- Apr 5, 2007
- 25,452
- 805
- 73
- Country
- United States
- Faith
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
Our behaviors are guided by telos to an extent, I'm not saying otherwise, except that our telos should be dynamic. We shouldn't have one end goal in mind and dismiss any other as insufficient or unnecessary. If my overall goal in my life is to help the world and improve our state of knowledge/wisdom about some subject, then that's what will motivate me.
And now you're just getting into meta ethical questions. Determining what good is doesn't necessarily require a teleological model. Nor does determining why you should be good require an end goal in mind.
A general principle of the Golden Rule would suffice in itself as to why one should be good by virtue of sympathy and mutual understanding. You don't need any goal necessarily to see why you should be good. But you don't need to know exactly what your future is in order to still have some goal in mind.
There are many good things. However, some good things could be situational and some bad things are not always bad. That adds many confusions. For example, I could try to become a perfect cheater, so I can benefit myself, and all the have-nos, by take a little bit from the haves.
A goal dependent evaluation could make the judgment easier. So a goal is critical in telling good from bad. Also, good things are timeless. So a good goal should also be timeless. If the perfect cheater dies, the have-nos still exist and the haves will also exist. Nothing will be changed. So, the goal is not good enough. Human history proves that again and again.
The goal set by Christianity is a perfect one. It is focused and is timeless, It is wide, complete, achievable and structurally accomplished.
Upvote
0