Quote from: Meta Cognition on January 27, 2015, 07:10:48 PMThe ultimate ideal of human flourishing is merely a necessary one in order for any conception of morality to cognitively make sense. Whether or not we place different stock in different methods of reaching such a position is irrelevant to the existence of moral facts. For instance, anti-natalism isn't about the negation of flourishing. It's about the impossibility of flourishing, and the best form of flourishing being the complete negation of life. For instance, zero net flourishing is mathematically superior to negative-one-hundred flourishing.And is morality something we should follow or something that exists? Do we need to follow morality? Does morality need to exist?
The ultimate ideal of human flourishing is merely a necessary one in order for any conception of morality to cognitively make sense. Whether or not we place different stock in different methods of reaching such a position is irrelevant to the existence of moral facts. For instance, anti-natalism isn't about the negation of flourishing. It's about the impossibility of flourishing, and the best form of flourishing being the complete negation of life. For instance, zero net flourishing is mathematically superior to negative-one-hundred flourishing.
What exactly happens if we encounter another intelligent species? Would morality then change to account how humans should behave towards them? Or will it always be about humans rather than consciousness?
Quote from: Meta Cognition on January 27, 2015, 07:31:18 PMQuote from: Dustin' on January 27, 2015, 07:27:16 PMWhat exactly happens if we encounter another intelligent species? Would morality then change to account how humans should behave towards them? Or will it always be about humans rather than consciousness?It would depend on the experiential capacity of those aliens. They could have less, equal or more moral worth than us based on their capacity as conscious agents to experience and interact with reality.So if they have less consciousness than us, they're irrelevant. But if they have more, does that mean humans are irrelevant? That wouldn't make any sense if morality is supposed to tell us how we should act.
Quote from: Dustin' on January 27, 2015, 07:27:16 PMWhat exactly happens if we encounter another intelligent species? Would morality then change to account how humans should behave towards them? Or will it always be about humans rather than consciousness?It would depend on the experiential capacity of those aliens. They could have less, equal or more moral worth than us based on their capacity as conscious agents to experience and interact with reality.
Is it bad if people only cared about themselves?
Quote from: Meta Cognition on January 27, 2015, 07:43:57 PMQuote from: Dustin' on January 27, 2015, 07:41:08 PMIs it bad if people only cared about themselves?Not completely. This sort of 'bias of immediacy' towards our selves is pretty foundational to the stability of society. If you're a murderous psychopath, however, like Ted Bundy then you probably are acting in an immoral way--even if it largely isn't your fault.'Morality exists because it ultimately benefits everyone's conscious.' Is that a good way of seeing why morality ought to exist?
Quote from: Dustin' on January 27, 2015, 07:41:08 PMIs it bad if people only cared about themselves?Not completely. This sort of 'bias of immediacy' towards our selves is pretty foundational to the stability of society. If you're a murderous psychopath, however, like Ted Bundy then you probably are acting in an immoral way--even if it largely isn't your fault.