Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2020 6:20 pm
You misunderstand. "Moral duty" simply means "obligation to act on a moral imperative." ...
Every moral principle has an imperative, a duty associated with it. If, for example, murder is wrong, then it means that we all have a
duty not to murder. If theft is wrong, then we have a
duty not to steal. So don't tee off on the word "duty." It's automatic, in ethics. It has nothing to do with what you talked about.
RCSaunders wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2020 6:06 pm
That is still wrong. There is no such imposed obligation as duty.
Sorry, RC. You're still misunderstanding. I think you're reacting to a colloquial understanding of the word "duty," and not realizing I'm using the philosophical term precisely there.
Maybe we can talk about "moral obligation" instead. Every ethical imperative
implies (rightly or wrongly) that the recipient is to consider himself morally obligated to do the good, not the bad. That's maybe the simplest way of putting it. We can argue over whether the moral obligation in each case is fair, but we can't really argue that it is not
implied.
So, for example, "Murder is wrong," is a statement that implies, "You should not murder," or "You have a moral obligation not to instigate or participate in a murder."
There is no such obligation. Ethical principles are not, "laws," or, "rules," or, "mandates," or, "proscriptions." Moral principles are values, and all values are relationships. Before anything can be good, bad, right, or wrong, the goal or objective of the value must be specified. If the purpose or objective of ethical principles is not specified, just anything can be put over as moral.
For example, when the collectivist or statist decides that the objective is the security of the state, the wholesale murder of men and destruction of property is considered, "moral," to secure state power (always put over in the name of, "defense," or "protecting freedom," or some other lie). When someone decides that the objective is to make the society safe from drugs, the murder of those who defy the state's laws is considered, "moral." When someone believes the objective is to obey God, when that God commands the people who worship him to go into another country and kill every, man, woman, child and animal, or kill all the males and non-virgin women but keep the virgins for themselves, that wholesale slaughter and slavery is considered, "moral." [1 Samuel 15:3, Numbers 31:17&18]
If moral or ethical principles determine how an individual ought to live his life, should those principles be benevolent or malevolent for the individual that observes them? It seems obvious if observing moral principles results in one's own benefit it makes sense to observe them, but if observing moral principles leads to one's own harm or destruction, there is no good reason to observe them.
Unless moral principles are for the benefit of individuals, they are of no use or value at all. But, even if one knows what the moral principles required for an individual to live successfully and enjoy his life are, there is no requirement, no
duty, to conform to those principles. To fail to observe right moral principles (or even to bother learning what they are) means a life of failure and regret at best, and most likely disaster, but there is nothing that makes it necessary to live successfully--that has to be rationally chosen and pursued.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 10:17 pm
One must choose to live happily and successfully if they are to be happy and successful...
Of course. But what is "happy," and what is "successful"? Those questions are not explained in that claim. "Happiness" as I said, is a mere emotion, and as such, is dependent on fortune -- literally, on "hap." And "success" is always "success IN." One can be a "successful" doctor, or a "successful" torturer.
A human being cannot live without knowledge. Just as food and water are necessities of his physiological nature, knowledge is a necessity of his psychological nature, because human beings are volitional and must consciously choose all they do, and informed choice is not possible without knowledge. One kind of knowledge required for making right choices is the knowledge of what is good and bad for the kind of being a human is, because it is that knowledge or lack of it that will determined whether an individual will or will not be successful living as the kind of being he is. When someone suggests they do not know what human success is and can see no difference between a doctor and a torturer, it is a kind of ignorance I do not know how to comprehend.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 10:17 pm
Believing happiness is some kind of emotional feeling is the shallow view of the hedonist.
I agree. But it is not only capable of being misunderstood to be the kind of "dependent emotion" I was just talking about, but the use of the word so generally IS that, that there's almost no chance that if you use it you will be understood aright at all.
That's why I'm glad you filled out your definition as follows:
Happiness is the total psychological state of the individual that knows he is living a life proper and fitting to a human being, in total agreement with the requirements of his human nature and the nature of reality, that he is living his life to the fullest possible, being and achieving all he possibly can. There is a feeling that results from that consciousness, a feeling of achievement, exultation, integrity, and joy derived from one's own virtue and the knowledge that all one is and all one enjoys is his because he has produced it. With or without the feeling, however, it is that kind of successful life that is happiness and all that makes life worth living.
This is not "happiness," per se,
The happiness I described is the only happiness there is and the only happiness that makes life worth living. It is that kind of happiness and achieving that human life is, "for." It has no other purpose, nor could there possibly be a greater one.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 10:17 pm
So could you explain to me what a "happy and successful" life would look like, in very concrete terms? Could you maybe tell me somebody who has lived the kind of life you are advocating we should live...like Socrates, or Ghandi, or Bill Gates, or whomever?
Probably not. I don't see how I can describe a successful life to someone who does not know the difference between the success of a doctor and a torturer. A, "concrete," example of a, "happy successful life," would unlikely be any you have suggested. I know and have known many individuals who, as far as I know, are or were totally happy and successful, but it is not possible to make such a judgement about others absolutely, and I think it is wrong to do so. There is one thing I do know, no two successful individuals will have very similar lives except in the principles they live by. All the successful individuals I have known have lived very different lives. Some observations I will make is that some of the most successful were successful almost their entire lives, some got their acts together rather late in life, all were totally self-supporting, most are wealthy, and some are extremely wealthy. Very few are well known, and most would almost never be recognized. I could name some names, but they would mean nothing to you, and I would not presume to expose them to others. (Some a law breakers, just because it is immoral to obey an immoral law.)
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
... What is it "rational" to do? We can only know that after we know what a human being is FOR.
NO! We know what is rational for a human being to do by knowing what a human being is.
Okay, put it your way.
What IS a human being?
I can recognize one in the street, but you say not all are "happy and successful," and that a good one ought to be -- so not everybody I recognize as a human being qualifies, obviously.
Most human beings are not happy and successful because they do not live as their nature and the nature of the world requires one to live to be a successful.
What is a human being? A human being is a volition, rational, intellectual being, the only such beings in this world. Volitional means that all one does must be consciously chosen. Rational means one's only means of making a choice is by means of reason, the mental process of judging which actions will achieve one's values. Intellectual means capable of gaining and keeping knowledge which is one's only means of reasoning, because knowledge is all there is to reason with or reason about.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
The biological definition can't be what you have in mind, then. What is a fully-actualized human being
in the sense you want us to be more individualistic to become? [Emphasis mine.]
You've made an unwarranted assumption which is quite telling.
I do not want others to be or do anything. I know that all human beings would benefit from living their lives rationally, and I would certainly like for all individuals to live successful happy lives, but how others live their lives is not my (or anybody else's) business. I regard the desire, and any action taken to fulfill such a desire, to make others the kind of people someone thinks they ought to be immoral. If there were such a thing as a, "golden rule," it would, "hands off," and, "mind your own business."
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
The only purpose human beings have is the use and enjoyment of their own lives.
Well, Jeffrey Epstein enjoyed his...until the end. So did Jimmy Saville...all the way, apparently. Ghengis Khan probably enjoyed his; he certainly got a lot of his desires. And plenty of others whom the rest of us would surely want to call "immoral" and "bad." Moreover, we would not merely want to say they wasted their lives, but much worse, used them in active creation of evil and victimizing of other human beings.
If the only purpose human beings have is "enjoyment" of their own lives, then would it not obviously be the case that every psychopathic pedophile predator would be living what you would have to call "a good life."
After all, he would certainly be untroubled by the twinges of altruism...
You really believe the sexually disfunctional and those who's lives are controlled by irrational desires and passions, because they have, "pleasure," are enjoying their lives? If a socialist like G.B. Shaw could understand, "The most intolerable pain is produced by prolonging the keenest pleasure," why can't a Christian?
Do you really believe Jeffrey Epstein and Jimmy Saville enjoyed their lives? What lives? They were never free, never really alive. They were slaves to their irrational self-destructive desires. You have confused physical, "pleasure," with, "intellectual joy," and, "subjectivism," with "objective value."
You may denegrate Ayn Rand all you like, but when it comes to understanding human nature, she never could have made the mistake of thinking the kind of subjectivist hedonists you use for examples could possibly have been truly happy or enjoyed their lives.
"But the relationship of cause to effect cannot be reversed. It is only by accepting "man's life" as one's primary and by pursuing the rational values it requires that one can achieve happiness—not by taking "happiness" as some undefined, irreducible primary and then attempting to live by its guidance. If you achieve that which is the good by a rational standard of value, it will necessarily make you happy; but that which makes you happy, by some undefined emotional standard, is not necessarily the good. To take "whatever makes one happy" as a guide to action means: to be guided by nothing but one's emotional whims. Emotions are not tools of cognition; to be guided by whims—by desires whose source, nature and meaning one does not know—is to turn oneself into a blind robot, operated by unknowable demons (by one's stale evasions), a robot knocking its stagnant brains out against the walls of reality which it refuses to see." [The Virtue of Selfishness, "1. The Objectivist Ethics"]
"An emotion is an automatic response, an automatic effect of man's value premises. An effect, not a cause. There is no necessary clash, no dichotomy between man's reason and his emotions—provided he observes their proper relationship. A rational man knows—or makes it a point to discover—the source of his emotions, the basic premises from which they come; if his premises are wrong, he corrects them. He never acts on emotions for which he cannot account, the meaning of which he does not understand. In appraising a situation, he knows why he reacts as he does and whether he is right. He has no inner conflicts, his mind and his emotions are integrated, his consciousness is in perfect harmony. His emotions are not his enemies, they are his means of enjoying life. But they are not his guide; the guide is his mind. This relationship cannot be reversed, however. If a man takes his emotions as the cause and his mind as their passive effect, if he is guided by his emotions and uses his mind only to rationalize or justify them somehow—then he is acting immorally, he is condemning himself to misery, failure, defeat, and he will achieve nothing but destruction—his own and that of others." ["Playboy's interview with Ayn Rand," pamphlet, page 6.]
I think some of the things you think (or at least have expressed) are dangerously mistaken, not to anyone else, but to yourself. I doubt very much that anything would change those views, and it is certainly not my intention. Nevertheless, I will continue express the truth as I understand it, for no other reason than because I have to be honest, (for the very selfish motive of protecting my own integrity).
I do not believe, "all men mean well," but I think you do, and I appreciate that.
RC