderstand wholly what a brain is, even and especially when that brain is nothing more than matter and energy.
This may be the stupidest thing I’ve ever read. A brain is just an amalgamation of particles obeying the laws of physics. It is nothing more than that. Indeed, on materialist premises nothing else exists that it can be. But to say what a brain is, is to wholly misunderstand it. Breathtaking in its stupidity.
it’s no problem for choices to be profound and mundane, complex and simple, inspiringly creative or hopeless banal, all coming from the same platform, the same evolved machines we call humans.
What choices. We have already established that particles obeying the laws of physics don’t have choices any more than mass has the choice of conforming to the inverse square law. You seem to think using flowery language somehow changes that. Of course that is part of the self deception you need to deal with your dissonance.
So, if I say the most meaningful and profound choices (in terms of human understanding and consequences) come from the same processes driven by our biological constitution as our most trivial choices, what of it?
The words “meaningful” and “profound” and “trivial” “choices” are all meaningless on materialist premises. Particles operating in accordance with the laws of physics do not make choices at all. It makes no sense to say that particles in motion are “meaningful” or “profound” or “trivial.” That you do not understand the obvious conclusions logically compelled by your premises is nothing short of astounding.Barry Arrington
April 16, 2015
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@Cross
So, in a long winded way you are saying that “evolution” did it and gave us our built in human traits (morals). Since you are a materialist evolutionist then reproductive success is all you have to work with. You provide no evidence of how this occurred, just assumption that it did.
I'm just stating the materialist position. It's neither germane or practical to re-litigate the merits of the scientific-materialist understanding here. It is enough to just articulate it so as to show the basis for materialists' grounding of their semantics, their basis for investing meaning in terms like "good" and "evil". As JDH inadvertently pointed out at Barry's expense, if I've succeeded in "begging the question" and nonchalantly shrugging off demands for "prove evolution did it, Barry's whole project has been destroyed. Once there is a question to begin, an avenue to investigate, the gig is up for him. It's a somewhat sneaky tack to take, but I don't mind declaring it up front, as I'm not trying to fool anyone. If I can get you to say, "that's your account", how do I know it's true"?, Barry has lost. His position is that there cannot be an account to investigate. It wasn't a well thought out position in the first place, more of an emotional outburst, and appeal to "can't you see the obvious?", so this is not any big shakes on my part.
Here is a scenario (apologies to Kubrick for nicking it). Hominid male A is big and strong, he takes the first and best food for himself, leaving the other males weaker so he can have reproductive success with the females, he gets to pass on his greedy genes. Hominid male B also has his group of weak males and all the females. They are competing with A’s group for the food and water. Hominid A picks up a large bone and kills B. He then gets to rape B’s females, great reproductive success. A passes on greed, murder and rape. Now, without the evo pop psychology, how do we ever develop the good decent stuff ie empathy, love etc. Cheers
If it's as simple as the cartoon sketch you've offered, I don't think we do. There's a lot of misconceptions packed into just a few sentences there, but if the world worked like your cartoon, we should be surprised to see empathy arise as a candidate for fixation in the trait set, let alone a successful one. First, greed, murder and rape are not heritable traits. The biological dynamics are such that the most cruel and aggressive father may produce a docile, kind and gentle son, at least in terms of disposition (upbringing and training arre influential on kids' development, too, etc.) Male A, in a social setting, is security threat for all. Not only or less aggressive/strong other males in danger, the mothers in the population are at risk of losing any male mates who provide protection, care for the young, food, resources, etc. So in a village down the river a bit where the social norms discourage such mayhem, more males survive to help raise and provide shelter, protection and sustenance for the offspring. Male A, the efficient killer, may somehow eliminate all the competition in his little bend in the river, but the 100 males down the river, who are much less inclined to violence, will participate in a "village" that outcompetes, and handily, the "village with one badass Male A". Village C. down the river, will produce more offspring that are themselves more fecund, because their social arrangements work better toward those ends. Evolution is not about individuals, it's about populations. So right there, that should give you a clue you are not getting a basic handle on the dynamics here. Greed and brute violence do work, even in our "evolved" human society today. But they don't work well enough to extinguish, or even prevail against other social patterns we have ingrained in us. Survival is a team sport, and what you've described may well serve the interests of Male A over the other reproductive successes of Male B and his other victims, but that heuristic doesn't scale. Murdering all competitors may garner you the biggest reproductive share of the pie in your species, but may push your tribe to extinction in the process. Eliminating your competitors, then, is NOT a route to reproductive success if it means your offspring's chances of survival are diminished by that. Now that Male A has killed all the other adult males in the village, and (say) impregnated every capable female, if there's no males left to hunt, or to ward off other warring tribes from up or down river, your "reproductive success" is actually a reproductive disaster. Male A's lineage dies out right around when he does, because his actions "outcompeted" his male peers in the village, but prevented the entire village from surviving and flourishing. In the real world, there are a multitude of threats and risks, and will others of the species are certainly competitive risks, they are also quite often your genes' strongest asset in protecting against other mortal risks you must face daily. This is the evolutionary basis for social grouping and social contracts. Even my account here is really over-simplified, when you look at how real biology actually works. I'm a bit far afield as it is, but I invite you to investigate how evolution really works. If you do not come back to your vignette here and see "cartoonish" as a charitable view of it, you will know you've not gotten out of the creationist bubble and into a clear-eyed scientific view yet. Populations, not individuals. Populations, not individuals.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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goodusername @ 60 "Hominid male A sounds very anti-social and he’s up against a group of (probably pretty upset) males (and females). I don’t think ‘A’ would fare very well." And here comes the evo pop psychology. So those upset weaker males form a gang and kill off Hominid A, so now we pass on gang mentality? It all boils down to "might makes right". Where and how do the good traits get to pass down? As a materialist, you only have reproduction success to work with. CheersCross
April 16, 2015
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Hominid male A is big and strong, he takes the first and best food for himself, leaving the other males weaker so he can have reproductive success with the females, he gets to pass on his greedy genes. Hominid male B also has his group of weak males and all the females. They are competing with A’s group for the food and water. Hominid A picks up a large bone and kills B. He then gets to rape B’s females, great reproductive success. A passes on greed, murder and rape.
Hominid male A sounds very anti-social and he's up against a group of (probably pretty upset) males (and females). I don't think 'A' would fare very well.goodusername
April 16, 2015
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REC @ 58:
““No, but see, conscious beings are really special”?”
Yes. Duh.
…because why?! The simplest of questions, and yet a materialistic worldview can’t answer it. “They just are! Don’t ask why—that’s where we must say a final farewell to reason and logic!”ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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"“No, but see, conscious beings are really special”?" Yes. Duh.REC
April 16, 2015
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Me_Think @ 56 "Sigh. Evolution is about population, not an individual.It is always about population genetics, not individual genetics, and no, emotions and feelings are not passed down to the next generation." Sigh, the last time I looked, individuals have sex and pass on their genes, not populations (are you thinking of the 60's and free love?). Using populations is just a way of avoiding the details which don't add up. If you don't think that our ability to have emotions and feelings pass down then you seem to disagree with eigenstate. CheersCross
April 16, 2015
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Cross @ 53
Here is a scenario (apologies to Kubrick for nicking it) Hominid male A is big and strong, he takes the first and best food for himself, leaving the other males weaker so he can have reproductive success with the females, he gets to pass on his greedy genes.......A passes on greed, murder and rape
Sigh. Evolution is about population, not an individual.It is always about population genetics, not individual genetics, and no, emotions and feelings are not passed down to the next generation.Me_Think
April 16, 2015
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Cross @ 53: It boils down to if it got us here, it’s good. This of course leaves every possibility wide open, but such is the nature of the worldview… as the OP’s argument pointed out so many threads ago.ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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REC @ 51:
“we can “be decent” without having a logical basis for why it would be wrong not to “be decent”… and that logical basis is most profoundly absent from 46.”
So absent the “logical basis” we can be decent?
Back to defining “decent” (I note you managed to avoid repeating my quote marks) as “whatever I can get away with in a particular group” we are, then. [sigh]
Btw, social contract, the optimization personal desires, intersubjective morality, whatever you want to call it, is irrational?
…and back to fitness and survival value as the judge of what’s actually “right” and “wrong”. “Is it not logical to do this? Why, it will ensure your offspring’s survival!” (This is a quite clear departure from the thread of argument, by the way. It was not for nothing that Mr. Arrington told us “Responding to an argument that is not made does not refute the argument that is made” several posts ago.) These have been repeated for pages now and they’re not getting any closer to being relevant…ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 37 and others So, in a long winded way you are saying that "evolution" did it and gave us our built in human traits (morals). Since you are a materialist evolutionist then reproductive success is all you have to work with. You provide no evidence of how this occurred, just assumption that it did. Here is a scenario (apologies to Kubrick for nicking it). Hominid male A is big and strong, he takes the first and best food for himself, leaving the other males weaker so he can have reproductive success with the females, he gets to pass on his greedy genes. Hominid male B also has his group of weak males and all the females. They are competing with A's group for the food and water. Hominid A picks up a large bone and kills B. He then gets to rape B's females, great reproductive success. A passes on greed, murder and rape. Now, without the evo pop psychology, how do we ever develop the good decent stuff ie empathy, love etc. CheersCross
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 50:
Goodness, no. We don’t “owe” anything, nor are we obligated to “obey” our nature. It’s a contradiction in terms. If it is our nature, that is how we are, else it is not our nature. In practical terms, do you suppose that you “owe reverent obedience” to gravity? I should think you don’t see it that way. It’s just a fact of the extramental world around us. “Obedience” doesn’t even make sense, nor does “reverence”. It does what it does. Same thing with our moral instincts. They are what they are. “Obedience” and “reverence” don’t even make sense in relation to that reality.
Whatever we’re calling “moral” here makes a poor natural law when compared to gravity. (You may have heard of a person being in the business of “law enforcement”, which is how humans deal with the crucial difference between the law of gravity and “our evolved nature”.)
The “correct way” is not a meaningful term, here. It’s like asking “what lies 1km north of the north pole?”. We are here because our ancestors have evolved in such a way that we are one of the very few lineages of all the lineages that have come to be that have not gone extinct (yet). So, our evolved nature is “correct” in the sense that we have successfully persevered (and thrived, even) as a lineage, but there’s no “morally correct” quality to this use of “correct”.
So… there’s no such thing as “good” or “evil” in a materialistic worldview? This, confirming as it does the OP’s argument, does not go very far toward refuting the OP’s argument. This is right back to what I brought up threads ago: equating survival value and whatever enhances or takes away from it with morality and what one can logically call morally “right” or “wrong”.
No. In that case, an “alternate universe” scenario of our evolution, where killing a fellow human may be “right”, and “good”, even as a commonplace event. If there are evolutionary benefits to (what we in our state would call) murder, there’s the potential for realizing that in the population as “natural virtue”. I’m sure we could find other species where individuals are killed by their own species, and this is adaptive. If that were the case, and we had evolved differently, our moral instincts would reflect that.
Again: “what we do or don’t do got us this far; ergo, what we do and don’t do is morally right or wrong.” I had a comment about this, as I said, some threads ago:
In the last post’s thread there was a deal of “materialism can provide morality” arguing which was backed up with appeals to “this behavior enhances survival or reproductive value”, followed by a deal of “how can anyone say that materialism has only survival or reproductive value with which to determine morality?” Therefore, a note before we proceed: for the purposes of this exercise (refuting the OP’s argument), the most efficient practice would be to not confuse “what ensures that I have more offspring” and “what harms my species” with “what is absolutely right” and “what is unquestionably wrong”.
You have no measure to apply to this that will produce “good” or “bad” as distinctions. The facts as they are, the way humans (or anything else) has evolved, is the basis for any semantic cargo we want “good” or “bad” to carry. You’re right to say that their being different doesn’t — itself — distinguish them as good or bad. Rather, they way they are is the ground for the meaning we give to “good” and “bad”.
You’re trying to say that a particular class of “feelings about” or “reactions to” actions should be set up as the decider of right and wrong. You’ve failed to explain why that class has any objective qualification that any other feeling or reaction on the face of the earth does not possess in equal amount.
I didn’t mention obedience at all, IIRC. Neither did I suggest that a rock or a bolt of lightning was a source of moral input, human or otherwise.
Certainly you didn’t suggest that either was. You also didn’t explain why either wasn’t as valid a source of moral input as any human reaction or belief or feeling or…
My point was that a rock is not a bolt of lightning, and yet, both are “just physics being physics”. When you jump down to fundamental levels of description you necessary lose the meaningful and often profound distinctions that obtain at higher levels of description. If both a rock and a bolt of lightning are the same thing — both are just “physics being physics” right? — why do we distinguish them with different labels, do you suppose?
What level of description is going to rescue us from “they’re all just matter” if we’re in a materialistic worldview? “No, but see, conscious beings are really special”?
If you understand that, you know what you need to know to see the error in Barry’s appeal to “electro-chemical processes”. It’s laughably transparent (and amateurish, to boot) to read, at least to my eye, but if it’s not to you or others, ask yourself why a rock is not a bolt of lightning; after all, both are just physics being physics, right?
It’s laughable to me that one would want to solemnly declare a rock and a human being both “just physics being physics” while asking special treatment for or consideration of the human being… Rocks and lightning share a common lack of something. The materialistic dilemma has something to do with that not being the case and yet neither rock nor lightning bolt being responsible for anything.ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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"we can “be decent” without having a logical basis for why it would be wrong not to “be decent”… and that logical basis is most profoundly absent from 46." So absent the "logical basis" we can be decent? Ok. Thanks. Kinda renders your pearl clutching moot, no? Btw, social contract, the optimization personal desires, intersubjective morality, whatever you want to call it, is irrational?REC
April 16, 2015
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@ebenezer.
Let me get this straight. We owe reverent obedience to “evolved human nature”?
Goodness, no. We don't "owe" anything, nor are we obligated to "obey" our nature. It's a contradiction in terms. If it is our nature, that is how we are, else it is not our nature. In practical terms, do you suppose that you "owe reverent obedience" to gravity? I should think you don't see it that way. It's just a fact of the extramental world around us. "Obedience" doesn't even make sense, nor does "reverence". It does what it does. Same thing with our moral instincts. They are what they are. "Obedience" and "reverence" don't even make sense in relation to that reality.
How are we sure that it evolved in the correct way?
The "correct way" is not a meaningful term, here. It's like asking "what lies 1km north of the north pole?". We are here because our ancestors have evolved in such a way that we are one of the very few lineages of all the lineages that have come to be that have not gone extinct (yet). So, our evolved nature is "correct" in the sense that we have successfully persevered (and thrived, even) as a lineage, but there's no "morally correct" quality to this use of "correct".
And mustn’t we be glad that it didn’t evolve in another way, which would not have told us to consider the killing of a fellow human “wrong”?
No. In that case, an "alternate universe" scenario of our evolution, where killing a fellow human may be "right", and "good", even as a commonplace event. If there are evolutionary benefits to (what we in our state would call) murder, there's the potential for realizing that in the population as "natural virtue". I'm sure we could find other species where individuals are killed by their own species, and this is adaptive. If that were the case, and we had evolved differently, our moral instincts would reflect that.
…so?bTheir being different doesn’t distinguish them as good or bad.
You have no measure to apply to this that will produce "good" or "bad" as distinctions. The facts as they are, the way humans (or anything else) has evolved, is the basis for any semantic cargo we want "good" or "bad" to carry. You're right to say that their being different doesn't -- itself -- distinguish them as good or bad. Rather, they way they are is the ground for the meaning we give to "good" and "bad".
You never explained why a rock or a bolt of lightning are less worthy of our obedience and consideration as “moral” standard-givers than are any “evolved” reactions to wanton cruelty.
I didn't mention obedience at all, IIRC. Neither did I suggest that a rock or a bolt of lightning was a source of moral input, human or otherwise. My point was that a rock is not a bolt of lightning, and yet, both are "just physics being physics". When you jump down to fundamental levels of description you necessary lose the meaningful and often profound distinctions that obtain at higher levels of description. If both a rock and a bolt of lightning are the same thing -- both are just "physics being physics" right? -- why do we distinguish them with different labels, do you suppose? If you understand that, you know what you need to know to see the error in Barry's appeal to "electro-chemical processes". It's laughably transparent (and amateurish, to boot) to read, at least to my eye, but if it's not to you or others, ask yourself why a rock is not a bolt of lightning; after all, both are just physics being physics, right?eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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Without agreeing on what that exactly means, there cannot be meaningful discussion. Is that objectively true? Let’s say you and I both agree that the moon is made of cheese, and we both agree on what that exactly means. What sort of meaningful discussion might proceed from that agreement?
I was stating a necessary condition for a meaningful discussion ("without... there cannot be meaningful discussion"). But that is obviously not a sufficient condition for making meaningful statements since one can still spew nonsense that merely satisfies that particular necessary condition. -- Analogy -- Necessary Condition: without buying a lottery ticket, you can't win the lottery. But merely buying the lottery ticket doesn't imply you will win the lottery. You still need to pick the right numbers on the ticket you bought. Only the latter is the sufficient condition for winning the lottery.nightlight
April 16, 2015
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"Is fear of God the only thing that leads you to be decent towards other people" It's love of God, REC, love of God. But also incredibly in awe, to the point of fear. Scary Awesome.ppolish
April 16, 2015
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REC @ 46:
@44-unrelated question. You asked what is different between a human and a rock. I replied.
Way to redefine the question—I guess the straw man is always easier to vanquish than a real after all…
Now you ask why you have to act like a human being towards another human?
Surely there’s a way to make this argument without begging the question. Surely? “[Act] like a human being”? So now “morality” is just, you know, the way that humans act? A standard this is.
You don’t. Just don’t be shocked when you get ostracized or punished by those who would prefer you would be.
Selfishness! Ah! So this is the noble materialistic foundation of morality. I see. Of course, if one can simply get away with not “acting like a human” and evade the rule of anyone who can ostracize or punish, we’re all good. I wonder if that would except one from accusation of “wrong” under this definition… or how it could not…
Is fear of God the only thing that leads you to be decent towards other people? Sad, really….
Sad that we’d have to leave out the argument and what several of us have been saying all along—that we can “be decent” without having a logical basis for why it would be wrong not to “be decent”… and that logical basis is most profoundly absent from 46. Oh well.ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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@44-unrelated question. You asked what is different between a human and a rock. I replied. Now you ask why you have to act like a human being towards another human? You don't. Just don't be shocked when you get ostracized or punished by those who would prefer you would be. Is fear of God the only thing that leads you to be decent towards other people? Sad, really....REC
April 16, 2015
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"So, if I say the most meaningful and profound choices (in terms of human understanding and consequences) come from the same processes driven by our biological constitution as our most trivial choices, what of it? Why is that a problem for you or anyone, Barry?" Not a problem for me, Eigenstate. For example, I often pray while I'm taking a dump. Jesus loves. Prayer is evidence of deeper evolution btw.ppolish
April 16, 2015
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