Sorry for the delay.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:No, I don't.
I address why I do throughout the post.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Sure, if it is an individual.
Which it usually is.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:I don't recall agreeing with that, but if I did, I no longer do. By choosing to engage in ineffective altruism, you choose to not dedicate the time and resources spent on said ineffective altruism on effective altruism, amoral actions, ineffective evil, and effective evil. Choosing ineffective altruism is certainly better than amoral actions, ineffective evil, and effective evil, but inferior to effective altruism.
I said, "First of all, I don't think that most people aren't deciding between giving to a soup kitchen and a homeless person."
You replied, "
That's true, but its besides the point. I was trying to demonstrate how the empathetic person would give to the homeless man, but the reasonable man would give to the soup kitchen or animal charity. The former being less effective altruism than the latter."
You seemed to be saying you agreed most people aren't deciding between effective and ineffective altruism, but that ideally we should practice effective altruism (which I completely agree with).
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:By giving to that old homeless man she is gambling for positive consequences. Given our current knowledge of said homeless man, we can't be sure what he'll do with the money. If he is going to use it to eat, he'll probably go buy some meaty junk food, increasing the demand for animal products, harming animals.
I value the homeless person over the animals.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Or maybe he'll use it to pay for his drug addiction, which will increase the demand for illegal drugs, allowing drug cartels to harm people.
Maybe.
It's not really relevant, though- this one particular example says nothing about whether or not empathy overall is bad.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Let's instead assume that the woman gives the homeless man ten dollars worth of healthy vegan food (beans, veggies, whole grains) in order to guarantee that the woman is producing a positive consequence, which is probably what you intended. Also, like you said, if she doesn't give the homeless man anything, then she spends her ten dollars on a hat. Given this information, it is best for the woman to be empathetic and feed the homeless man, because it is the best possible altruism she can practice. However, if the woman was motivated by reason and a desire to practice effective altruism, she could instead donate her ten dollars to Mercy for Animals and get the most bang for her buck in terms of altruism.
Most people don't care around ten dollars worth of healthy vegan food, and giving it to the homeless man would involve empathy (presumably), so I don't really see your point here.
As for the donation to Mercy for Animals- most people weren't going to donate to Mercy for Animals anyway; they were going to do nothing. Giving it to the homeless man doesn't subtract a strong good and add a little good, creating a smaller net good. It adds a little good to a net neutral, producing a net good.
Also, even if empathy did create smaller net goods, that wouldn't make it bad- it would still make it good, just not very good.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Maybe its better for emotionally driven people, like this woman, to practice empathy in order to get them to practice the bare minimum of altruism, but for reasonable people who want to be as moral as practicable, empathy should not be a guiding force.
I agree that empathy shouldn't be a guiding force.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Maybe. More information to verify this would be best.
Seeing pictures of Syrian refugees humanizes the situation, even if you don't see them all.
It's completely different from vague numbers of 'collateral damage'.
At least, that's the case for me. And studies about similar things suggest this is the case for most people.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:I don't think your comparison works. I'm a homosexual, and none of my friends seem any more interested in participating in gay rights events after meeting and getting to know me (to be fair, neither am I).
I didn't just pull that out of the air; studies prove that meeting gay people makes you more supportive of gay rights.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COLGHwZ1wdA
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:This is only true if morality is arbitrary and relative.
Maybe it's not clear what I'm trying to say here.
All I'm saying is that reason doesn't necessarily lead to good moral decisions, because you can use logic to do immoral things.
Something can be logical in terms of helping your personal pleasure but still be immoral.
Reason is a tool we should use to determine what is most moral based on compassion (or caring about the interests of others), but reason alone isn't something that necessarily leads to a positive moral outcome.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:I think you agree that science and reason are the only accurate means of determining objective truth.
Are you counting philosophy as reason?
If so, I agree.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:Why should anyone care about being altruistic if morality is not based on objective truth (which can only be found using science and reason)?
Give me an example of a situation in which you think morality is based on reason and science, and I'll try to explain how I think there's more to it.
Cirion Spellbinder wrote:People who use reason to do evil things only do so by making some unsubstantiated beforehand, rendering their reasoning fallacious and untrue. Maybe a murder would justify their actions in this way:
I think we're talking about different things here.
I'm not talking about justification; I'm saying that
morally unjustifiable actions can be taken for logical reasons based on selfishness (among other things).
I'm not saying that basing morality on reason and science renders those actions moral.