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12-04-2002, 08:09 AM | #181 | |||||||||||||||||
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kingjames1:
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Why does determinism make revenge misdirected. Revenge within limits is a drive that would definitely have served to eliminate anti-social elements from tight-knit social groups - aiding in the survival of those groups. Quote:
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Rehabilitation doesn't presuppose the ability to make morally significant choices - it only presupposes that drastic behavioral changes are possible. Quote:
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Let me put it this way. I think we would both agree that there is no objective deliciousness out there that determines what tastes good and what doesn't. We have tastes for foods that provide the nourishment we need (eg. we have a sweet tooth probably because we no longer have the ability to manufacture vitamin C). Does the fact that the taste for food is a purely biological function eliminate the deeply human experience of enjoying a delicious meal? Quote:
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By the way, I'm not a full-blown determinist. I believe that the brain acts in a deterministic fashion (inputs + brain state = output). I think the jury is still out on the determinism of the universe. Unless someone successfully finds some hidden variables, I think it's prudent to assume that quantum mechanical events are truly noncausal. Quote:
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However, it still doesn't seem to be damning to my views. I never claimed that we could have any hope of determining the exact output of a brain to an arbitrary precision - only that the brain state is simply a function of the inputs and the current state. I've never argued that the brain wasn't an incredibly complex network of neurons. I wouldn't think of it. Quote:
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I would not be surprised if it could be expressed in an algorithm that could be processed by a Turing Machine. However, it could easily end up being a problem that a Turing Machine couldn't solve in a finite amount of time. Quote:
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12-04-2002, 09:41 AM | #182 | |
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Response to Primal:
There are a few things that are evidently confused in your understanding of the purpose of my summary of cultural relativism. I chose it because it is the dominant view in intellegentsia. It is also the dominant view I have encountered in my personal interactions. I did not chose it (or social darwinism) as a straw man. Where you have drawn strawman implications are of your own doing. BTW, my only comment about social darwinists in this section was that such an individual would not find the charge of being animalistic offensive...it was a facetious comment, though half-true. You seemed to have read that comment back into my evaluations of cultural relativism. Is it that difficult to understand that in dealing with cultural relativism specifically, I can draw relevant conclusions for other forms of ethical relativism? The rejection of a reduction of ethical categories to social constructs for reasons of destroying their culturally presumed transcendence (consider the ethics of Plato or Aristotle, or the Stoics, or Augustine, or Aquinas, or even Kant for that matter) has obvious implications for evolutionary ethics as well, to take one example. This is not the same as rejecting Christianity as cruel since the Koran contains cruel injunctions, and the Koran and the Bible have similarities -- as you suggested. This indeed is sloppy thinking. But it is also sloppy to confuse this with my arguments. But I can see from your second reply that there will be no convincing you otherwise where you have judged me of "double-think." So I will simply challenge you to a simple, narrow discussion of your position (evolutionary ethics or biological morality, or whatever you refered to). Surely your sophisticated evolutionary approach should be no match for a "fundamentalist," "lazy," doofus such as you have labeled me to be. BTW, all critiques come from within a worldview, but there is an obvious distinction between negative critique and advancing a position. So you are right to say that I critique relativism from a Christian perspective, but wrong to assume that I am thereby advancing Christian objectivism. If I am, it is only indirectly so, and inevitably so, as it would be if you were to critique Christianity from your perspective. A couple of things... You wrote: Quote:
One (or two) last thing(s), I do want to respond to the following: "More equovocation, you are confusing the term "arbitrary" as in decided on for no solid reason with arbitrary= random. BTW evolution is not just chance. This ignores the fact that arbitrary in the second sense makes morality no less equal,illegitemate, randomly distributed, constructed etc. Which are all hallmarks of ethical relativism." This distinction is interesting. Where do you find it in the dictionary? Is a random process a "solid reason"? You are right to say that evolution isn't simply chance in the sense that it is more than chance mutations -- it is also environmental pressures, whereby certain mutations are favored. But where did such environmental conditions spring: solid reason or chance? Unless you hold to some sort of teleological cosmology, you must conclude that even the conditions that suppress and favor genetic mutations are based on "no solid reason." Hence, evolution is ultimately an arbitrary process, contingent solely upon randomly produced materials and environments. Or do you believe the big bang (as it happened) was logically necessary? Secondly, I still find your statement about group-selection being self-interested incoherent. The only thing that can be called selfish in this process in the genome -- but a gene can be 'selfish' only in a poetic sense. Perhaps you're confusing poetry (and other such emotion-laden stuff) with sound reason? J. [ December 04, 2002: Message edited by: kingjames1 ]</p> |
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12-04-2002, 11:55 AM | #183 | |||
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Response to Primal:
I'm sorry, I couldn't help responding to more of your objections. Quote:
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Finally, I am under no obligation to save your soul or convert you. How could I? To assert this is to presume an enormous, God-like power. Your gross caricatures of Christianity are surely an instance of the pot calling the kettle black. J. |
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12-04-2002, 01:15 PM | #184 | ||||||||||||||||
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Response to K
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Of course. My rejection of determinism does not result from some feeling that washes over me all of a sudden, but from my entire experience as a person. Quote:
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[ December 04, 2002: Message edited by: kingjames1 ]</p> |
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12-04-2002, 01:28 PM | #185 | ||||
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Response to K:
The problem, it seems to me, is that your paradigm cannot account for a number of things. First, you write: Quote:
First, this doesn’t describe morality at all. On this account, if a person protects his social grouping well, he is a moral person. But this can’t be the case, because there have been many people, who have done just this and who are morally repugnant. Ie. Hitler.(He is the epitome of the person protecting his social group, Germany and in particular Aryans within Germany). In addition, if protecting one’s group is the one and only criteria for morality, then that should lead to certain social policies that are morally corrupt. We should get rid of disabled people, for starters, because they’re a burden. So are old people. In fact, if it is praiseworthy to protect your group, then anything, however immoral, becomes moral by virtue of my acting for my grouping. Oh, and by the way, when I do this, you can’t really criticize me the first time I do it. Why? Because “I am determined to do it by my genes.” I haven’t received my input of moral outrage yet from others that you describe later. Now, at this point, you might say that he (Hitler) shouldn’t have acted thus, because it wasn’t in the interests of an even larger grouping, the peaceful coexistence of Europe, but that is simply pushing the problem farther out. Once you do that, you have to abandon that argument that we act for the local grouping. You have to go back and forth like a yo-yo. Small group: family, no: locality, no: country. No, maybe not, back to family. This is incoherent. There is a second problem and it has to do with two mutually exclusive statements that you made that cannot be reconciled. It is my contention that there is an “oughtness” to morality. We sense a moral compunction to act in a given way, in my view based on a God-given conscience. We can address that particular view (mine) another time. For now, though, let’s look at your view. You try to explain our moral behavior in terms of what it is. It is determined by our genes, by our environment. We are “programmed by our environment.” In fact, there are multiple stimuli that program our behavior but ultimately we are simply machines that act on stimuli and conditioning. Fine. (In fact, I will concede some agreement with you here. I think a lot of our environment does condition us. No question. But not completely. We are not completely free but we are not completely in chains either). But then you go on to state that there is no reason why a person should not object to the actions of another. Why? Well, at first I thought that you were going to root your justification in the idea of “survival of the fittest.” But on further reflection, looking at your posts, I realise that you don't even get that far. This is what you state, in responding to my post on child sacrifice: Quote:
What this means is that when you say that you object to someone killing children, all you are really saying is: “hey, that can’t be benefiting the survival of the fittest, your social grouping etc.” But if you think that’s what we’re saying when we view such a thing, then I may have to conclude that you are unreachable. It is simply counterintuitive to state that what we mean by “torturing babies is wrong” or “killing 6 million Jews is wrong” is simply the same as “hey, you are going against the idea of survival here.” If you can’t see this, then I can’t help you. But you have a further problem, because having said that we can criticize others on this basis, you then write the following: Quote:
But you write elsewhere the following: Quote:
If we “have no choice,” then how can you state “in hopes of changing that deterministic behavior.” I’m programmed and that’s it, right? And if I hear your criticism and ignore it, then really I can’t be held responsible, because my actions are completely determined. I’m sure you’ve met the objection before that determinism destroys personal responsibility. For determinists, this objection is unanswerable. And perhaps this is where I should stop, because it should be clear to the vast majority of readers now that determinism is a hopeless cause. It simply doesn’t accord with logical arguments and it certainly doesn’t accord with what we see in the world. When I push over your children and shout at them, you know perfectly well, when you object “don’t do that. It’s wrong,” you’re not saying “hey, you’re damaging the ability of our group to survive.” You know that. Further, if I do it again and reply “Hey, buddy, I’m determined. I couldn’t have done otherwise,” that you are bound to agree with me on the basis of your arguments, but your arguments are screaming “this doesn’t make sense!” Time to abandon determinism, K. |
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12-04-2002, 04:26 PM | #186 | ||||||||||||||
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kingjames1:
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12-04-2002, 04:59 PM | #187 |
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Norge:
After this much discussion, you haven't grasped even the very basics of determinism. It may be my fault for not explaining it more clearly. You seem to be stuck in a few areas and I'll try my best to explain further. 1. I don't believe there is an objective right and wrong. Your points about my morality not being able to condemn certain actions as wrong are meaningless. I'm not trying to set up a morality whereby actions can be judged as right or wrong. Actions simply are actions and I'm providing an explanation for why those actions happen. I don't say that actions that try to preserve the close social group are "good". I only say that species with a predisposition to perform those actions gained a survival advantage that allowed them to prosper. The idea of "good" and "bad" only exist in our minds and they exist there because of the evolutionary advantage they provided our ancestors. 2. If someone's actions are determined, you don't believe they should still be held accountable for those actions. This is something you are injecting to the discussion that I never claimed. I've listed many practical reasons for holding people accountable for their actions despite the determinism. Species with individuals who had the drive to hold others accountable for antisocial behavior had a distinct survival advantage over those that didn't. It helped maintain close-knit groups. I would change a burned out light bulb. I wouldn't leave it in it's socket just because it's burning out was determined by its structure and the amount of current it had seen. 3. You also seem to think that determinism means that peoples' actions are not affected by the actions of others around them. Determinism is not predestination. The determinism I'm putting forth is simply that a person's behavior is based only on the stimuli acting on their brain whose structure is determined by genetics and the sum of their previous experiences. My drive to hold someone accountable for an action I find disgusting causes me to provide them with another input (negative reinforcement from me) which may prevent them from performing that act. It's not time for me to give up determinism. Certainly not until you've convinced me that you at least understand it. kingjames1 and I disagree, but I do think he/she at least grasps the main points of my position. |
12-04-2002, 05:33 PM | #188 | |||
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K,
This is a disappointing reply for one reason. You haven’t engaged at all with the points that I made. Not one, apparently. That is disappointing. You wrote: Quote:
I don't say that actions that try to preserve the close social group are "good". I only say that species with a predisposition to perform those actions gained a survival advantage that allowed them to prosper. That’s exactly what I am responding to! You wrote, Quote:
This last one is a mystery to me. You wrote: Quote:
Thanks. |
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12-04-2002, 11:27 PM | #189 |
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james you are so full of shit I can smell you from here.
You deny that you are arguing for Christian perspective, then admit you are a Christian which is why you will not accept evolutionary ethics. Woes me! I guess a poor "lost soul" like myself just can't accept divine doublespeak james. james I likewise am not going to show you how a criticism of pragmatism doesn't necessarily entail a criticism of Christianity: I already did that via an example. Just because you lack reading comprehension skills does not mean I'm going to draw you a picture and then email it to you. Which is probably all that will work by it seems. The fact is you may placing both under a common rubric, perhaps they even share features in common: however your crticisms only apply to one or the other in most cases. And you treat them as if they apply to both. And how the hell can you come up with the idea tha situational morality=absolute morality. Ever hear of a contradiction in terms james? It simply baffles the mind how you are willing to spend so much time and go to such great lengths to prove to everyone on this board how much of a moronic freaking idiot you really are. Well you can stop james because most of us here are already convined. Further demonstration will not be necessary. I doubt you are going to save any souls here from the dark lord underground in his lake of fire. imo you have probably just read too many "Left Behind" books james and are just trying to defend a viewpoint built on fantasy with a very poor and simplistic philosophy that even a person taking an introcudtory course or aware of basic logic can see through. Stop thinking that you are going to magically justify some two-thousand year old fairy tail and come to grips with reality. That is the best advice I can give. |
12-05-2002, 07:19 AM | #190 | |||||||||||||||||||
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Norge:
Very well. Here is a point by point response. Quote:
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However, since you brought it up, this is one of the areas I find very interesting. Clearly the majority of the evolution of social animals was at the small group / family level. Only recently (in evolutionary terms) has humanity reached a point where our social groups include a huge majority of people we don't even know. I believe that is the cause of many of the "grey areas" in "morality". Is war an acceptable method for ensuring national priorities? Is it OK to keep the money when a corporation makes a financial mistake in your favor? There are a million of them. Note again that I'm not saying these questions can be evaluated as truly right or wrong. I'm only interested in how our deterministic evolved brains will react now that out communities are much more global in nature. But, this stuff all belongs in another discussion, so I won't dwell on it any more. Quote:
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I want to be very clear on this. I AM NOT EVALUATING ACTIONS AS GOOD OR BAD / RIGHT OR WRONG. I am only trying to provide an explanation for behavior. You mentioned two mutually exclusive statements and then never provided them. I'll wait for those. Quote:
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If I've provided my son with the threat of punishment for hitting his baby sister, he now has an additional input to process. He is still bound to the output of his brain, but now his brain will process the threat an it will (hopefully) change the output. Quote:
Again for the millionth time - holding people responsible for their determined behavior provides an input to their determined brains that can affect future behavior. Instead of destroying personal responsibility, determinism enhances it. Why hold anyone responsible if doing so will not affect their future behavior? Quote:
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