What if they did, and it were narrowed down enough to see substantial overlap?Mr. Purple wrote: The remaining ideas(maybe hundreds) that are logically coherent may have nothing to do with each other. It seems like most likely there wouldn't be any overlap between all possible moral ideas.
Most notions you will find more of a cluster with overlaps.Mr. Purple wrote: In the case of the two you presented, they are direct negations of each other, so it already seems like the overlap idea would fail without even needing to find all the other coherent moral ideas.
As direct negations of each other with no overlap, those two represent different islands: one is morality, and the other the opposite; anti-morality, immorality, evil. I don't see how this would be semantically confusing, indeed, it's necessary. Concepts frequently have opposites, and morality always will: doing the precise opposite of what is prescribed in order to be good.
You will not likely find any consequential prescription without an opposite.
So either you're claiming morality doesn't exist/is entirely subjective due to your problems with the duality of good and evil, or you have to accept than we are intrinsically dealing with two diametric concepts here.
Is your problem deciding which one is morality and which is anti-morality, or is your problem that you think they're both morality (or could be)? Do you reject the idea that there could be an opposite to a concept that is properly defined as the opposite concept?
Because you accused me of straw manning egoism. I didn't, you're using the word incorrectlyMr. Purple wrote: I don’t see how what these supposed “ Real egoists” think matters for this discussion
http://www.iep.utm.edu/egoism/ (I think you linked to this site before, so I don't understand why you wouldn't have read this)
We're talking about the normative form, as they say. I don't really like that whole article either, but they get the basics right at least.In philosophy, egoism is the theory that one’s self is, or should be, the motivation and the goal of one’s own action. Egoism has two variants, descriptive or normative. The descriptive (or positive) variant conceives egoism as a factual description of human affairs. That is, people are motivated by their own interests and desires, and they cannot be described otherwise. The normative variant proposes that people should be so motivated, regardless of what presently motivates their behavior.
It's as if I summarized that Christians believe in the Bible/Jesus, and you claimed I'm straw manning because Christians believe in the Qur'an and Muhammad and that the Bible is flawed.
There may be some fringe group identifying as Christians who believe the latter, but the former description is accurate.
Definitions are important, particularly if you're going to accuse somebody as you did. If you don't know what egoists actually believe in practice, or even what the definitions in philosophical dictionaries say, you have no place to accuse me of making a straw man of egoism.
What you defined is not egoism, it's something else aside from that. Call it "hedonistic egoism" if you want, some special variation that combines the two descriptive and normative forms into meaninglessness, or arbitrarily mandates pleasure worship. I suspect you were confusing psychological egoism and 'ethical egoism'.
I already explained at some length the problem of attempting to combine the two, though.
These are not all deductive logic, which supersedes pretty much everything else, but they are based on reasoning.Mr. Purple wrote: but many bedrock philosophical ideas(like mathematics, induction, occam's razor) are still justified with intuition at their root, so i’m not sure why you are setting up logic and intuition as if they were a dichotomy.
Mathematics is actually axiomatic and based on the laws of identity, and functions with logical consistency (things that are not are undefined and not used); it derives no authority from intuition, and is frequently counter intuitive.
In the case of Occam's razor, an idea with fewer assumptions is more likely to be true, because with each additional assumption there's a certain functional probability of being false.
Logical induction is the most intuitive of all of them, and the least reliable; yet it still does inform from probability. If you observe a certain number of things which have certain properties, it's likely that these are emergent from some higher law and that you will continue to observe things consistent with this. People don't think that way, but it's not granted authority from intuition; the probability it yields is based on reasoning and empirical analysis.
Those things are not founded upon, and do not derive authority from, intuition.Mr. Purple wrote: In the same way that intuition is used for these while still being considered logical and rational, it doesn’t seem irrational that morality could require an intuitive foundation as well ( except for those you actually do manage to prove contradictions in).
That said, if you use formal deductive logic (or mathematics where it applies) and you run out of things to narrow down, then you apply Occam's razor and you're still left with multiple options, at that point you're out of rational ways to narrow down your options. If you find yourself in such a situation, go ahead an use "intuition", or flip a coin, or guess by some other means; they're all about equally useful, depending on who you are. Some people may have slightly better intuitions than a coin flip, many have worse.
Simple: Those do not derive authority from intuition. Your assertions about that are just wrong.Mr. Purple wrote: You have to show what is fundamentally different about the intuition used to justify the truth of math, induction, or occam's razor that doesn't apply to the silly foundations of god or magic.
If you seriously don't understand how mathematics are more credible than religion then you should start another thread on this, because that's something I can't get into here. This is already a mess.
I'm saying this is not the place to discuss it.Mr. Purple wrote: I'm sure there is a better answer to this than just telling me to step in line or you will ban me.
We're already off topic. Nobody wants to read three pages of me explaining to you why math is better than religion.
Meaningful period, not just to me. That's not consistent with the purpose of a definition, which is to provide information. A tautology does nothing in this regard.Mr. Purple wrote: Meaningful to you and logically consistent are two different things.
It is logically inconsistent with the premise of a definition, which you implicitly accept when you claim to be defining something.
I thought I already did and it was obvious. Tautologies are not definitions.Mr. Purple wrote: You can’t just say it’s inconsistent, you have to show where the logical inconsistency is.
An answer must be consistent with the premises in the question.
A definition must define.
When we're talking about judgement, yes.Mr. Purple wrote: Does functional meaning refer to morality that is “Within our control”? Even if the only metric being measured is a being's propensity towards accidents being considered wrong, that doesn’t mean the moral system is logically inconsistent, it just might make it seem silly to us personally.
Within your control up to the edge of your existential self; up to (but not including) your core motivations.
When we deal with these topics, we're actually getting into the metaphysics of self.
We can also talk about functional application.
Judgement of events or outcomes is different, but it makes more sense to call them bad/undesirable or good/desirable rather than moral or immoral.
If it's wrong to shoot somebody, and you're forcefully strapped (unable to move on your own, and unable to escape or change your fate by any means) into a robotic arm which aims your hand, gun bolted in place, at somebody and forces your finger to pull the trigger with some actuator, and the person is shot, did you act wrongly in that?Mr. Purple wrote: Why did you add “Within our control” as a necessary component to morality? When asking “ What is a good or bad action?” It doesn’t seem necessary to include this.
Maybe you fucked up somewhere along the road to end up in that position, but in that isolated event, did you do anything wrong?
If every human being were forced to do the right thing, questions of moral judgement would become meaningless here.Mr. Purple wrote: Morality could be independent of whether any humans ever do the right thing or if every human must do the right thing and still could be logically consistent.
We could only speak hypothetically of beings with the ability to do wrong.
It's not a form of egoism, it's something you came up with; some bizarre cult of pleasure worship.Mr. Purple wrote: Hedonistic egoism, which is the only form of egoism I have voluntarily brought up, seems to even fit your extra criteria of “within our control” though, so i’m not seeing where hedonistic egoism is inconsistent even by your standards.
And it's NOT in our control if you believe in psychological egoism, which you seem to (which does have hedonistic and non-hedonistic variations, but hedonistic prevails since the non-hedonistic ones are tautological).
Two remaining systems, in that case. And no, they're both systems. They can not both be properly called "moral" though. One is moral, and one is immoral. Those are the words that fit them. You are in no way compelled to choose one over the other. Do you want to be good or evil?Mr. Purple wrote: You seem to be making it clear here that the final popular opinion choice between the many remaining systems has nothing to do with one being any more true than the other.
It's practical advice for using words correctly.Mr. Purple wrote: It’s just practical advice for not confusing people,
The semantics of what we label what only comes in after we're done with using deductive logic, and possibly Occam's razor.
One is correct if your goal is to be evil, one is correct if your goal is to be good. These have no power of compulsion unless a person was already trying to be good or evil, already valued morality or immorality in principle, and then only to course correct.Mr. Purple wrote:but It seems like if it was true that #2 was the correct set of actions,
We can try to encourage people to be good or evil, but logic does not compel people to value anything at all; it just tells them when their values are inconsistent.