Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Mon Feb 22, 2021 2:48 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Feb 22, 2021 10:36 am
Terrapin Station wrote: ↑Sun Feb 21, 2021 4:57 pm
No, you did not. I don't know if you don't understand what I'm saying here?
I'm insisting on an identity relation because it's a logical possibility, and as far as I can see, there are only two logical possibilities here. Do you understand the idea or not? You're not at all addressing the actual idea.
The OP is about Gewirth's argument.
Gewirth never mentioned 'identity'.
If you insist that is a strawman.
I have already explained Gewirth's position on the issue.
Are you referring to the Law of Identity?
If that is the case, note Rorty's critic of Mirroring as in his
Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature.
Right, so you don't understand what I'm asking, because you're just now trying to clarify what I'm even referring to via "identity."
Instead of arguing about something and continually responding in a situation like this, clarify what the person is referring to, so you can be talking about the same thing, addressing the same thing.
What I'm referring to isn't a "law" of identity per se, but it's the idea that the "law" of identity is addressing: simply, whether x and y are exactly one and the same thing.
Again, I'm not saying that Gewirth used the term identity. I'm saying that per his argument, there are only two logical possibilities re the relationship between P and X. Either he's saying they can be one and the same thing, or he's talking about situations where they are never one and the same thing.
Do you agree with this?
I do not agree with your interpretation and views of the above.
What Gewirth implied between X and P is there is an inherent moral purpose in P with reference to S.
Gewirth focus is not on 'helping the elderly getting across the street'.
In any case your example is not that clear.
Let take a more clearer example.
Suppose S is a soldier and faces an unarmed enemy E.
S decides not to shoot E for what he thinks is for Purpose P [so that E can live].
In this case, Gewirth would imply the inherent Purpose, the moral ought within S i.e. the 'ought-not-to-kill humans.