Joey McGee
That statement is only incorrect if you interpret it incorrectly.
Your statement was wrong because it was articulated wrong -- it's not that big a deal as I can be inarticulate at times. Regardless, when the statement is dragged out to it's conclusion, that is a possibility that such an argument could be advanced and would be accepted.
Yeah I would agree with you, and I agree in many respects with Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris (a recent event on science and morality) on a lot of these outlooks. In my estimation, because these replicators do work on their own without our interference, in many cases it might be too chaotic like trying to figure out the genome or predicting the weather. In many cases it's completely cut and dried, but because human interaction is such a subtle thing I think we might have to settle for more general approximations in some cases. I think Sam talked about that there too. So really we will always be improving morally because our grasp of the facts about reality will improve. Objective moral values come from objective knowledge. Truth is love, as they like to say.
The problem is with Sam Harris's argument is that it's based on the concept of utilitarianism which has a number of flaws.
To determine what ought to be, one does have to determine what is; one also has to determine what possibilities there are in the future and pick the one that is morally best for mankind and has a chance of working properly.
For a society that doesn't consider genocide to be immoral and in fact might consider it a moral obligation
Your views of morality are too fuzzy. The problem with moral fuzziness is that the lines become so blurred that you effectively end up with no sense of morals or ethics.
WhatRoughBeast
Please, let's not get wrapped around the axle here. "Ought" has several meanings. The Man was using the sense of "expected to happen due to the effect of natural laws", as in "If I drop an object at sea level, it ought to accelerate downwards at 9.8 m/sec/sec. "Ought" also has the meaning of "morally desireable or enforceable", as in "Children ought not to be sold as sex slaves." Or, for that matter, "Genocide ought to be prevented."
At least you have your head screwed on right enough to agree that Genocide should be prevented.
JFrankA
It looks like you are looking for the "hard line" between manipulation and mind control.
Of course. If we can't find a hard line, at least some line.
The brainwashing techniques that Lemurien posted are accurate and are very close to mind control without placing implants into a living brain. Brainwashing, I should add, is very different than "regular" manipulation.
Agreed, but the question then is -- is there any difference between military training, and brainwashing?
In order for brainwashing to take place, it has to include not only mental manipulation but physical and environmental changes that are going on 24/7. Sleep deprivation, changes in diet to make the body weaker, constant, and I mean constant and consistent reward/punishment system has to be in place as well as what Lemurien has already posted in order for Brainwashing to work. It's a lot of things to do, it's not just repeating a commercial over and over.
Generally true
True mind control, IMHO, will change those wants and desires in a person permanently no matter what they are and who they are.
Not necessarily. If I was able to manipulate a person's brain activity to make them do what I want, regardless of what it was; that's mind-control. If I decided to temporarily stop for a few hours, then resume, it wouldn't make it less mind-control.
I think factors that would divide the line from manipulation to mind-control would be
1.) The degree of resistance a person has to it
2.) The ability to make a person do things beyond what they would normally want to do
3.) The ability to for a person to realize that they are acting out of character, or to realize that they are being manipulated
The less resistance a person has to it; the greater the ability to make a person do things they normally wouldn't want to do, and do things out of character; the smaller the persons ability to be aware that they are being manipulated or are simply acting unusual -- the greater the extent of the control.
INRM
"In closing, I want to remind you all that no matter how I die, it was murder"
SNL Parody of Julian Assange