odysseus wrote: ↑Sat Nov 07, 2020 7:53 pm
...the value in experience has an intrinsic meaning, which is that it cannot stand alone. The pain in question, were it to be so conceived, would be pain-in-the-world-for-nothing, which we call ethical nihilism.
Right. And I see you don't want to be an ethical nihilist.
But what proves to you that that is not the most
realistic thing to be? After all, "I don't want to be a nihilist" is nothing to that question.
Meanwhile, what convinces you that "experience" has either "value" or "intrinsic meaning"? A nihilist would say it has neither. The burden of proof's on you to show he's wrong. How do you do that?
We are thrown into the world, to use a nice Heideggerian term (derived from Kierkegaard), to suffer for no reason. This is impossible.
Not at all. It's quite
possible...indeed, it's
certain if there's no actual God. For then, there can be no "reason for" suffering. It's just a contingent fact that we all suffer, then.
Redemption is a good word for this notion of relief.
It's a poor word, I think. "Redemption" means "to buy back," as when one purchases another out of slavery. Who will "buy you out of" the world of suffering into which contingency has "thrown" you?
It's a medieval setting and the young girl has been charged with being a witch and is burned at the stake. One has to put oneself in the agency of the experiencer, the flames rising, the pain unspeakable.
Yes. But what convinces you that in spite of unspeakable pain, this girl is being "redeemed" in some sense? I see no sense at all in which that's obvious.
I'm speaking on behalf of the Atheists here, though I am not one. I'm wanting to see you come up with something I can take to them and say, "See"? But I have nothing yet I can use to convince them their nihilism is wrong.
Heidegger
Hitler's favourite, you mean? Or was that Nietzsche?
It is a metaethical openness that demands closure, and this demand issues from the nature for the intuited pain itself.
"Issues from nature"? Nature, qua nature, my dear fellow, has no opinions. She is an unconscious grinder. And "the nature of pain" doesn't "demand" anything...except perhaps that you die.
No, it's really not. What's more than the event is the experience of the event. But it takes a whole other step to show that that experience is tied to any objective "badness" or "evil." To feel "value" is not to confer objective value. It's just to say one has a particular kind of illusion or impression...and if it is more than an illusion, that claim must be justified by something.
And what would that be?
Not clear on this. Are you suggesting suffering can be an illusion?
No. I'm suggesting that any perception of "badness" or "evil" or "value" is just a feeling. And feelings are not objective values. They're just feelings. So you've got to prove the suffering has objective moral status. I see no reason from your argument so far to grant that it does.
...what is objectively confirmable is what is most intimate to subjectivity.
That''s not Descartes view. Descartes view is that all that can be deceptive. The
existence of the
subjective entity is the most you can get from him: no more follows from his argument.
Oh know...I do believe there is. I just don't think you've given us any reason to believe there is. I have my own explanation, but I find yours far too thin on details to convince me, so far.
But this is the only argument there is.
Then I'm afraid you have no argument.
I can't say I understand why you think pain simpliciter is "thin". Is that flame on your finger thin in its actuality??
I did not say "pain is thin." I said I find your argument thin.
What I find from that experience is a) empirical facts, b) the subjective experience of a thing we call "pain," c) an impression that something "bad" has happened, and d) a trip to the hospital, where others will have some questions for me.
But in all of that, I do not know how you get objective morality. After all, I put my finger to the match in response to your urging. The feelings I had are possibly merely contingent. My impression of the value of the event, or of your advice, is strictly my own, so far as I know. You'll have to show me how I get good and evil out of that.
Feelings are not contingent,
Yeah, they are.
No two people "feel" exactly the same things. Some people have less or more "feeling." But feelings notoriously are not trustworthy.
Qualia is not contingent.
Qualia are unique to the percipient. As such, they issue in no universals.
The "badness" is transcendental.
I can't make sense of that claim. You, yourself, appeal to physical phenomena, then claim, "it's transcendental". Nope. You're going to have to show that.
How do I get good and evil out of this? I don't know where else to get it if not in the concreteness of experience itself.
Then you can't "get" it at all. For experiences do not justify good and evil, if good and evil are mere personal impressions created by an indifferent universe.
The Atheist case isn't even rocking yet. Have you got more?