RE: What is GOOD?
March 5, 2013 at 8:27 pm
(This post was last modified: March 5, 2013 at 8:33 pm by genkaus.)
(March 4, 2013 at 7:54 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: Empathy and reason are the means to a achieve a desired end, not the end in themselves.Within the naturalist paradigm both empathy and reason are happy by-products of an indifferent evolutionary process. Human reason serves as a fancy set of claws and fangs. Empathy perhaps a type of protective herd behaviour. They're about survival nothing more, nothing less. Reason and empathy are morally neutral means of survival. They do not conform to any higher moral standard.
What is actually being said here is that empathy and/or reason dictate a moral standard - not conform to one. Further, it'd be foolish to assume a higher moral standard without first establishing a standard moral standard to be higher from.
(March 4, 2013 at 7:54 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: Within naturalism that is...And if naturalism is your assumption then it is inconsistent to say that either empathy or reason allow us to rise above our animal nature. Rise above? To what?
To human nature. The most significant and defining distinction between humans and other animals is our extraordinary capacity to use reason to such an extent. That is what separates us from animals - the capacity to reflect upon our intentions, our goals and our actions. If, as you say, survival is what matters to a living entity, then the boost given by that capacity to reason is enormous and therefore it would be considered above other animals.
(March 4, 2013 at 7:54 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: Either the answer is within naturalism, which it isn't since all that matters is survival, or they, empathy and reason, converge on a specific end, which implies that evolution is teleological, something excluded from the neo-Darwinist paradigm.
The mistake here would be thinking that if anything is teleological then there must be an intelligence behind it. Simply put, it'd be a matter of the angle you are looking at it from. For example, if you see a tree as a system then everything in it does perform a specific function towards specific goals. In that sense, there is a specific purpose behind each sub-system. But to assume that this implies a specific intelligence within each system or even a central intelligence would be incorrect.
(March 4, 2013 at 7:54 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: The question, I think, we must ask ourselves is this. What is the ultimate goal? What is the good that we hope to attain by applying reason and listening to empathy. And what is it that makes it good? Apart from the means, empathy and reason, what is the desired end?
The ultimate goal - if anything can be referred to as such - would be determined by the defining trait or set of traits of humanity. While it is not firmly established what these might be, some indications are given by psychological research into the subject, such as Manfred Max-Neef model of Fundamental Human Needs or Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs.
The distinction between humans and other animals becomes even more pronounced given the study of these facets of humanity. The animal needs usually stop at the basic physiological and safety level, while human needs go way beyond that - indicating the qualitative difference between basic survival and a life fully lived. And while it is not established, these are the needs you'd expect of a rational biological entity. Further, these traits would be such a basic and objective aspect of human nature that it would be incorrect to reduce them to simple desires or subjective wants.
It'd also be incorrect to regard these as good or bad. The primary choice of whether or not to act according to those traits (or work towards the goals) would be amoral. But, given that they are part of your nature, that would be an irrational choice.
(March 4, 2013 at 8:46 pm)whateverist Wrote: I'm much more concerned that we live up to what is best in our animal nature than that we rise 'above' it. Excessive rationalization can disorientate us from our very natural better lights.
And how do you determine what is best or better part of your animal nature without the use of reason? The little bird again?
(March 4, 2013 at 8:46 pm)whateverist Wrote: Must it explain our actual behavior, our feelings about that behavior or what our behavior should be explained only by its alignment with some absolute standard.
Not necessarily absolute, but there is a need for an objective and justifiable standard. Otherwise you acting on the feelings of your empathy is no more moral than a rapist acting on the feelings of lust or hate.