Nobody has got anywhere by debating with you in a decade or more. You take nothing into account and you learn nothing. So we make fun of you, that's all there really is to be done with you.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 amThere you go with your immaturity in thought and looking for something to mock. The 120 is just the number ['replace function in word] from that link. I aim to have a near exhaustive listing regardless of the number.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 9:18 amWhy bother with any of it then? All of those can just as sensibly be replaced with "good" and you don't need the list at all.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am
Dogmatic as usual,
These virtues can cover for 'efficiency'.
"Excellence" implies striving to do things well, often efficiently, to achieve high-quality outcomes.
Diligence: Reflecting perseverance and careful work, which often leads to efficient results.
Resourcefulness: Involves finding efficient solutions, especially in challenging situations.
Prudence: Suggests wise decision-making, often leading to efficient use of resources and effort.
Why did you want your list to be 120 things? Is "120" a good number for some reason? Is that more important? What is your working rationale for any of this junk?Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am The above are from the links provided above.
If 'efficiency' is valid, then we can add to the listing.
What do you mean "there could be more" ?.... of course there could be more, there is no actual end to an arbitrary list. Your obsession with making and ordering lists blinds you to this obvious fact.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am I believe there are more we can add.
Example: Adaptability: Altruism: Awe: Balance: Charisma: Chivalry: Civility: Composure: Conviction: Equanimity: Fraternity: Independence: Magnanimity: Mindfulness: Resilience: Self-awareness: Self-respect: Solidarity: Stoicism: Vigilance:
There could be more.
I was making a joke at your expense. There is no structure at all to your thinking and you aren't presenting any form of argument in that rambling OP. You have nothing to form a circle out of. But if you have a proper rationale for manufacturing these weird lists, you shouldn't need ad-hoc pruning to keep them correct.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am If 'ethical' is circular, we can exclude it for this OP.
Morality and ethics is messy and inefficient. Your messy and inefficient efforts to impose order on it with foolish lists of inadequate nonsense can't change that.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am The main point here is the two list of virtues are sufficient to support my point that the concept of virtue cover a very extensive range of human behaviors and to mix it up with Morality & Ethics would be very messy and inefficient.
Or... all you are doing is excluding things you find difficult only because you find them difficult and not because they have any intrinsic reason to be excluded. This is what you already did when you threw out out "good" and "bad" and "right" and "wrong" from your """morality-proper""" which now has nothing to do with actual morality.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 4:25 am Therefore it is more efficient [Occam] to deal with Morality & Ethics by excluding 'virtues' as independent and complementary.
You want to push the virtues and vices aside from thoughts about what it even is that makes them virtuous or vicious for the sake of convenience. Wishing for the virtues of laziness and shoddy half-assed work. It's not going to get you anywhere, this effort is nothing but new grounds to mock you.
You wouldn't get anywhere near an exhaustive list with any number. You should really think one day about whether these lists you fantasize about but are incapable of compiling are even possible, meaningful, and useful. Lists don't actually do any work.
Sulk if you want to, but I only get to mock that which is mockable. You never really think about what it is that makes it so incredibly easy for me to take the piss out of you. It's things like the giant, pointless, unwieldy, useless, redundant lists and your insistence on relying on them as a tool of analysis.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am It is because you are so narrow minded and bankrupt of ideas, childish & immature that you resort to mocking instead of recognizing your weaknesses.
I always point you at logical flaws in your arguments. You always take things in a personal direction. Here I am trying to get you to really think about this lists problem you have, and have had for as long as I have known who you are. But you are going to accuse me of some other failing because you can't address that issue.
They are designed to return a set of words that will please you, not to do philosophy. You aren't debating with an AI, you are just modifying the prompts for a text generation engine. If you tell a text generation engine to tell you that your lists are really useful and make a powerful argument, it will do so because its design is to make you happy so that you will come back for more.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am Usually I don't present anything new without discussing with various AIs's critiques and convincing them with counter arguments my ideas are tenable and feasible.
You are becoming like a rat in a science experiment that turns away from food because it has a new stimulus to prefer.
I don't think Kant is your source for "morality-proper" and he definitely didn't separate out good from morality. You have to outgrow this Kant nonsense, none of what you do is his fault.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am Kant, one of the greatest philosopher, have had similar ideas of separating 'virtues' from morality-proper.
You would do better to look beyond your pride and see how easy it is to expose failings in your arguments. None of these, now "near exhaustive" lists are compilable. Your 120 "virtues" don't scratch the surface, a list of 12,000 wouldn't be any better. And what is such a list even useful for?Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am You will look very stupid with your immature mocking when my thesis is proven clearly and rationally to be tenable and very feasible.
That isn't Occam, that is a dogma. Philosophy isn't a problem solving exercise. Even if it were, you can't solve all your problems with pointless excursions into atomistic dismemberment.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am Separating large complex wide ranging problems into manageable units is one of the most critical steps [a critical maxim] in Problem Solving, it is Occam.
Your original mistake was to try and make this "morality-proper" thing happen, and that came from this same instinct you have shown here to castrate morality by shearing off body parts and insisting they belong elsewhere.
That makes a complete mockery of your own exercise here. More reason to mock you.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 30, 2024 3:22 am Besides I am not ignoring "virtues" at all but keep those that are relevant in complementary to morality-ethics proper.