It has to do with what people value. Is your claim that a person who is suicidal would not want a better life if it were somehow magically possible? I'm talking about what people value, not what they see as realistic or possible in their current situations. The whole reason why they are committing a suicide is the avoidance of suffering, and I already wrote about that.
Suicidal people "value" the end of life. aka--what exactly do you mean by "value"? And why do hypotheticals have any say in this, or any say in a scientific morality? Should we perhaps instead live in the real world?
Sure, a suicidee would want a magical better life. So would a heroin addict. So would a woman about to kill her two newborns because she thinks Jesus told her to do so. If magic is possible, we should all be blissfull all the time. Maigc isn't possible. Suffering exists. Ending suffering is sometimes such a priority that it means ending life itself.
But, maybe I'm misapprehending Harris' entire argument. Is he saying that in Magic-land, his theories make sense? Well, maybe they do. I haven't thought much about magic-land.
We, as in human beings. We want to avoid things that lead us to "bad life" (suffering, etc.) and we want to increase things that lead us to "good life" (pleasure, etc.). This is my understanding of human beings anyway, (1) I'd like to hear exceptions to this and (2) how it relates to the discussion of how we should build our moral guides.
1) Masochists (not masochists who derive pleasure from masochism, but true masochists)
2) You use the word "we". That to me means "all of us". I think it's obvious all of us don't agree. Harris seems to also think "we/all of us" prefer a certain moral imperative. "Well-being of conscious creatures" or something. I too find this wrong in part because this isn't actually what "we/all of us" morally ascribe to.
Off the top of my head, to be more precise, there are no good reasons (that I know of) for believing that there is any kind of life after death so the question is easily answered.
Wow. Well...a good reason for
believing there is life after death is that it would be really swell. This would bring great comfort within life, and allow oneself to not worry about death and instead focus on life.
A good reason for a suicidee is even less--that even if "life" after death is utter void, it will be better than his current suffering.
Maybe I misapprended what "good reasons" mean, and you're only speaking of "scientific reasons"? If "good reasons" means "personal, religious, psychological reasons" it seems that yeah, there are plenty of "good reasons" to believe in life after death.
BUT, semantics aside, what you probably mean (again) is that for some people in some situations it's better off to be dead than alive, and in this case we're talking about the avoidance of suffering, which I wrote about in my previous posts.
Sure. Mathematical theory:
Living in terrible distress = +6 suffering value. Magical wishes to end this = -100 suffering. Ending suffering = 0 suffering.
In the real world, can't you see why a suicidee (perhaps, who's wished for years that the magical would happen but it never has) would choose a 0 value rather than a +6 value?
Or is "life itself" assigned a default -x suffering value? Life, by itself, is non-suffering? Why? How? Give scientific proof?
Let's propose more humans today or in history live in a state of suffering against a zero value than those who live in a non-suffering state. Does this mean all humans should kill themselves, to avoid that positive value of suffering? I don't know how you're calculating any of your assertions.
I have to wonder why you bring this up again and again?
Because you seem to think "to be alive" is a positive state of existence. That anyone considering suicide would just look and see "wow I'm alive!" and epiphany into believing being alive, just by itself, is worth something.
(also, because you haven't demonstrated any of your positions by SCIENCE CAN ANSWER MORAL QUESTIONS, which is why this thread exists. In other words--we're now discussing philosophy, when the point of the thread seemed to be that science could completely ignore philosophy).
They are two different things, the current situation, and what we really value. Sometimes it's better to be dead than to suffer, I have no objections to that. What the suicidal person achieves (or at least has good reasons to believe that he achieves) with the ending of his life is the avoidance of (his own) suffering, which is actually a good case for human beings not valuing "bad life". On the other hand, if the person really thinks that a better LIFE awaits him after death he probably has no convincing reasons to believe that, but I'd be very interested to hear them.
to the bold: you seem to have a pathological objection to that. You seem to think it's
wrong.
I utterly agree with your paragraph here. It's my position completely. I'm baffled then why you've continued to argue against it in 90% of your other paragraphs. Maybe I'm just dumb (not being sarcastic, sorry if I'm dumb).
What are these questions of yours that I don't want to engage with?
Any question besides those revolving around "SCIENCE CAN ANSWER MORAL QUESTIONS".
I have already said that I'd rather discuss these things in real time over a chat system because I find writing stuff like this (and in a foreign language) is way more time consuming than I want it to be. For this reason my replies might take a long time to appear, but I'm more than willing to discuss my own moral ideas with you or anyone else, in the hope of learning something new, it just takes a lot more time than necessary. I have no expertise on this issue, nor have I really thought about these things in depth, but as you can see from my previous posts, I do have some serious first questions about the whole "is-ought" notion and its relevance to moral thinking.
Me either. And I'm surprised English isn't your first language. I decline a chat system because I suffer from several anxiety disorders and cannot abide by most personal interaction. Sorry. Also sorry if I've molded your responses into a strawman. I'm just so aghast at Sam Harris that I'm looking for excuses to jump on anyone remotely resembling him. Plus, I've been drinking.