Iwannaplato wrote: ↑ You seem to think there is some magical change in your behavior because you use phrases like 'from my perspective' before ad homs and insults.
Here we go again, in my view: Stooge Stuff. On the other hand [ever and always it's seemed to me], Stooge Stuff only from my own hopelessly prejudiced moral and political "convictions". In other words, going all the back to when I was an objectivist myself. And, as such, construed to be a Stooge by others.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑You could explain why psychoanalyzing Maia isn't Stooge stuff here, but for some reason you opt not to.
That's because when moral philosophies come into conflict in places like this, who is to say when another becomes a Stooge?
"That" revolves around the "rooted existentially in dasein" assumptions each of us makes regarding things like conflicting goods.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑'That's'? What is the 'that' in 'that's referring to?
Then, On the other hand, I've noted a number of times that my own understanding of it is largely subjective, subjunctive. In other words, as often as not, precariously problematic.
Uh-oh. Looks like we've got another 'he's right from his side, I'm right from mine' situation: "up in the clouds".Iwannaplato wrote: ↑None of which precludes explaining how you justify, in your largely subjective, as you say, understanding of it. You stay up in the clouds.
There's how you understand it and there's how I understand it. But for you to suggest that my posts regarding Paganism or Pagan morality are all up in the clouds?! I can only suspect that, perhaps, it's a..."condition".
He wondered: why are so many here intent on accusing him of what they insist he is accusing them of?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amIt's pretty simple: you have said that your Stooge label has to do with people making you the issue.
I point out that you make other people the issue in your thread, and ask why this is ok to you.
Your response is abstract and does not explain.
Of course: huh?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 am For example, you could say, no when I speculate about Maia's psychology, the psychology that supports or necessitates her beliefs, it's not Stooge-like because....
Over and again I note that, given the very, very, very different lives that we have lived, what are the odds that I would understand abortion, nihilism or human sexuality as she does? Let alone grasping the world around us emotionally and psychologically as she does?
Instead, over and again [with Maia and others], I focus not on what value judgments individuals come to embody -- what they say they "believe" -- but on how, given their own unique collection of personal experiences, they have come existentially to acquire these conflicting assessments in the first place. And then the part where attempts are made to connect the dots between what they believe and what they are able to demonstrate to others as that which, if they wish to be thought of as rational human beings, they are obligated to believe as well.
Come on, as though coming closer to my own frame of mind as a moral nihilist is the same as coming closer to the frame of mind of someone who shares you're conviction that there is an objective morality, but insist it's theirs's not yours. You do grasp that distinction, don't you?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 am...even if conflicting good are entirely subjective, that doesn't mean that people can't via discussion, negotiation, analysis, come closer to each other's positions. It's not impossible for a person to say, you know you're right, I'm doing something that I criticise others for doing. That isn't ruled out by conflicting good being objective, nor is that possibility ruled out by those goods being subjective.
In fact, with you, my main interest still revolves around discovering how your own frame mind is not in turn fractured and fragmented given what I believe is your own No God frame of mind. Do you believe morality is objective? Do you believe there is an external font mere mortals can fall back on in differentiating good from evil?Do you believe that philosophers are at least capable of coming in the vicinity of a deontological assessment of conflicting goods?
In other words, in regard to morality, how is your own moral philosophy either in sync with or opposed to what I attempt to encompass here in regard to abortion: https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/t/back- ... lity/30639
When have I ever argued that conflicting goods can't be reconciled? Or even resolved for that matter. Instead, the distinction I make here is between those who embrace "might makes right" [the sociopaths, the narcissists], "right makes might" [the moral objectivists left or right, God or No God] and those who embrace "moderation, negotiation and compromise" [because they construe their own moral philosophy as objective but are willing to pit it against others in free and fair elections.]Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amSo, when the reaction on your part is - well, you have your interpretations, I have mine, moving on, as if they can never be reconciled in any way, it seems to me it is based on a false assumption that nothing can be worked out.
Though, by all means, if some here are convinced their own moral philosophy is in fact the one and the only One True Path to Enlightenment let them defend it given a context of their own choosing.
A bridge? Note one then. What bridge are the objectivists here on in regard to abortion or human sexuality other than their own set of assumptions about the human condition? And how do those like Maia not fall back on a Goddess as the bridge able to reveal to them their own Intrinsic Self?Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amYes, we can look at all this as subjective. My subjective sense of what I like and dislike in interactions here bumping into yours. But here I am pointing out a bridge over the gap.
Really, what could possibly be a better moral philosophy than one you insist is derived from a Self that absolutely no one else is in possession of? You "just know" intuitively or spiritually deep inside you that some things are naturally Good and other things are naturally Evil. And, since others are not you, they may well possess a different assessment of these conflicts. In fact, given just how different our individual lives can be, it's almost likely that they will.
As for this part...
...twist it into your own even more insightful assessment of me.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amBut the issue seems unimportant to you when it deals with your behavior, but important when it deals with other people's psychology or behavior. Well, here you may have a common interest with the 'Stooges', because it will certainly reduce focus on you if you don't include group aimed freshman in college psycho interpretations of them first. That's inviting a return of the favor. And then at the individual level, if you start focusing on other people, it seems you are betraying your own subjective morality, but further on a practical level, I guarantee it will lead to more Stooge behavior.
Okay, a "condition" it is then.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amWell, if you are saying that, posting in philosophy forum is pointless.
Well, given that "here and now" I do not clearly advocate that Trump be president, they would certainly be objectively wrong to say that I am. Instead, my point revolves far, far more around the assumption that there does not appear to be an argument [philosophical or otherwise] that enables us to pin down whether believing this is closer to being either an inherently rational or an inherently irrational assessment of his presidency.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 6:56 amI'm sure if someone wrote that you were clearly advocating that Trump be President or that there is NO problem with objectivism, you would find it in yourself to explain that their interpretation of your position is false.
Or they could note their own assessment of moral philosophy [re abortion or nihilism or human sexuality] and argue that "in fact, it is an objective account." But, right now, in my view, they would be wrong to say that I believe that morality is objective. That's false.
Well, in a "click" world, anyway. But they would also be wrong if they argued that I argue that objective morality does not exist.