Ichneumonwasp
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- Feb 2, 2006
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I think duty devolves to empathy.
How does that work?
Empathy causes actions via emotions as it were. Most people don't have much in the way of Buddhist non-attachment, so for them empathy is effectively sufficient to change behavior because that tie is very strong and will go right into the complex pleasure/pain thing we all know and love. For some folk (like me) that gets more ... complicated, but I think it's still basically accurate.
Well, yes, empathy causes actions via emotions. But so does every other complex human action derive from emotions. Most of what we call rationality depends critically on emotion and "feeling". Remove the emotional impact on thinking and we cannot perform executive functions (we can't order what is most important in a series of tasks, for instance) because the mechanism of valuation has disappeared.
Some people do often have more empathy for the guy with the gun than the bleeding dude. Cops for example, assuming the guy with the gun is a cop. Guy on the ground is going to get cuffed (none too gently), searched, and left there while the amblance comes. Ain't too empathic hm?
Then how can empathy serve as the basis for any moral system? There is no right and/or wrong if empathy can be placed willy-nilly. That's why I keep arguing that there is much, much more to ethics.
Dunno what you mean by consequentialism; explain/integrate?
Sorry. Deciding on the moral worth of an action based on consequences. It is primarily important to the utilitarians out there and of no consequence to deontologists. We would typically use consequentialist thinking to determine culpability in the trucker example.
Your point re neural plurality is only partially accurate. It is self-integrating; that is in fact one of the most important features about it as a system. Cases where it isn't - like split-brain patients (with a severed corpus collosum), blindsight (ability to know where things are but not that they are there), etc are fascinating for just that reason, they violate the rule. It is extremely difficult to address the question of how much of it we "consciously" regulate; in my informed opinion the field isn't anywhere near having the data to answer that. Perhaps in another hundred years.
Cases where the integration breaks down prove the point I was trying to make -- namely that the integration occurs at higher levels in multimodal systems. I would not use the words "self-integrating" since the that seems to imply some sort of intentional plan (I'm just as guilty of using this dualistic language that we have inherited), though I think I know what you mean. There are even much weirder breakdowns in some of the rarer neurological syndromes like simultagnosia and other parietal-occipital-temporal junction abnormalities -- at least they strike most of us as weirder.