I accidentally unsubscribed to this thread and forgot about my last post until I was looking through my old ones. Kevin had taken the time to reply with some good ideas so I figured that the objective, scientifically moral thing to do would be reply despite the time expired. (
March 10th) My brain did need a break from this topic and I'm fresssshhh.
I think Harris would point to religious ideas of good and bad as counterexamples to that claim. A lot of those ideas seem clearly counterproductive if the goal is the well-being of conscious creatures, yet people care a lot about them.
I would argue that they thought they were in alignment with the highest form of well-being due to their supernatural distortions. For example, if you think that God's well-being and happiness is all-important and earthy suffering leads to heavenly well-being there's nothing you won't do for him no matter how painful or destructive the actions are to conscious creatures on earth.
I'm not even sure about that. I think that I'd point to Peter Singer and the animal liberation movement as a counterexample there. Scientists were busily torturing animals for decades before Singer led the charge to get people to believe that the wellbeing of non-human conscious beings mattered.
I disagree but that's a really good point. I would argue that people who enjoy or don't care about the suffering of animals are demonstrably disturbed, it's a factor in diagnosing psychopaths. You could objectively say that it matters because being callous towards suffering causes the species to become callous towards itself. That's kind of a simplistic argument that could be elaborated upon and clarified but you see where I'm going.
Similarly the appalling state of much of the Third World isn't a scientific problem - the world has more than enough food to feed everyone, and more than enough industrial capability to give everyone in the world clean water, basic medical care, mosquito netting and so forth. Science can make it easier to fix those problems without making any real sacrifices, but another solution would be to persuade people they should make some sacrifices.
But the fact is that poverty persists because of corruption and religion. It's not the only cause, but if Canada suddenly became the leader of the NWO, everyone had their belief systems reset, and all of the corrupt people dropped dead for some reason the situation would be remedied pretty fast. The reason those people keep their power is lies about reality that their followers believe, whether they are conscious frauds or not. The lie is that there isn't a better way to conduct themselves in order to achieve objective well-being for all. It's knowing facts about reality that would make the difference. Perhaps convincing people through philosophy would be worthwhile but I would argue that exposing the lies and illuminating the facts about reality should technically be enough.
Really? What is he saying that, say, Singer and Parfit and maybe Rawls haven't said before?
I wouldn't know. I was already thinking in this way before TML and I've heard parallel ideas before. The neuroscience arguments and comparison to religion's search for well-being were two fresh perspectives I hadn't thought deeply about.
I still keep an open mind, I intend to read a lot more about this in the future, including the posts I missed. I'm sure that the Dawkins/Harris event based on TML will generate more interest and new debate. It's on the 12th and will be posted online shortly after.