Sculptor wrote: ↑Fri Apr 24, 2020 11:56 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Fri Apr 24, 2020 5:35 am
Sculptor wrote: ↑Thu Apr 23, 2020 9:52 am
No, individual propensities contradict. So no collective propensity is possible.
You are spewing nonsense here.
Even you are capable of understanding this. Humans are two groups A & B
Group A has a propensity to wage war.
Groups B has a propensity to make peace.
QED. There are individual propensities. No propensity related to "humans".
So, as I say above propensities contradict. No propensity covers humans.
The above is strawman.
All humans can be divided into many and infinite types of group in terms of propensity.
This is irrelevant to the point.
It is very noticeable a species of living things display its own specific propensity which is different from the individuals.
Every normal individual strives to live as long as possible till the inevitable.
But the species' propensity is to ensure the species is preserved without the care of
all the individuals.
Within the human species a certain percentile are "programmed" to take risk to benefit the species expanding population and new resources.
Note the example of mayflies where the majority of individual[s] dies without reaching the necessary river but what serves the species is that based on the principles/strategy of large numbers, that there are sufficient numbers to reproduce the next generations.
Even if it were so; an "IS" does not make an "ought"
You are ignorant because your thinking is too superficial.
Based on linguistic and common sense, yes, "is" cannot be "ought" just as 'black' cannot be 'white'. But if we reflect deeper both are on the
same continuum of greyness.
Even you can understand the most simple idea.
Perhaps you should look up the "is/ought problem"; this is a common philosophical trope. Philosophy 101 you might say.
Insulting me, just makes you look more stupid.
It is not an insult but a fact as evident, you are ignorant and thinking too superficially.
You are following the philosophical trope blindly without doing your own thinking.
I am well aware of the is/ought dichotomy brought up by Hume.
Here is where you are ignorant [as evident];
Hilary Putnam argues philosophers that accept Hume's "is–ought" distinction reject his reasons in making this, and thus undermine the entire claim.[22]
Various scholars have also indicated that, in the very work where Hume argues for the is–ought problem, Hume himself derives an "ought" from an "is".[23] Such seeming inconsistencies in Hume have led to an ongoing debate over whether Hume actually held to the is–ought problem in the first place, or whether he meant that ought inferences can be made but only with good argumentation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Is%E2%80% ... erstanding
Hume focus on this issue was regarding theists forcing their moral ought from a God which is illusory.
Hume discusses the problem in book III, part I, section I of his book, A Treatise of Human Nature (1739):
- In every system of morality, which I have hitherto met with, I have always remarked, that the author proceeds for some time in the ordinary way of reasoning, and establishes the being of a God, or makes observations concerning human affairs; when of a sudden I am surprised to find, that instead of the usual copulations of propositions, is, and is not, I meet with no proposition that is not connected with an ought, or an ought not.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Is%E2%80% ... m#Overview
And note Yin is not [does not make a] Yang yet they work in complementarity within reality.
not relevant. mystical BS. Does not help your argument even if true
Again you are ignorant on this.
A particle is not [does not make] a wave.
But Bohr applied the principle of complementarity to reconcile the two contrasting elements.
I had used the same principles of complementarity to reconcile "is" to "ought" along its shared continuum.
Irrelevant. Humans are more complex, that wavicles,
Strawman again.
What I have done is based on empirical evidence and sound logical arguments.
Empirically, a living human being is breathing all the time, thus all human beings are breathing all the time.
Logically, it is a fact, all living human beings ought to breathe, else they die.
Thus "is" is "ought" logically and rationally.
There is no reason humans ought to live.
Use your brain.[/quote]
It is evident from empirical evidences, all species including the human species has the propensity to strive to preserve itself until the inevitable.
I have applied the same principles above to derive secular objective moral oughts.
You have established zero
Your point don't have any credibility because you are ignorant and thought too superficially.