To define good and evil based on pleasure and suffering is moral equivocation because we can imagine many scenarios where pleasure and suffering would amoral or where suffering would be good and pleasure would be evil.
I didn't say "pleasure". I said
well-being.
For instance, a person falling and scraping their knee. There would be no moral significance to that suffering.
Derp. Because it's an accident, not the result of a decision or action.
Now, if someone would
push a person, causing him to fall and hurt themselves, that's another story.
Also, a person who decides not to have children because it would be painful or a person who decides not to have children because it would impinge on their free-time for themselves.
What's wrong with that and how is it relevant to what we are talking about?
You are addressing a separate issue which is the foundation of moral duties & values. A lot of the things you list are morally good, but they have no objective foundation from the view of an atheist (as you admit). It doesn't sound like you have a problem with that as you admit that the spectrum of Harris' moral landscape is subjective.
Only insofar as the premises go of what the words "good" and "evil" mean. Once we agree on those definitions, we can easily make
objective evaluations of actions to label them good or bad.
So, do you agree with the premises?
Here they are again:
- good: those actions and decisions that maximize well-being of sentient creatures
- bad: those actions and decisions that increase suffereing of sentient creatures
Do you object to these definitions? If yes, why?
How would they have to change for you to agree to them?
This is another issue as on one hand you criticize people by saying "how one can have a conversation with someone concerning morality, if that person does not agree that well-being is preferable to suffering."
Well, yeah....
Indeed, how can one have a conversation about morality, if one can't even agree that "suffering = bad, well-being = good"??
It's a serious question. I would like to have an answer.
and on the other hand you agree that Sam Harris' moral landscape is subjective.
No, I said it is
pseudo-objective. It is objective insofar as we can objectively evaluate actions and decisions in moral terms. The "pseudo" is about what the intended goals of the moral system are. And those goals are: more well-being, less suffering.
Again: why is this a problem?
The premises, furthermore, are only subjective for the simple reason that they are human ideas. We don't find these definitions under a rock. We
concluded that well-being is better then suffering, simply from experience.
Just look around: nations with higher well-being and minimized suffering do
better in all aspects then nations where it is the other way round.
Example nations with maximised well being and general rules of conduct that are geared towards maximising well-being and decreasing suffering:
- Sweden
- Finland
- Denmark
- ... (just about any western democracy, really)
Now, how about examples of the other way round? It's not dificult to come up with some examples. I'm sure you have already thought of a few:
- North Korea
- Afghanistan
- ... (just about any dictatorship, really)
So, in which of these countries would YOU want to live?
Again: what exactly is the problem?
You keep complaining, but you're not actually explaining what the problem is OR what the "correct" way would be then, in your opinion.
I'ld really like to know what it is, exactly, that you are objecting to.
Seems like a conundrum to me as you are affirming that any type of pleasure can occupy the peak of Sam Harris' moral landscape.
No, I never said that. See first line of this post. I didn't say "pleasure". I said "well-being".
Do you think that genocide is okay if it promotes the well being of future generations?
The problem with that "if", is that it simply isn't true in reality.
I don't see how genocide (= the indiscriminate killing of a large group of people based on some trait like skin color, religion, ethnicity, etc) could ever promote well-being. Today or in the future.
It's like saying "
if the eiffel tower was small enough, would it fit in your pocket?"
Well... yeah... but.... The eiffel tower isn't small enough........................................