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Favorite Philosophers?
#41
RE: Favorite Philosophers?


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#42
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 9, 2017 at 6:11 am)possibletarian Wrote:
(December 8, 2017 at 1:31 pm)vulcanlogician Wrote: Let me play devil's advocate then. A woman is attacked by a rapist (who only intended to rape her--not kill her). She defends herself by shooting him in the head with a 38 special. Justified?

I know you used that simply as an example but it does highlight difficulty in cases like this, if someone were to attack me I have no idea what the intentions are, so by instinct I'm likely to assume the worse case scenario.  I remember a judge in the U.K. arguing that in the case of a shoplifter for instance, the theft actually took place the moment  a person decides to steal and reaches out for it, but of course not being privy to a persons thoughts means that you have to wait till it's obvious the person is not going to pay for it through actions in order to have a case in court.
This is fine of course when what we are talking about is a bar of chocolate, but if someone is under attack, they clearly cannot afford to wait for it to play out.

Good point.

But of course in Vulcanlogician's question to me he says that the rapist does 'only' intend to rape her. Not that he might have been wanting to steal her purse and we assume he wanted to rape her. But he did intend to rape her. And scare quotes because I don't see that as an 'only'. In many cases I think I'd rather be murdered than raped. Again, it depends.

I think shooting someone dead in the head when they may have only been stealing a purse would be very bad. Because I don't think theft is anywhere near as bad as rape or murder at all. But if someone is clearly trying to rape someone then despite it not being legally justified I think killing them instantly with a shot to the head is morally justified because I don't actually think that's as bad as rape, at least in most cases, morally speaking.

Of course if we also have to factor in the consequences of the woman going to jail for manslaughter and having that trauma on top of the attempted rape, then I guess it depends really. Depends whether however long she spent in jail when being a victim would cause her more suffering than the being raped would have. And despite the fact that all rape causes huge amounts of trauma I do think some rapes are even worse than others. Some are more violent than others, some last longer than others, etc.

I still wouldn't think she did anything wrong morally because I think in many cases rape is so traumatic that it's worse than death. Maybe it wouldn't be worse than death if the attempted rapist had survived and had painful brain damage for many years, but again, even then I'm not sure. My best guess is that the psychological trauma would be worse. After all, we can experience great amounts of pain without necessarily being miserable and we can experience great amounts of physical pleasure and still be miserable . . . so overall I'd say that psychological pain is worse. Which is one of the reasons why I think that I'd probably even rather experience painful brain damage than experience being raped. Although I wouldn't really like to choose either to be honest!

It's certainly possible to be a rape victim and go on to live a fulfulling life despite that trauma, thankfully. But sadly it is not always the case and some people never recover, and lives are ruined. Whereas if someone dies instantly they not only suffer less but they don't really have any life left for there to be anything to fulfill or suffer with. I think death is morally neutral if you put aside the other people who grieve for the dead person. And my guess is that 1. People are less likely to grieve huge amounts for a rapist. 2. Even grief over death of a loved one may not be as painful an experience as rape. I guess, again, that depends. It's certainly a different type of suffering I think. And the experience of losing a child is probably usually a more painful grief than the experience of losing a parent, for example.

This all depends really. But at the end of the day I'm going to say that whatever causes the most suffering overall is overall the most immoral consequence.
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#43
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
I've always failed to understand how I am responsible for the intentions of some other person.  The woman in the hypothetical above had no possible way of knowing that her assailant wasn't going to kill her.  I can't understand how she wouldn't be justified in shooting him. 

Let's try another:  My best mate Danny and I have a falling out.  Danny says that the next time he sees me, he going to cut my throat.  He goes round to all of our mutual acquaintances and tells them, 'The next time I see Boru, I'm going to cut his throat.'  He visits Big Mick's House O' Knives and purchases 'The Boru Throat Cutter Mark IV' knife, with optional eye gouging attachment.  He later sees me come out of a shop, draws the knife and screams, 'I'M GONNA CUT YOUR THROAT!!'.  He charges me, but I manage beat him to death with a cricket bat (like you do).  When the cops arrive, they find a note in Danny's pocket that reads, 'My intent is to just frighten Boru, not cut his throat.'

Should I be charged with a crime because I didn't know Danny's intentions?

Boru

addendum:  Any woman who kills the man who 'only' intends to rape her has my full support, whether or not she knows of his intentions beforehand.
‘But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods or no gods. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.’ - Thomas Jefferson
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#44
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 9, 2017 at 2:59 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: I've always failed to understand how I am responsible for the intentions of some other person.  The woman in the hypothetical above had no possible way of knowing that her assailant wasn't going to kill her.  I can't understand how she wouldn't be justified in shooting him. 

Yeah in real life we can't know the intentions.

It kind of depends if it is incredibly obvious he is just trying to grab her handbag or not.

If he clearly wants more than that then it's safe to assume the worst and shoot him dead, IMO.

But Vulcanlogician gave it to me on a silver platter because he straight out said in this hypothetical scenario that the person was intending to rape her.

He says he is 'only' intending to rape her, not murder her. She shoots him dead and is that justified. The short answer is: YES. And I don't know why he says 'only'. In many cases I think I'd rather be murdered.

Maybe not legally justified, but we're talking morally here. Not talking about what the law thinks. I don't think my answer is 'cold'. Or if it is I don't care. There's been a whole book out about how in many case empathy gets the morally wrong answer. *

I may lack empathy but I don't lack compassion. And perhaps my lack of empathy might make it more easy for me to clearly see who is suffering the most, in some cases, than if I relied on feeling the suffering that my emotions think the other person is feeling? I struggle to feel my own emotions let alone anyone else's (I'm very likely on the autistic spectrum and going to have my final testing soon). But I'm well aware that rape is a worse suffering than dying instantly from a handgun.

* https://www.amazon.co.uk/Against-Empathy...0062339338





I certainly don't agree with this guy completely though. Because I think there are morally rationally reasons for supporting people's intuition that helping the one rather than the many is better at least in some cases. I don't aggregate people together and treat them as one super being suffering tremendously, 1000 people suffering is just 1 person suffering from 1000 different perspectives. Perhaps a person begging on the streets is suffering more than ANYONE who gets killed by a typhoon will suffer no matter how large the group? Notice I say "anyone" rather than "everyone". Because only persons suffer, there is no super person known as "people". If 1000 people suffer identical amounts that's morally identical to me than if one of those people suffered that amount . . . but in reality no one suffers the same amount so the larger the group the greater the chance of greater suffering qualitatively. That's why quantity matters IMO. For probabilistic reasons. It doesn't matter in and of itself. 1000 people suffering is worse than 1 person suffering because the more people suffer the greater the likelihood that one of those people will suffer more [i]qualitatively[i]. So, quantity only matters indirectly.
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#45
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 8, 2017 at 1:15 pm)Hammy Wrote: By the way, I love how Dean Rickles explains something I already figured out myself all by myself! Big Grin :




I've listened to Dean Rickles in the past. Pretty impressive stuff, especially with regards to the various theories of time.
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#46
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 6, 2017 at 8:20 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote: Heraclitus.

Funny because he's the rival of my favorite philosopher Big Grin
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#47
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 6, 2017 at 8:20 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote: Heraclitus.

Didnt he say that everything is made of water?
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#48
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(December 8, 2017 at 7:19 am)vulcanlogician Wrote: I'm getting into Popper. I plan on reading his work in political philosophy. "Enemies of the Open Society" or something like that. Negative utilitarianism sounds really cool too. I hadn't heard of it before your post, but I googled it, and it makes a lot of sense. Why do you like the theory? Does it stand up to arguments that plain old utilitarianism can't?

I take elements from negative utilitarianism but I dunno if I count as a utilitarian seen as I don't actually aggregate utility. I guess I'm a conequentalist or a utilitarian that doesn't aggregate utility.

Negative utilitarianism is superior to the standard kind because it focuses on minimizing suffering more than it focuses on maximizing pleasure. Which is far more morally relevant as far as I am concerned. If someone is already okay and not suffering... then them experiencing intense pleasure and becoming super happy isn't as morally important as helping people who are actually suffering.

Quote:Wow. You know your metaphysics, dude. I am somewhat familiar with Kant's phenomena/noumena (I'd have to refresh my memory) and I'm fascinated how it might relate to hedonism or utilitarianism. Kant's ethics are not consequentialist, that much I know. I'd be interested to hear how his metaphysics relates to a brand of ethics he rejects. (I'll click on the link you left at some point.) I've read a good bit of Kant (not as much as you, obviously). But I haven't read any Husserl at all. Anything you can recommend which is a decent introduction to his thought?

Phenomenology has impacted my actual life because it has helped me overcome the paradox of hedonism. It no longer makes sense for me to search for happiness itself when all the so-called external pleasures are in fact my internal phenomenology. We never truly experience objective reality. There is no such thing as 'happiness itself'... our positive experiences don't cause happiness, they are happiness.
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#49
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(January 2, 2018 at 7:02 pm)CapnAwesome Wrote:
(December 6, 2017 at 8:20 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote: Heraclitus.

Didnt he say that everything is made of water?

That was Thales. Heraclitus said that you can't step into the same river twice.
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#50
RE: Favorite Philosophers?
(January 2, 2018 at 7:13 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote:
(January 2, 2018 at 7:02 pm)CapnAwesome Wrote: Didnt he say that everything is made of water?

That was Thales.  Heraclitus said that you can't step into the same river twice.

Definitely applies to particle physics. Our whole bodies aren't even the same phenomenological atoms that they last were! There is no 'usness' or essence that we can experience. No boundary of the self that can be detected.
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