His Kant-like contribution? If there was one to be had it would probably be that all things considered, none of us should be too certain of ourselves ... (There. I just saved you an hours worth of reading ... lol!)
Funny...yeah his noumenon.
Since you referenced him first I expected he had some big contribution to ethics I'm unaware of. Maybe not as big as Kants noumenon but if there's a significant contribution just simplify it down as much as possible.
The human mental of identification and categorization.
Which is "distinction" and related to perception.
Notice, though...... I didn't say it stems from "the Bible."
That's fine.
Wherever I may roam ... I'm an Existentialist, not a Fundamentalist nor a Foundationalist. However, if I was to posit sort of practical starting point for my own personal engagement with Ethics, it'd probably be Barbara J. King's book, Evolving God, but not for theological reasons
Existentialism is a broad category as its name implies. I've found it asks interesting questions but often dwells upon them without any movement towards understanding. It's like a strict materialist and a brilliant apologist arguing over the existence of free will. It's possibly a very interesting discussion...and almost certainly without any meaningful resolution even if one could prove their argument. It's a very low stakes victory.
So when you say you're an Existentialist, it's so unlikely that whatever that means to you is what it means to me.
Sure. I can agree with that. But then we get in the whole Ends VS. Means thing which can then be thrown into relief against the IS-Ought distinction of Hume. Or just throw Hume against Kant. It gets fun. It also ends up going nowhere for all of us.
There's that Existentialist....that's the identifying feature I find familiar lol.
So, then we employ governments to help make our decisions 'for us.' (That's meant to be a bit of humor ...)
As a member of the federal government I'm glad to be of service. No thanks necessary.
Oh....you still don't get me, I see. No, it's not a case of the 'theist' saying to the atheist. I'm an Exisentialist. Think of me as a person who wakes up each day and sees essentially the same thing the atheist does. I just "think" something different as I work through the facts of life ... and oncoming death.
@2PhiloVoid I promise...despite whatever people say of themselves...I assume everyone an atheist until they display a true act of faith.
Think of me as a kind of Carl Sagan who swallows Pascal's pill ... for whatever relief that offers.
Is that how you see yourself? Think of me as Dioginese, easily tearing apart ideas...but fully aware that is a pale shadow to constructing them. I know the vastness of my ignorance and prefer to hide what I see as true. I see no one saying what I think. I see little which appears to me wise. It seems I might be dumb but honest enough with myself to suspect it....or perhaps smart and greedily keeping the little truths I know like a pile of gold that I don't want anyone to know.
When no one really says the things you think it's difficult to tell.
I don't know what you are. Only you know. But as Winston might have said, "... I wish I could know."
Yeah the label was a spontaneous self referential joke. I hold so few principles that they're hard to cohere into a descriptive label.
Yep. We studied that issue a little back in Medical Ethics class. Being that it was 2003 or so, I don't think we got into how it might apply to the issue of "helping transgender folks." I don't plan on getting into that issue really. Neither here nor there.
Recent advancements. Not important. Just an example.
Sure. But I'd say that Ethics is our 'attempt' at truth.
What truth are we trying to approach?
I feel as if I can describe behavior truthfully....but it's not an ethical description.
That's all truth ever really is since and shouldn't be confused with Reality in-as-such.
Sure, whatever it is we believe we apprehend...it is incomplete and even if it is complete, there is no means for knowing that.
He'll try, but at the point after his Discourse on Method and he begins to try to "tell us", that's when I begin to ignore him and start walking the Existential path in a Pascal leaning kind of way. Pascal disagreed with Descartes on the whole epistemological "building project" as such. So do I.
It seems an unavoidable project.
Sure. There's always the risk of Epistemological Trespassing, and all of us have to be wary of that. Unless we're in power ... lol!
Again, it seems to me an unavoidable project....if you believe that ethics are founded on truth. I would describe ethics as related to truth...in many ways...but not really an explanation of truth or exploration of it. Maybe I can show you what I mean.
Well, that makes two of us. Because, you see, I only value the style of philosophy that majors in analytic evaluation, not in gross speculation.
I wouldn't recommend the pursuit of truth to anyone. It's a vain endeavor that doesn't necessarily result in knowledge of value. We aren't neutral beings in our relationship with truth. Some things may be true, and appear to be potentially catastrophic to reveal....and if so, one should not speak it.
Why would I find this insulting? ... do this. Consider the inverted meaning of my use of Ghost Rider. Then maybe you'll realize that on some levels, you and I are not so different. We just come at some of the same goals via different angles and concepts.
What makes a great philosopher? That's a question that goes with so many others. Personally, I don't think any one philosopher provides all the answers. At best, one philosopher has a few good ideas; another one over there has a few more. Yet another over yonder provides a good counterpoint to these two and a fourth (or more) might get at an issue in a way the others don't.
I will say this: I'm no fan of Hegel or Heidegger.
I'd agree with you to some extent with what you've said here, but for different reasons since on Existentialism isn't another Existentialism. Kierkegaard isn't Niezsche, Camus isn't Heiddeger, and Sartre isn't Tillich or Jaspers or Pascal. Not that you need to care, but there are differences among the similarities.
Sure. I don't care. There's smart men there, but they inevitably express stupid things. There's stupid men there who may accidentally say something smart.
It's a group of people who may or may not have useful knowledge, who may or may not pontificate endlessly on pointless questions. I'm aware some philosophers believe, for example, it more likely we live in a simulation of sorts....and probably can make a strong argument for it. Yet even if they could convince me, I don't see how it would change my perspective on anything except add a vague layer of extra uncertainty. All in all, even if convinced, I would have to guess that the only way to incorporate such uncertainty is to...ignore it. I can't know what to question, but still have to proceed in the simulation as if it were reality. In the end, despite it being a profound change in perspective, it tells me nothing about how to engage with reality, and therefore I can only ignore it.
I don't even bother looking up who these philosophers are lol...I mean, who is reading their work and why?
I threw Kant at you since I assumed like every other philophile you were at least familiar with his work. Do you know his "peering through the keyhole" passage?
Yeah. And the continual turning we could do, we end up justifying the premise of this thread. And I appreciate you're being an accomplice in that endeavor. Lol!
Nobody else seemed to be saying much lol.
They do since each Ethical position may (and can be) at odds with some of the others. It's not as if they all have the same moral goals.
You think the goals are moral ones?
I could probably start building an ethical framework for advertising for example. If I were to try and base it on morality though.....any advertiser would almost certainly fail if they followed it.
agreed.
Ohhhhhhh..... that sounds rather Machiavellian. I'm not sure making "the point" in that way leads to accuracy or truth in human, international relations.
No word more dubiously contradictory than "Machiavellian". We describe cunning, immoral, strategic plotters this way....yet Niccolo himself gives away his entire strategy, and pragmatic nature of political power, to anyone who cares to read it. It's about the least Machiavellian thing he could have done.
Again, consider an ethics for advertising built upon morality. I would build mine as a guide for achieving the telos of advertising itself as I see it, based upon pragmatic considerations.
If we each had an advertising company, do you think yours would compete with mine? If so....why? If not....what exactly was the point of the ethical framework? And I'll just concede yours may be more moral, more honest, less manipulative, and more "good" in other ways we might agree. I can't imagine though, that would matter to many except for you....and your employees would find a more secure future working for me once you're out of business lol.
A moral car salesman may not be ripping off customers....but he certainly takes more than the car is worth. Perhaps he only gains much from the very wealthy....but it's not exactly a moral endeavor in my mind. He trades a depreciating asset for more than its worth. It's a tricky negotiation.
With that in mind, he's going to sell more if the customer wants the regardless of value. Advertisers who do that will inevitably succeed. Advertisers who...I don't know....focus on important things about the vehicle and try to honestly inform you of comparative value will fail imo. That doesn't mean lying is required but honesty instead of emotional manipulation doesn't seem to work. If it did, I'd propose we'd see a lot of very honest advertising. I'm not exactly sure what a morally derived ethical framework for advertising even looks like other than one that drives the Advertiser out of business. If you think people generally don't want to be told what to buy, talk to anyone who sells something expensive.
Sure. That's to be expected.
I'm not sure what way to ask this again without repeating myself so or getting some reading homework back from you...so let's start with what I think we agree on so far....
1. Ethics describes behavior in some way.
2. There is at least some overlap with moral descriptions of behavior.
3. Ethical frameworks or models are typically created for specific roles and the behavior those roles engage in.
If we agree on this, when I ask what your starting point for ethics is I am asking what is it you consider when constructing an ethical model? Your morals? What you think the morals of a particular role should be? Something about truth? Please don't give me a book lol. Even if I did read it, it seems rather hopeful I'd understand where you're coming from.