dr
"Good" and "bad" are culturally defined. In my eyes, we can make the most of this life experience by maximizing happiness for all beings--if an action, object or idea helps this goal, it is "good"; if it hurts this goal, it is "bad". Without priorities and primary drives, "good" and "bad" mean nothing.
Also, "will" is an empowering illusion, and "god" is the unseen force responsible for everything we can't explain.
"Truth" is difficult.
Well said. Looks like your free will is working just fine.
Yes, there are trade-offs. If we maximise happiness for some, we minimise happiness for others. And who we maximise for, and who we minimise for, is determined by politics.
And politics is as we know is: who does what to who.
Yes, there are trade-offs. If we maximise happiness for some, we minimise happiness for others. And who we maximise for, and who we minimise for, is determined by politics.
And politics is as we know is: who does what to who.
We need reforms in some places and revolutions in others. But reforms are slow and revolutions unpredictable. I propose we give up and embrace nuclear holocaust.Maybe we can reform our societies' structural flaws while there are still enough living beings for wealth distribution to be an issue...
We need reforms in some places and revolutions in others. But reforms are slow and revolutions unpredictable. I propose we give up and embrace nuclear holocaust.
Uh huh, right.But but... it wasn't my free will that did that! It was just a string of brain functions all coming together to form that conclusion! Each of them was predetermined in advance!
But but... it wasn't my free will that did that! It was just a string of brain functions all coming together to form that conclusion! Each of them was predetermined in advance!
I'm still convinced. If morality is false, it doesn't matter what we believe. If it is true, we should believe it. Hence I will try as much as I can to lead a moral life.
You're right, they were.
"If morality is false"... can you expand on that? Morality arises from the common drive for security, and the understanding that every action has consequences. Not harming others is perfectly logical, but unfortunately religion was a necessary vessel for these ideas.
What I mean is what I said in the OP, that ultimately it doesn't make a difference. Security is no better than not having security, happiness is no better than suffering. Thinking some states are better than others is just an illusion we have evolved to believe in. It's just our brain giving us messages. Goodness then is just whatever we think it is but has no ultimate reality, so all of existence is equally neutral.
Ah... I agree, reality is unaffected by what does and does not serve our wills.
My philosophical approach is rather pragmatic. When you get right down to it, goodness is entirely subjective, free will (and chance, btw) are illusions, and God is no more likely than the flying spaghetti monster.What is Good, What is Free, What is Will, What is God, What is Truth, What is Is?
My philosophical approach is rather pragmatic. When you get right down to it, goodness is entirely subjective, free will (and chance, btw) are illusions, and God is no more likely than the flying spaghetti monster.
But I was raised to equate goodness with happiness, and that's a better definition than any others I've come across. Sometimes it gets messy; murdering people makes extreme antisocial psychopaths happy, which forces us to make further value judgments. But it's a very intuitive concept, and I'm proud to espouse it.
Free will and chance are illusions that result from us being unable to quantify or even recognize all of the factors that contribute to any given decision or event. But they're convenient illusions all the same; at least until such a moment when humanity understands everything in the wide universe, if that ever happens.
I personally have no use for God, but for others religion can impart happiness, so my usual attitude is whatevs. Except when I hear a news story about some fundy assholes hating on innocent people, or blowing people up.Then my attitude swings toward 'militant atheist' for a few days.
On a more positive note, truth is real; although we can and do make mistakes in verifying certain truths, and many truths are simply beyond our current technological means to understand.
Fun topic!