Wowbagger
The Infinitely Prolonged
I hesitated to use the term Group Selection to describe this theory. That is how most people have talked about it, in the past. For various technical reasons, that I won't bother getting into right now, that had been problematic. So, I figured I would try a new approach with this "stabilization" wording.
However, in a naïve, non-technical sense, perhaps thinking of this in terms of "group selection" (with scare-quotes) might be helpful in understanding the idea, in approximate terms.
That is: Those moral values that allow a society to survive and thrive better are selected for, and society will more likely continue selecting for them, until something better happens to come along. Any values that detract from the survival of society will be filtered out, as they try to enter. Sometimes it takes longer than others, but filter out, they will.
And, sometimes, there are trade-offs: A value gets selected is slightly bad for some small part of society, but sticks around because it is so much better for so much more of society, than the opposite alternative.
Does that help, somewhat?
It doesn't matter if YOU think it is "good" or not. It is, objectively, what morality will end up being about, anyway.
That is the point in pointing in building an objective morality.
I do not have a choice in the matter, either. If I said "I prefer not to have morality stabilize around well-being", it would be like saying "I prefer not to live on a planet that is revolving around the sun!"
One of the things that happens when you demonstrate an objective morality is that quite a LOT of philosophy gets bypassed! It's like centuries of thought and writings on the subject cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.
Philosophy can still be useful for systematics purposes, though. So, it's not a total loss.
Nietzsche's speech is largely right. But, he equates "conformism" with "approbation or the interest of society", for some reason. Just because one is bad, doesn't mean the other is. It might not be in the interests of society for everyone to be as "conformist" as Nietzsche is saying.
Would Nietzsche claim it is 'conformist' to live on a planet that is revolving around the sun?
What if I told you morality has... a way... of matching what is prudent? At least in the long run?
I will be posting responses to Garner's book, soon.
However, in a naïve, non-technical sense, perhaps thinking of this in terms of "group selection" (with scare-quotes) might be helpful in understanding the idea, in approximate terms.
That is: Those moral values that allow a society to survive and thrive better are selected for, and society will more likely continue selecting for them, until something better happens to come along. Any values that detract from the survival of society will be filtered out, as they try to enter. Sometimes it takes longer than others, but filter out, they will.
And, sometimes, there are trade-offs: A value gets selected is slightly bad for some small part of society, but sticks around because it is so much better for so much more of society, than the opposite alternative.
Does that help, somewhat?
We don't have to reduce it that far. Beginning with the process of Natural Selection is good enough. Almost everything else I am saying follows from there.I continue without seeing any definition of “Nature”. Are you saying “Nature” is “physical forces”? I fear that this concept is not operational in Ethics. Electrons, force fields or the law of Gravity does not explain almost nothing of human behaviour and even less of morality. It would be good that you define “Nature” or “natural” for a better common understanding. Thank you.
According to theory, "stable" is inevitable, for some moral value. (Maybe maintaining distances between classes will be part of that, but I doubt it.)No. I don’t know. Distances between classes are growing in the globalized world. But this is not our problem. "Stable" is not "good". "Growing" is not "good" also. I can consider “stable” something awful. No contradiction.
It doesn't matter if YOU think it is "good" or not. It is, objectively, what morality will end up being about, anyway.
That is the point in pointing in building an objective morality.
I do not have a choice in the matter, either. If I said "I prefer not to have morality stabilize around well-being", it would be like saying "I prefer not to live on a planet that is revolving around the sun!"
I suspect cooperation and equalitarian will likely be part of the objective morality we stabilize on. But, whether I am right or wrong about that, neither I, nor any philosopher you can name would have a choice about that!Sorry, but if you are defending cooperative and equalitarian morality, you cannot say the same thing than I have said. I am Nietzschean (on this occasion) and I’m against rationality, equalitarianism, socialism, democracy, science and progress. I am Zaratustra, the Übermensch Prophet! You don’t understand what I’m claiming!
One of the things that happens when you demonstrate an objective morality is that quite a LOT of philosophy gets bypassed! It's like centuries of thought and writings on the subject cried out in terror, and were suddenly silenced.
Philosophy can still be useful for systematics purposes, though. So, it's not a total loss.
There are different ways, I guess, of describing the same history. The only difference is that I would say this "invention" is more like an "inevitable emergence".So the leaders of the weak ones, the Priests, have invented an unnatural rule: morality and equalitarianism.
Like I said, before, it is pointless for me to find a contradiction in something that, largely, does not contradict what I am even saying.a. Show me any contradiction in my Nietzschean account or…
b. Show me an experience (observation or experiment) that concludes I am wrong.
I continue thinking that you are not able to do it.
Nietzsche's speech is largely right. But, he equates "conformism" with "approbation or the interest of society", for some reason. Just because one is bad, doesn't mean the other is. It might not be in the interests of society for everyone to be as "conformist" as Nietzsche is saying.
Would Nietzsche claim it is 'conformist' to live on a planet that is revolving around the sun?
Once again, you seem not to understand that morality and prudence are different.
What if I told you morality has... a way... of matching what is prudent? At least in the long run?
Thanks! It takes place December 7th!I just recently ordered Mackie's book on ethics. I will try and give a synopsis to let you have some target practice for the debate.
I will be posting responses to Garner's book, soon.