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03-29-2003, 05:05 AM | #31 | ||
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Nice discussion.
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If you'll notice, you haven't found a flaw in Utilitarianism. But turn the situation around: would you kill 1 innocent man to save 10 million others? Yes, you would. But how would you justify this deontolotically? You'd have to start making exceptions. Only utilitarianism stands up theoretically. Quote:
-Zulu |
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03-29-2003, 05:38 AM | #32 | |||
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Because the specifics to how they answer these questions are not relevant to the questions that I seek to answer, I do not pay close attention to that body of research. I pay close enough attention to see which theory is generally winning the debate. At this point, BDI functionalism seems to be at the top of the list. Quote:
This applies to desire itself. What makes a desire "good" or "bad" is its tendancy to bring about state of affairs that are the object of (other) desires. So, there is a heirarchical structure to desires (some desires are better than others), but this heirarchy does not require a different type of desire-independent value; this value is as desire-dependent as all others. Quote:
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03-29-2003, 05:59 AM | #33 | |
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Beliefs and desires are propositional attitudes. What this means is that all beliefs and desires can be expressed with a sentence: X believes that P X desires that P Where "believes" and "desires" are mental attitudes, and "P" is a proposition. A proposition is the meaning component of the sentence. "Snow is white" is a proposition. "I am writing this post" and "AlonzoFyfe is writing this post" are two different sentences, but they describe only one proposition. A "belief that P" is a mental attitude that the proposition P is true. Beliefs are motivationally neutral -- they merely store data about the world. A "desire that P" is a mental attitude that motivates the agent (to a degree proportional to the strength of the desire) to make it the case that P becomes or remains true. Combined, beliefs and desires cause action. The action aims at fulfilling desires, given the agent's beliefs. Beliefs and desires are both necessary and sufficient to account for all human intentions, but working neural connections and properly functioning muscles are also necessary for the belief and the desire to actually cause an action. |
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03-29-2003, 06:48 AM | #34 |
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By why use that terminology? Why not stick to: happiness [and pain]?
It seems easier to qualify pain and happiness than to qualify desires, at least as far as I can tell. -Zulu |
03-30-2003, 06:09 AM | #35 | |
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Besides, neither hedonism nor eudaemonism are actually alternatives to BDI theory. Both take BDI theory to be true, and then adds one simple limitation. Hedonism states that the set of potential propositions for "P" is limited to two: P = either "I avoid pain," and "I acquire pleasure" in all instances of human action. Eudaemonism states that the set of potential propositions for "P" is also limit to two: P = either "I avoid unhappiness" or "I acquire happiness" in all instances of human action. But both theories prove inadequate to handle all instances of human action. I hold that "desire that P" and "belief that P" are similar in that, just as there is no limit to the set of propositions that an agent can believe, there is similarly no limit to the propositions that an agent can desire. But if some set of limits is discovered, it will not alter the overall theory much. One will simply add caveats that it is unreasonable to hold that a person OUGHT TO "desire that P" for all P that cannot be the object of a desire. |
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