Re: Modern Physical theory as a basis for Ethical and Existential Nihilism

From: Wei Dai <weidai.domain.name.hidden>
Date: Sat, 24 Jan 2004 21:00:39 -0500

On Sun, Jan 25, 2004 at 01:01:42AM +1100, Stathis Papaioannou wrote:
> If I stop with (a) above, I am simply
> saying that this is how I feel about suffering, and this feeling is not
> contingent on the state of affairs in any actual or possible world [there, I
> got it in!].

(a) as stated is ill defined. In order to actually reason with it in
practice, you'd have to define what "activity", "cause", "net", "human",
and "suffering" mean, but then it's hard to see how one can just have a
"feeling" that statement (a), by now highly technical, is true. What about
a slightly different variation of (a), where the definition of "human" or
"suffering" is given a small tweak? How do you decide which of them
reflects your true feelings? The mere presense of many similar but
contradictory moral statements might give you a feeling of arbitrariness
that causes you to reject all of them.

Difficulties like this lead to the desire for a set of basic moral axioms
that can be defined precisely and still be seen by everyone as obvious and
non-arbitrary. Again, maybe it doesn't exist, but we can't know for sure
unless we're much smarter than we actually are.
Received on Sat Jan 24 2004 - 21:22:44 PST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Fri Feb 16 2018 - 13:20:09 PST