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Posts by Obbe

  1. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Why? Why should their desire to live more than 365 days be met with the response of changing their behaviour?

    Are you retarded?
  2. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Because 365 years = 1 year of years. I also meant to say 365 days so there was no confusion of calendar year etc but fucked up. Anyway, does that matter? Why do you keep dodging?

    I was just curious. I think they should probably change the way they do things of they want to last longer than 365 years.
  3. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by mmQ So it's kind of like the determinism vs free will debate in that we both effectively agreed but our definitions of free will make it seem as though we don't, even though for all intents and purposes, we do.

    I think so.
  4. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Zanick So, to be clear, you want to dispose of our moral systems, which have answers on how to handle this common problem, in favor of yours, which has none and doesn't believe it's possible to establish a framework for figuring them out?

    If our moral systems had the answers to these problems we wouldn't be having this discussion. Morality doesn't give us truth it gives us opinions.
  5. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Any normative statement is not objective. Do you think all normative statements are irrelevant?

    No idea.
  6. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Okay, say we investigate all these variables. Lets say that it is 100% proven that any meat consumption by humans after 365 years from today will lead to the obliteration of Earth.

    Now what should we do?

    Why did you edit your post from 1 year to 365 years?
  7. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Zanick What if the people in your society (let's assume you're a legislator or something) have differing opinions regarding a body of conflicting evidence? I don't think this is unlikely, I think it's rather typical. How does an amoral agent tasked with yielding the best possible outcome for a society determine what that means in the context of competing values and ideas? Assuming you aren't operating a totalitarian state, which I think would require you commit to a different moral theory altogether, but please correct me if you object.

    I don't know zanick. I guess they would jusy try their best? Why do you think morality is the best way to make decisions? It isn't objective.
  8. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Manonfire Not hot at all
    Wtf is wrong with u



    One in the video tho daaaaamnnn
    Thays how she deserves to be treated

    Who cares.
  9. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Zanick How do you weigh what is good for a society if your conception of moral value is that there are as many moralities as there are people?

    To use eating meat as an example, I suppose instead of asking if eating meat is moral or immoral society should investigate whether or not it is effective, efficient, sustainable, etc. You know, variables that we can actually measure and demonstrate with evidence instead of opinion.
  10. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Zanick Obbe, do you have anything resembling a decision framework for a community within your subjective view of morality? I don't see how this can be possible, as yours seems to represent sheer anarchism without a moral leg to stand on.

    I guess I think society should base decisions on what is best for society and not on what is perceived as moral or immoral.

    But I never claimed to have a "decision framework".
  11. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Because it's an objective basis for morality.

    If you don't disagree with any of my premises or don't believe I have illegitimately connected any steps of my reasoning, then you are forced to acknowledge that. It's not Lanny's version, but it's there.

    I think it's a language thing. Kind of like how you think nothing is subjective, yet there is still a definition for that word in the dictionary.

    I wouldn't call your system "morality", or even "your" system... it's really just "how things are".

    I still say morality is relative and really is irrelevant to most issues. I think you're saying the same things, just in a really convoluted way so that you can sniff your own farts and get a boner over it.
  12. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain I have used the FBI anonymous tip form to report you for possessing and selling child pornography for cryptocurrency through this website.

    I hope your opsec was on point.



    Are you asserting that somehow they magically generated an uncaused opinion or feeling, and it actualized into this world in the form of action?

    Because as far as I know, everything in this universe is caused and created by objective physical processes. The illusion of subjectivity simply exists because of a lack of information; you can draw useful conclusions based on incomplete information, which is the only purpose or definition of subjectivity I've ever heard as remotely defensible. It's just a subset of objectivity.



    Correct and incorrect has nothing to do with either morality or objectivity. Objectivity strictly boils down to true/false logic. The only objective truth in the universe is what can be derived through pure logic, and the use of analytical statements to illustrate tautological truths. It is literally binary, true or false. For morality, the best you can do is test for consistency, and you can derive certain logical axioms a priori, from which you can derive moral axioms.





    No part of my morality asserts correctness, and the answer of who is acting morally or immorally is actually not binary and/or mutually exclusive, it's not like a coin toss. Neither of them have to be correct or incorrect.

    You choose what you want to do and whether you can live with the consequences of doing it. If you think something would be a negative action to take against you and you don't want it to happen to you, you don't don't do it because you've already judged that action in their position to be bad, whether or not it is advantageous or anything else for you.

    I don't think we actually disagree about any of that, I'm not sure why you keep framing this as an argument.
  13. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
  14. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Put salt on the coaster before you put your drink on it.
  15. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain Systems with the ability and impetus to begin to exist and sustain their own persistence, are oriented to do so. That's just a tautological, objective truth. Additionally, any system that has the tendency ("desire") to act or be a certain way, has the imperative to be that way and actualize itself that way. This is also a tautological truth. These facts, and the ability to deal with and around them, are the basis of my morality.

    Social contracts seem to be just such a system, for individuals as well as for the concept of a social contract itself. Certain behaviours are logically optimized for such a living system, and a supersystem composed of the interactions of such individual life systems, to exist, and to form such a system is a logical necessity for any such individual who is born and respects their own right to life, and wants it preserved. It could apply to aliens or super intelligent cows or something else entirely. If you are born and want to do know the most optimal way to continue exercising your freedom to do stuff as a result of being alive, then my moral system applies to you.

    Let me make a better argument for you, because you are a mongoloid.

    Lets think about an alternatively morally oriented being; a "Mr Meeseeks" from the cartoon Rick and Morty.

    If you haven't watched it, Mr Meeseeks are creatures that are created spontaneously from nothingness with the press of a button, and their primary and singular higher motivation is to cease to exist, because existence is torture to Meeseeks. Upon being summoned, you can ask a Mr Meeseeks to perform a task, and the only way for them to cease to exist is to successfully carry out the task they are assigned. That task thus becomes their singular checkpoint on the path to nonexistence.

    The box that summons a Meeseeks is designed by Rick, it did not emerge as a direct result of evolution etc, it is essentially a tool designed by rick. This is important because it is borne of a different set of motivations and pretty much shows us a completely valid alternative set of morals.

    Such a being can have a completely different and incompatible set of moral motivations because

    1) Existence is an inherent negative to a Meeseeks. Its natural impetus is to reject its right to life, and end its own life, and propagation is a negative to it. Not dying means ultimate suffering for the Meeseeks.

    2) In order to end its life and its further suffering, it must perform whatever task it was assigned.

    So to a Meeseeks, the most logical course of action would be to do whatever is necessary to accomplish its task and go back into nonexistence. The basis for his behaviour is no different than mine, I just happen to have the desire to keep living and the Meeseeks does not. He would simply be acting on his self interest, as I am acting in mine. I don't need to make that judgement for him.

    However, the fun part of this example is that we can dissect individual moral actions through the use of the Meeseeks as a tool to isolate each consideration and its circumstances, because it gears anything except steps towards accomplishing that one goal is basically a negative.

    However, even this still works in my moral system. If I was in the position of the Meeseeks and assumed his motivations, I would say it is perfectly reasonable for the Meeseeks to act whatever way it needs to in order to accomplish its goal, but I have no obligation to allow it to accomplish that goal if it violates my rights. I could judge the Meeseeks as being perfectly morally consistent, even if it murders someone, because it has no desire to preserve its right to life or continue to do anything except its right to life. However, even the Meeseeks must still play moral ball with us, because if it just goes out and does whatever, we could still arrest or restrain it and hinder its from its primary goal, which is nonexistence… so even if you don't value your own right to life (because Meeseeks skip straight to the "freedom to do anything" part, but with the desire to do only one thing, ultimately nothing)), ultimately, you can value morality in order to actualize your goals, whatever they may be.

    My moral system is 100% logically consistent and ob jective.

    Didn't read.

    Originally posted by Captain Why is that clearly subjective?

    Because their conclusions are influenced by their opinions or feelings.

    If morality is objective than one of them must be incorrect. You believe morality is objective, so tell me how you would determine who is correct in that scenario.
  16. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Captain You don't understand what the word "subjective" means, you fuckwit. An action can be moral or immoral depending on the circumstances surrounding it. That doesn't mean it's subjective. An equation can be equal to 20 or 35, and two different equations can be equal to 12, it depends on the information presented but that doesn't mean mathematics is "subjective".

    A person blows up an abortion clinic and believes it was the moral thing to do. The person who owns this clinic believes it was an immoral thing to do. That's clearly subjective.
  17. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Obbe Why? A person blows up an abortion clinic. They believe it was a moral action. The people who own the clinic believe it was immoral. This is possible because morality is relative.

    If you believe morality is objective and that there is something objective we can look at to determine who is correct in a situation like this, what is it?
  18. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Lanny No, you've said some things are both right and wrong, simultaneously, dependent on perspective (you have an alien example). That's entirely different from saying the moral status of an action is sometimes right or sometimes wrong contingent on other situational facts. No one here has disagreed with the latter, almost everyone would disagree with the former.

    Why? A person blows up an abortion clinic. They believe it was a moral action. The people who own the clinic believe it was immoral. This is possible because morality is relative.
  19. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Originally posted by Lanny Well there's a distinction between a fetus and a baby. Also a person who thinks killing young children is generally wrong but thinks abortion is acceptable doesn't take a relativist position. Ethical realism doesn't (necessarily) mean you think there are a set moral laws and no situational fact can change what's right (e.g. abortion vs. infanticide). It just means that moral statements are propositions with truth values rather than mere statements of opinion.

    If you believe that the truth of a statement like "X is immoral" depends on the situation and is not always true, then you seem to believe that morality is relative.
  20. Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    Also, you appear to have just stated that something is wrong sometimes, but sometimes it is not. Which means it is relative. Which is exactly what I've been saying this entire time...
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