Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
There are several arguments against hedonism:
Moore's heap of filth. G.E. Moore argued that pleasure cannot be the only good because there are some things that are good even if they produce no pleasure. For example, he argued that it would be better for a beautiful world to exist than a heap of filth, even if no one ever experienced either world. This suggests that beauty is good in itself, not just because it produces pleasure.
All this shows is that some people, including Moore, think that beauty is good in itself. The fact that people think this is no evidence that it is true.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
The problem of false pleasures. Some pleasures are not good. For example, the pleasure of getting drunk may be enjoyable in the moment, but it can have negative consequences in the long run.
Easily answered. The pleasure of getting drunk is intrinsically good, but may be instrumentally bad.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
The difficulty of defining pleasure. There is no universally agreed-upon definition of pleasure. What one person finds pleasurable, another person may find unpleasant. This makes it difficult to use pleasure as the basis of a moral theory.
First of all, let's be more accurate: instead of saying 'pleasure' and 'pain', we should really say 'pleasantness' and 'unpleasantness'. There is a distinction to be drawn between pain and unpleasantness; pain (noun) is unpleasant (adjective), therefore the unpleasantness of pain is a property of the pain, and is not identical with it. What we are concerned with in hedonism is not pain as such, but the unpleasantness of pain, and of other experiences. If there are people who find certain physical pains pleasant (I don't know whether there are or not), then for those people those pains are (other things being equal) not bad, but good.
Secondly, the fact that people find different things pleasant or unpleasant is irrelevant, since we're not talking about those things, but about pleasantness and unpleasantness themselves. And since everyone experiences pleasantness and unpleasantness, we all know what we're talking about (if we're honest), so there really is no problem. We don't need a definition to tell us what pleasantness and unpleasantness are, we all know that already. Do we need a definition to tell us what yellow is? I don't think so. We recognise yellow when we see it, and that's good enough.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Hedonism does not take into account the importance of other things in life, such as love, friendship, and justice.
This just begs the question of whether there are other intrinsic goods than pleasure. It's very typical of even professional philosophers that they simply accept the common opinion that there are other intrinsic goods without supporting evidence or argument.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Hedonism can be difficult to put into practice. It can be hard to know how to maximize pleasure in all situations.
This is another error that philosophers have fallen into: confusing theory with practicality. It is no refutation of a theory to show that it is difficult, or even impossible, to put into practice.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Hedonism can lead to a selfish and self-centered way of life. If pleasure is the only good, then there is no reason to care about the well-being of others.
This is an obvious non sequitur. 'Pleasure is the only good' does not entail '
my pleasure is the only good.' There is nothing in hedonism that says that I cannot or should not aim to give pleasure to others.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
In addition to the limitations discussed above, hedonism also faces a number of challenges from contemporary moral philosophy. For example, virtue ethics emphasizes the importance of character and virtue, rather than pleasure. And utilitarianism emphasizes the importance of maximizing happiness, rather than pleasure.
The fact that a lot of philosophers believe in virtue ethics is no evidence that virtue ethics is true. And utilitarianism is a variety of hedonism, so if utilitarianism is true, then so is hedonism.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Oversimplification of Value: Hedonism reduces the complex spectrum of human values to a singular dimension of pleasure and pain. Many argue that other factors like knowledge, beauty, love, and justice also possess intrinsic value, independent of their hedonic consequences.
As I've already pointed out, this begs the question of whether there are other intrinsically valuable things than pleasantness. I really find it rather depressing that philosophers simply accept that there are other things, on no better basis than the fact that many people
think there are.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Incommensurability of Values: Hedonism struggles to account for situations where different types of pleasure or pain are incommensurable. For example, is the short-term pleasure of a guilty pleasure comparable to the long-term satisfaction of a virtuous act?
I would challenge the view that there are different types of pleasantness and unpleasantness. I can easily understand what it means for the pleasantness of different experiences to differ in intensity and/or duration, but I do not understand what it would mean for different experiences to have different kinds of pleasantness. As far as I can see, if an experience is pleasant, then that is all that can be said: we cannot go on to say 'this experience has this kind of pleasantness rather than that kind.' What kinds would these be? If anyone thinks that there are different kinds of pleasantness or unpleasantness, it is up to them to say what those different kinds are. I think that if you try it, you will only be able to describe different kinds of pleasant and unpleasant experiences, not different kinds of pleasantness or unpleasantness.
I think what is happening here is that people are misattributing incommensurable qualities of the experiences themselves to the pleasantness or unpleasantness of those experiences. To take the example given: suppose the 'short-term pleasure of a guilty pleasure' is the pleasantness of eating a chocolate cake when we know we are supposed to be dieting, and suppose the 'long-term satisfaction of a virtuous act' is the pleasantness of feeling virtuous because last week you gave a substantial donation to a charity to help with flood relief, and you are still finding this pleasant to think about. The two experiences are obviously in many ways incommensurable: there is no analogue in the second experience to the tastiness of the cake, the sweetness as you eat it, the chocolatey smell, and so on. Likewise there is no analogue in the first experience to the feeling of satisfaction at having helped people in need. But none of these is a property of the pleasantness of either experience. I would argue that all the incommensurability is to be found in properties of those experiences other than their pleasantness; and if I am right, this objection to hedonism fails.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Quality vs. Quantity of Pleasure: Hedonism often focuses on the quantity of pleasure, neglecting the quality of experiences. Some argue that higher-order pleasures, such as intellectual or aesthetic pursuits, are more valuable than lower-order pleasures, even if they may not be as intense.
There are really three assertions here:
1. that pleasures can have different qualities
2. that these qualities can be ordered hierarchically, so that there are higher and lower order pleasures
3. that the supposed higher order pleasures are more valuable than the supposed lower order pleasures.
I would answer point 1 as I did for incommensurability: I think the qualities here are not different qualities of pleasantness, but of the experiences absent their pleasantness. As for points 2 and 3, these seem to me to be merely appealing to a common prejudice, generally on the part of intellectuals, against experiences in which they don't generally participate, and which they look down on. Once again, no evidence or argument is provided to justify this supposed hierarchical ordering of pleasures: I think all we are seeing here is snobbishness.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
The Paradox of Hedonism: The pursuit of pleasure as an ultimate goal can paradoxically lead to frustration and dissatisfaction. Excessive focus on pleasure can hinder one's ability to appreciate life's simple joys and can lead to neglecting other important aspects of well-being.
This objection is not actually against hedonism as a philosophical theory, it is merely a cautionary note aimed at those who try too hard to get pleasant experiences; therefore it is irrelevant to whether the theory is true or not.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
Moral Considerations: Hedonism can sometimes justify actions that are morally questionable if they lead to personal pleasure, even if they harm others. This raises concerns about the ethical implications of a purely pleasure-based morality.
This again commits the error of assuming that hedonism prescribes pleasant experiences only for oneself. Prudential hedonism is only one variant of hedonism, and not the variant I subscribe to.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
While hedonism offers a simple and intuitive framework for understanding value, it is a limited perspective that fails to capture the full richness and complexity of human experience.
This objection really answers itself. The purpose of hedonism as a theory is, indeed, to provide a framework for understanding value: that is all it is intended to do, and it is absurd to criticise it for not doing things it is not meant to do.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 am
War [killing of human is inevitable] in the first place is
immoral to begin with.
Cowardice in war is in a way, moral, i.e. the avoidance to be killed by humans.
Cowardice in war is not refusing to kill people, it is trying to save yourself and to hell with anyone else. You are confusing being a coward with being a conscientious objector, which is utterly different.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sat Nov 02, 2024 5:59 am
As I stated, war [inevitable killing of humans] is immoral in the first place.
Soldiers are thus engaging in immoral activities.
Soldiers who are highly moral as human beings had been evidenced to shoot off target when facing their enemies thus avoiding having to kill humans.
So I suppose that if you had been the British Prime Minister in 1940, instead of fighting the Nazis you would have surrendered to them and then stood by and watched as they took away the 300,000 Jews then living in Britain to the concentration camps and gas chambers. And you would then have been complicit in mass cruelty and genocide.
Unconditional pacifism is a very naive doctrine. It is based on the assumption that going to war can never prevent an evil greater than the war itself. This assumption is false.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Nov 03, 2024 7:06 amVeritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 5:27 am
As I said, it it too messy to deal with morality that include non-human species.
ROFL. Well, sorry if the messiness of the universe offends your aesthetic sense. Perhaps you should ask the Almighty if he would alter the universe so that you find it more tidy and aesthetically pleasing. Meanwhile I will continue to deal with the universe as it actually is, messy or not.
You missed the point.
Having to deal with too many variables is messy, i.e. not efficient and not adopting Occam.
You deny this?
It's stupid and irrelevant. If it is morally required to get into messy situations, then that is what you should do. Morality trumps everything, including messiness.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 5:27 amVeritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 5:27 am
There is no way, non-human animals can feel pain & pleasure like humans do which is highly exceptional.
Prove it.
It is obvious, non-human animals do not have the same capacity nervous system like humans that of humans.
Some higher non-human animals may have the same expressions of pleasure and pains as humans but such experience wears off immediate the stimuli is absent.
If they experience pleasantness or unpleasantness at all, then we ought to treat them well.
The material point here is that whether non-humans experience pleasantness and/or unpleasantness has no effect on the correctness of my theory. If they do, the theory says we should treat them well. If they don't, the theory says that it doesn't matter how we treat them. The theory thus covers all possible situations.
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2024 5:27 am
Show me where Hedonism has been put fully into practice with some reasonable or possible success.
I have checked with AI, it only show some practices in ancient times but none in the present.
As I have said before, we are discussing ethical theory. All you are doing by introducing stuff about practices is dodging the issue.