Ask a Philosopher!

Also, I was looking at the definition of a word.

Absolute- free from imperfection; complete

Then I got around to thinking of seeing if I could reduce each word of the definition

ex. Free-grant freedom to; free from confinement

Well, I don't feel like doing a ton of work here, but here is what I found is that definition of words basically "pass the buck".

My question is, if word definitions are in fact one massive game of circular logic, then are words objectively meaningless?

(Sorry if this is incoherent, lol)
 
It's probably going a bit off-topic, but I wouldn't entirely agree with that. If one has very good reasons for thinking that God exists, then one has (in virtue of this) very good reasons for thinking that the existence of God is compatible with the existence of all the suffering that we see in history. That isn't necessarily just a refusal to accept what reason shows us - it may, on the contrary, be a rational weighing of one set of evidence (reasons to believe in God) against a rival set of evidence (reasons to suppose that God's existence is incompatible with the existence of suffering). Certainly there are plenty of people who have considered this very rationally indeed and concluded that God probably does exist and therefore probably does have some plan of the kind you mention. That's not to say that these people are right to think this, of course - just that to think this isn't necessarily irrational.
Fair enough. Nowadays there are more reasons not to believe in a personal God than to believe though.

Right. But one could then say that as long as those rules exist (in whatever sense of "exist" applies to rules) then that moral system exists. One might even say it has some kind of objectivity. Although presumably not the kind you're looking for.
The set of rules might be internally consistent but have no real relation to the real world and how things work there. It is like saying "x=x"; it might be true but it's not very interesting. In the real world all the moral systems seem to have serious defects, owing to at least the extreme complexity of the world (in that we haven't just figured out all the different kinks yet) or possibly also due to the fundamental non-objectivity of all morality.

I think that if a "true" set of moral rules exists, then there's no question why it should be followed. An objective morality, if it exists, is by definition normative. Say, for example, that it is an objective truth that it is wrong to murder. That fact, of and by itself, is a reason not to murder.
A system that would stifle human progress, no matter how 'right', wouldn't be all that snazzy imo. Practice rules over principles for the most part. I do hope that if an objective set of moral rules exists, it's best for all humans, as individuals and as a collective whole, to follow it at all times and they do it gladly and naturally. I'm not sure if that is required of such a ruleset. I guess it would depend on what gives it its objectivity. I may be wrong though; I haven't really given this much thought.

Ah! So you think that there does exist a true and objective morality, then - namely utilitarianism, or some form thereof. You think that an act is right inasmuch as it maximises utility and wrong inasmuch as it minimises it (or something like that). But why's that?
Not necessarily a true and objective one - a useful morality. Utilitarianism is its own justification, in that human progress - vaccines, star travel and whatnot - is generally considered groovy and "Oh Yeah!" within our species.
:cool: Why that is, well, I suppose it has more to do with emotions than sense. The Universe will cool down and all the stars will eventually die, so why do anything? Because many a fun and exciting thing can be experienced before that.

Ah, well this is where fundamental intuitions clash. To the virtue ethicist, it's just a basic fact that certain states are good or bad, because the goodness or badness of moral states is a function of whether they enable the person to flourish or not. And to the virtue ethicist, it is just fundamentally clear that someone who enjoys going around killing people has something wrong with them: that person is not flourishing, no matter how happy he or she may seem to be, just as a person with a chronic illness is not flourishing compared to a healthy person, no matter how well he or she copes with the illness or even likes having it in some perverse way. And the virtue ethicist will think that the enabling of human flourishing is the only way of "cashing out" moral claims that really makes any sense.
What is 'flourishing', exactly? How come a murderer isn't flourishing when he murders - if he does it skillfully, is admired by many (deranged) persons, enjoys it greatly and even sees divine visions because of it? Perhaps it inspires him to great works of art that have a lasting value even after he's caught and disposed of? Not that there's many such murderers, but even one would do to challenge the notion of non-flourishing.

But you, it seems, think that utility is the only sensible way of "cashing out" moral claims, so you evaluate virtue ethics by that criterion and find it wanting. It looks like there's just a fundamental disagreement there.
I suppose so. I just think "flourishing" and "virtue" are unnecessary baggage words and that utility and feeling are where the beef of (useful) right and wrong's at.

No, the virtue ethicist won't suppose that virtues are individually tailored in that way. If something's a virtue, it's a virtue for everyone, and the same for vices. That's because we're all human and have all evolved to function in the same basic way. Something can't be a virtue for one person but a vice for another any more than an activity can be healthy for one person but unhealthy for another.
I wonder what Macchiavelli would say to that? ;) One could say that one of a good politician's virtues is skillful lying, in that if he doesn't lie the interests of the people he's serving might suffer.

Now of course you'll say, ah, some activities can be healthy for one person but unhealthy for another. Eating high-calorie foods might be healthy for someone who is dangerously underweight, but unhealthy for someone who is dangerously overweight. But that is because those two people have different kinds of health problems, for which different treatments are appropriate: the end goal is the same, because health itself is the same for everyone. A virtue ethicist might say something similar about virtue. Say that generosity is a virtue. Someone who is very stingy should therefore perhaps make an effort to give more money away. But someone who is very profligate, and too free with his or her money, should perhaps make an effort to give away less. The end result - a "correct" amount of generosity, the amount that maximises flourishing - is the same for everyone.
I don't really understand the bolded. If I have nothing to give, must I make debt in order to give to charity? It probably means some percentage: but then rich people could well afford to give away 90% of their earnings, which would be catastrophic to the poor (if they gave away the same %, that is). And what's more - aren't different people, you know, different? What if someone feels satisfied with giving 10 dollars/month to the local bum's booze fund, and another still feels guilty and a human failure after giving away $ 10 million to orphan Africans? How does one even know when he's 'flourishing' and what it takes to achieve that?

Thus Aristotle, the grand-daddy of virtue ethics, says that every virtue is actually a mean between two extremes, and the best life is the one that displays each kind of behaviour to the appropriate degree and in the appropriate ways.
Other than sometimes leading to mediocre boringness, those are good instructions. Sometimes a little William Blake is needed to spice things up I think. "The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction"; "The Road of Excess leads to the Palace of Wisdom", etc.

(Emotivism doesn't mean doing the things that you feel are right - it means the view that ethical statements are just expressions of emotions. So if you say "Murder is wrong" that is exactly the same as "Murder - ugh!" or something - you are not ascribing a property of wrongness to murder at all. So emotivism is a theory about the nature of moral language - a meta-ethical theory - not a theory about which actions are right or wrong.)
What is the correct term, then? For doing what I feel is right? Is it simply 'following conscience' - or something more formal?

This sort of thing is of course the bread and butter of ethical philosophers, and it's supposed to help work out what our basic intuitions are. Most people would say that killing the infant Hitler would be the right thing to do. That suggests that most people think that an act that is in itself wrong may be the right thing to do if it brings about sufficient good, which supports utilitarianism. However, change the example a little, so that by killing one baby you save not millions of lives but only two lives. Would it then be the right thing to do? I think most people would hesitate to say that. And that supports a non-utilitarian position.

However, utilitarianism has the resources to combat this sort of thing. For example, a utilitarian may say that although killing one person to save the lives of two people would, in itself, be the right thing to do, the consequences of adopting that rule would be bad overall, because it would make people too ready to go around killing people. A society in which people are prepared to kill one person to save the lives of two would be a society where people would just be too blase about killing in general, and the result of that would be more bad, overall, than good. So a utilitarian, even an act utilitarian, can accommodate this sort of thing and consistently say that a certain act which might seem to maximise utility actually wouldn't, and so should not be done after all.
What about a thousand people, though? Where does the line go between unacceptable and acceptable killing? Furthermore, how exactly would society suffer if all the children that are born disfigured/injured were reported as dead and never shown to the parents, thus (eventually) cutting down handsomely on healthcare and educational expenses? I am implying that one needs the heart as well as the head here. It may be irrational and even detrimental to follow one's feelings sometimes, but they are our most human quality, even more so than our intellect imo (I believe my heart in this matter too ;)). In many ways they are meant to temper each other.

That's an interesting claim which suggests that you're using the word "morality" to refer to the moral codes which are actually in place, rather than objective morality in the sense you gave before. Because if you think one can talk about what moral codes "should" be in place, then you evidently think that there is an objective morality of some kind, but it is distinct from the morality that people actually follow. So it seems to me anyway.
I *feel* that it should be so. Call me sentimental, irrational, etc, if you wish. There is the logical side to it, which I already mentioned - that progress is good in itself, and utilitarianism guarantees it. But even that is ultimately rooted in emotion. Why should we progress? I feel that we should. Most humans have felt the same way throughout history. Maybe this has something to do with flourishing? I wish that we humans progress on all fronts and enjoy the fruits of our progress at the same time. Is that flourishing or does it need some 'extra ingredient'? :)
 
Like Bill suggested, you would have to get more specific about this. I'm not sure I understand the question.

You know.. like.. What is reality? What is the underlying driving force behind what we see, hear, experience, behind everything that "is"? Are we just brains in a vat, is the universe a hologram, is all the "behind the scenes" stuff driven by some sort of a supernatural entity, or.. Well, what *is* reality?

I realize that this touches on a whole bunch of philisophical concepts, but in the end it is a simple-seeming question: "What is reality?"

As a philosopher, how would you answer such a question?
 
The Universe will cool down and all the stars will eventually die, so why do anything? Because many a fun and exciting thing can be experienced before that.

Fun and exciting for who? Perhaps cruising the Caribbean is fun and exciting and should therefore be done. But then you have all the people behind the scenes who make all that fun and excitement possible, stewards, house cleaning, and everyone else who works on the ship. Are they having fun too, cleaning up the passengers' messes and serving their every whim and complaint. Somebody has to make the sacrifices and do the work. Things don't just happen out of the blue, pulled up by their own bootstraps. The Pyramids are a grand thing but thousands of laborers were probably miserable making them. The Space Shuttle program is certainly spectacular but I'm sure it isn't a picnic working for NASA (under all the stress they must go through to get things done on time and done right.) True, you can't make an omlette without breaking some eggs but that doesn't mean you AREN'T committing violence against the eggs. To even sustain life requires committing violence against some living form, plant or animal. Existence is inherently evil.

Sorry if I sound negative but I just got home from a terrible day at work and I really don't want to go back tomorrow, however, I can't afford to quit. Maybe tomorrow will be a good day and I'll share your optimism for a while. :sad:
 
Ok if you're still taking questions, I have one aswell.

How do the philosophers at the universities influence the 'philosophies' of the general population? Do the ideas even trickle down anymore at all and what would be the time frame?

Some examples would be cool aswell.
Cheers :)
 
Nevermind.
 
Fun and exciting for who? Perhaps cruising the Caribbean is fun and exciting and should therefore be done. But then you have all the people behind the scenes who make all that fun and excitement possible, stewards, house cleaning, and everyone else who works on the ship. Are they having fun too, cleaning up the passengers' messes and serving their every whim and complaint. Somebody has to make the sacrifices and do the work. Things don't just happen out of the blue, pulled up by their own bootstraps. The Pyramids are a grand thing but thousands of laborers were probably miserable making them. The Space Shuttle program is certainly spectacular but I'm sure it isn't a picnic working for NASA (under all the stress they must go through to get things done on time and done right.) True, you can't make an omlette without breaking some eggs but that doesn't mean you AREN'T committing violence against the eggs. To even sustain life requires committing violence against some living form, plant or animal. Existence is inherently evil.

Sorry if I sound negative but I just got home from a terrible day at work and I really don't want to go back tomorrow, however, I can't afford to quit. Maybe tomorrow will be a good day and I'll share your optimism for a while. :sad:
I've got two words for you pal, read carefully and maybe you will learn something:
Spoiler :
Boo Hoo.
:goodjob:

It's true that life is miserable for many and not so grand for most - now. However in the future that is bound to change. Right now the world is more advanced than ever, and while some things have gotten worse (overpopulation, social disarray/aimlessness, environmental damage), most are getting better - most importantly technology. Once we invent viable nanomachines, all your animal murdering worries will be over forever.

To stay philosophical, at least somewhat: have you seen in the documentaries, how much people actually smile in the poor countries? When you have few luxuries, you tend to enjoy the little things, and the company of your fellow people. Beyond a certain level material goods don't bring any additional happiness. In fact they may lead to houses that are devoid of feelings and filled with things (it's cliché I know but it's true in many respects).

Oh, about the NASA thing: you think fun and exciting things cannot be hard at the same time? I'd say it's the opposite. The harder and more dangerous, the more exciting. Remember Kennedy's words: "...not because they are easy, but because they are hard..."? Now I'm no astronaut, and wouldn't want to be because my nerves couldn't take it. But I'm glad there's people who can do such things and it fascinates me. Sure, safe things can be fun too, and exciting to an extent. But there is another element that is missing here. Plotinus talked about flourishing above there; I'm not sure if I'm on the same page about the concept, but look: don't you think that overcoming obstacles and by so doing getting to a better place for yourself or others is a value-in-itself, something to be rejoiced about and continued?
 
It's true that life is miserable for many and not so grand for most - now. However in the future that is bound to change. Right now the world is more advanced than ever, and while some things have gotten worse (overpopulation, social disarray/aimlessness, environmental damage), most are getting better - most importantly technology. Once we invent viable nanomachines, all your animal murdering worries will be over forever.

Yeah, right. In the 1950s they said housewives would be liberated by household gadgets that would do all the work for them. Now we have dishwashers, washing machines, microwave ovens and who knows what else. Is there less work to do around the house? Are people happier? Of course not.

In the seventeenth century, Descartes thought that once medical science had advanced to the stage where the most common diseases such as smallpox were eradicated, everyone would be happy - a view which shows just how ill everyone was back then. Now we've eradicated smallpox and most of the diseases which ravaged the world back then - at least in western society. Are we all happy as a result? No.

Much of the misery in the world is caused by other people. No matter how much wonderful technology we have, human nature doesn't change. People will always be greedy, irrational, and basically selfish; millions will always suffer because others choose to wield their power in an unenlightened way. Now one can argue about whether life is, on the whole, good or bad, or whether the good things in the world outweigh the bad ones in it. But don't think that the overall balance of human happiness is going to change much in the future. It never has before.
 
Yeah, right. In the 1950s they said housewives would be liberated by household gadgets that would do all the work for them. Now we have dishwashers, washing machines, microwave ovens and who knows what else. Is there less work to do around the house? Are people happier? Of course not.

In the seventeenth century, Descartes thought that once medical science had advanced to the stage where the most common diseases such as smallpox were eradicated, everyone would be happy - a view which shows just how ill everyone was back then. Now we've eradicated smallpox and most of the diseases which ravaged the world back then - at least in western society. Are we all happy as a result? No.

Much of the misery in the world is caused by other people. No matter how much wonderful technology we have, human nature doesn't change. People will always be greedy, irrational, and basically selfish; millions will always suffer because others choose to wield their power in an unenlightened way. Now one can argue about whether life is, on the whole, good or bad, or whether the good things in the world outweigh the bad ones in it. But don't think that the overall balance of human happiness is going to change much in the future. It never has before.
Well, of course not everyone will always be totally happy. It's a useful evolutionary trait to be dissatisfied by default: it fuels survival and development. And there's the fact that we don't really comprehend how hard life used to be in the ancient ages. If someone were transported to live as a medieval peasant for a while from his boring corporate job, he'd jump back behind that desk full of hurrahs for the modern wonders of life, I'm sure. And conversely, if a medieval peasant was somehow trained to use computers, or even to work modern farming tools - he'd be all smiles and say things like "You're kidding right? You have time for BREAKS? You EAT THIS GOOD EVERY DAY and you dare COMPLAIN about it??? I wish God would strike you down, you lazy b-tards!". Overall, I think we in the West complain way too much relative to our situation (not that there's nothing to complain about, but put into perspective, our troubles are small compared to the 3rd world and especially past ages.).

Also, with the nanomachines thingy, I was addressing Gary Childress' anxiety over us eating animals. That source of unhappiness at least would be eliminated. But even now one can limit oneself to plants if he so wishes; I don't think eating them can be considered immoral under any system, unless you eat the last plant on Earth that others would've needed for survival.
 
In fact, medieval peasants had more days off than we do, so they would hardly envy us our amount of leisure time.

No-one would deny that material prosperity has, overall, increased (even if it hasn't increased for everyone). And I certainly don't think that people were happier in the past or that most people would be happier were they to be transported to the past. What I'm denying is that people are happier now than they were in the past, or that they are bound to become happier in the future.
 
Yeah, right. In the 1950s they said housewives would be liberated by household gadgets that would do all the work for them. Now we have dishwashers, washing machines, microwave ovens and who knows what else. Is there less work to do around the house? Are people happier? Of course not.

In the seventeenth century, Descartes thought that once medical science had advanced to the stage where the most common diseases such as smallpox were eradicated, everyone would be happy - a view which shows just how ill everyone was back then. Now we've eradicated smallpox and most of the diseases which ravaged the world back then - at least in western society. Are we all happy as a result? No.

Much of the misery in the world is caused by other people. No matter how much wonderful technology we have, human nature doesn't change. People will always be greedy, irrational, and basically selfish; millions will always suffer because others choose to wield their power in an unenlightened way. Now one can argue about whether life is, on the whole, good or bad, or whether the good things in the world outweigh the bad ones in it. But don't think that the overall balance of human happiness is going to change much in the future. It never has before.

In fact, medieval peasants had more days off than we do, so they would hardly envy us our amount of leisure time.

No-one would deny that material prosperity has, overall, increased (even if it hasn't increased for everyone). And I certainly don't think that people were happier in the past or that most people would be happier were they to be transported to the past. What I'm denying is that people are happier now than they were in the past, or that they are bound to become happier in the future.

Agreed and agreed. Well-being is not readily modeled. Material wealth and surplus generated through great works can be said to have overall increased, but if we take a look at per capita happiness as a function of want, then we would presume that people with less are less happy than those of us with more. From that standpoint, prior to the Industrial Era entirely, opulence was in the hands of the few, but even that manner of means was not what is available to millionaires today.

For relativity sake, if we consider a person that "has everything" is at 0 happiness (since this is relative, this does NOT mean they are unhappy or even apathetic, just a starting point) and someone with very little is less happy based on the difference in their situations, we can try to take an average of all people in all places at all times. The number of people has INCREASED so we can't take this as an absolute factor. But if we take the average, we will note that, in fact, "progress" benefits the few while it leaves the many as they are with a lag time and therefore "progress" and the creation of "want" is inherently subversive to the function of happiness. Unless we distribute benefit/wealth to the multitudes quickly and efficiently, then we are in fact less happy as a people even if certain individuals are found to be better off.

Human nature is prone to jealousy and prone to selfishness. While the plight of the poorest today may be better than the poorest in a previous age, their expectations for what others receive have increased. Ignorance is bliss, and if they didn't know about Hollywood, fast cars, and computers, they might be better off. As it is, delivering laptops to children in Africa TODAY instead of 15 years ago is evidence that we can't close the happy gap as fast as we can widen it.

:scan:If we consider the future, it really all depends on human activity today. If we consciously decided to stop making pills to make a man larger (for those willing to pay for it) and instead focused on making vaccines and hospitals with current technology available to third world countries, we might create an overall happiness benefit. Unfortunately, there is a greater value assigned to "absolute progress" than to "humanity's progress."

Note: I am not a philosopher and I, in general, detest intellectual snobbery. However, I prescribe to a social science (economics) and I love intellectual discussion and debate.
 
I love reading your posts, Plotinus. You should write a book or something.
He has written five, IIRC. If you pm him, he might pass along titles and links to them at Amazon.

1) What do you think of Alan Watts? I.e., how "respected" is he, where is he coming from (he is a Zen Buddhist no?), how would you sum up his views in one sentence, etc.
Alan Watts' "Way of Zen" had a huge influence on me in college. Great book.

What I'm denying is that people are happier now than they were in the past, or that they are bound to become happier in the future.
QFT

Our egos and desires are powerful forces that drive us to accomplish things while at the same time they create unhappiness and dissatisfaction. If you want to be happier, work better, want less.
 
Our egos and desires are powerful forces that drive us to accomplish things while at the same time they create unhappiness and dissatisfaction. If you want to be happier, work better, want less.

:applause:
 
"What is reality?"

As a philosopher, how would you answer such a question?
Well, I won't speak for Fifty, but my father's answer when a student asked him this was "Stop paying your rent and you'll see what reality is."
 
QFT

Our egos and desires are powerful forces that drive us to accomplish things while at the same time they create unhappiness and dissatisfaction. If you want to be happier, work better, want less.

Bravo indeed. This ties in well with my own current conservatism and what I've been saying in the Politics 101 thread. Also if we constantly look forward to the future as the great boon that will finally and resolutely make our lives better I think we miss a chance to relish the present.
 
That's a very good answer. :clap: Is your father a philosophy professor?
He was, but he found, somewhat before he was up for tenure, that he had nothing more to say in his area of specialty. So now he's a very idealistic and rigorous university administrator.
 
Kant, and particularly the Critique of Pure Reason.
 
Wow, people... And I thought I was cynical. Well here's some further thoughts on the matter:

Have you seen any documentaries lately? I watched one about, among other things, an African man who was trapped in a pit that was used as a toilet by the local militia soldiers for weeks. He was rescued then but he never knew the rescue was coming and he had to eat and drink what was... down there all time. You'd think he was a human wreck by the time they got him out of there, especially since the militia threatened to kill him every time they 'did their business' over him. But no - he smiles in a peculiar way I've seen in no Westerner, answers something like "Of course I was terrified; it was terrible. But that's life. What can you do, man?". It was not a defeated man's smile, not some last ditch effort to be human, as you might suspect.

Now that is an anecdote, but third world people often display the same kind of attitude (from documentaries I've watched). They have a sort of healthy fatalism, but at the same time clear goals (western life while keeping local values) and a sense of community around them (family, tribe). The only thing lacking is a clear way to their goal, which is the main cause of struggle (in areas without hunger; in hunger areas it's a struggle for survival). These are animated, motivated people full of feeling and grace in adversity, displaying the best human qualities. There is usually not a shred of the Western apathy characterized best by the phrase "meh... whatever", on the net and among teenagers. Such people would be laughed out to die in any really poor country.

What am I saying with all this? Yes, you're right, matter by itself doesn't bring happiness, and too much of it can even take it away. People in the West have all that they need for living in reasonable luxury (historically at least); the more stuff they buy beyond that, the less it all seems worth and the emptier their hearts and apartments begin to seem. Most who have slaved their entire lives in corporate jobs don't even know their families all that well (this has become a cliché due to countless movies, but it's true at least here in Finland). Life seems to lack goals; most take the easy way out of their brain and drink themselves to pieces every weekend and watch tv all their free time. My parents have not read a single book in decades... All they read is the local newspaper and Reader's Digest. They never miss an episode of Bold and the Beautiful; after all it's easier to watch someone like that on tv than to become like it yourself.

As for the peasant thing: the peasant may have had more breaks (though I doubt it was always so; what about the serfs or slaves?), but he could potentially be dragged off to war, killed by some local hotshot lord with no big consequences, done in by hideous diseases (with the medication often being more deadly than the disease), etc. And what's worse, the work was back-breaking with no prospects of significant change (due to stringent social classes). If he had known about our comparative paradise, he would've wondered what we're :):):):):)ing about. Maybe he'd have shifted his opinion after a decade or so of our life, I'm not sure. But in the south of Finland (Inkeri) there were areas where the people worked so hard that there was hardly enough time for women to give birth. So they had special criers to cry for those who had no time for it. I'm sure such people would've loved to live in our times, apathy and moral decay or not.

When we get to the stars, humanity will have new goals once again. I'm hoping if I ever have children, that they could be among that generation already. Once we drag a few asteroids into orbit to give everyone everything-a-plenty, we can build more ships and try to colonize the local planets. Why, you ask? It's human, to strive for better things through difficulty. I've always despised the zen-types singing in their caves about 'Onenness' with this or that or everything. Guess what? You were saved by egoists' medicines. To call the great and the good all a vanity - which in the end it is ofc - is simply not seeing the point of humanity (imo). It's not about the goal, although you must always have one. It's about the journey. Once the Solar System is taken, we shall vie for Alpha Centauri. Perhaps other dimensions can be found, too, to be explored by humans. I pray that it never ends until the last star has its last nuclear breath. Then we can all say like this great man at the end of this great video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deV68rbsNyQ (Skips to 6:35 if you wish, but no harm in watching the whole thing - or the series it's from; it's the best miniseries ever made imo.)
 
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