Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 03, 2022 9:57 pm Wait, wait...what is "the is/ought" world? How do you get an "ought" out of your "is"?
iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 3:36 amWell, there's the way the world either is or is not. The laws of nature, mathematics, the empirical world around us. As close to an objective reality as we are ever likely to get. Well, excluding solipsism, sim worlds, dream worlds, Matrix worlds etc.
Then in regard to moral and political and spiritual value judgments, there's the way the world is and the way each of us as individuals would like it to be instead. The way some insist it ought to be instead. That's the part I root in dasein.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Mar 05, 2022 10:12 pm There's no "ought" in that explanation. To say that people "would like something to be X" does not mean it "ought" to be that way.
If I would like a Ferrari, that does not imply the world "ought" to give me one. Dreams are not duties.
Word games?
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 5:04 amNot at all. If you know Ethics, you know that the "is-ought" problem is the biggest philosophical problem there is in that field. Yet you blew by it as if it didn't exist.
Of course: Ethics. With a capital E. Ethics as defined and then deduced into existence didactically/theoretically/analytically in a world of words that make no real connection to the world of actual human interactions like the examples I noted above.
Thus, when I ask you to explore "the biggest philosophical problem there is in that field" as it pertains to an ethical conflagration that philosophers have never come close to resolving other than in an analytical "world of words", most objectivists blow by that time and again.
Okay, Mr. Serious Philosopher, give us the argument that establishes that abortion, in fact, is immoral.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 5:04 am I've done this, repeatedly, on the appropriate thread. I refer you to that.
No, in my view, what you have done is to provide us with your own subjective political prejudices regarding abortion and refused to really delve into how they were or were not derived from the manner in which I explore my own political prejudices in the OP on this ILP thread:
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
Indeed, to the extent that you do believe that, objectively, abortion is immoral, wouldn't that ultimately be derived from your own subjective, rooted in dasein existential "leap of faith" to the Christian God?
Dasein in a nutshell when it comes to moral and political prejudices.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 5:04 am I've asked you repeatedly to define your particular understanding of what "dasein" means. You seem to use it in every context where you run out of answers, but since you never say what you mean by it, nobody can tell whether or not you're merely being evasive.
I have to think you actually have any specific understanding of it at all. If you did, you would surely just define it for us.
Unless you do, just know that you're not communicating anything by lapsing back to it.
Ever and always: define, define, define!
As though there aren't words such that any defintions a "serious philosopher" might provide us with are only as relevant as the particular context in which his or her definition is used.
Thus: Define "Freedom". Define "Justice".
Instead, my main interest is in how words defined analytically are examined existentially out in the world of actual human interactions. The world of conflicting value judgments derived, in my view, largely from dasein and played out given the reality of political economy.
Mine rooted existentially in dasein,
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 5:04 am There it is again!
Nobody has any idea what you mean. Time to define your term.
To "nobody":
I don't believe that a word like "dasein" as I understand its meaning can be reduced down technically to a precise "philosophical definition". I believe one can only attempt to convey its meaning existentially.
Thus as I noted above to IC: