Kshartle wrote:
moda0306 wrote:
So the DECISION to breathe underwater is an "unsound" decision, because it involves an incorrect premise: You can breathe underwater.
If I conclude that "I ought to breathe underwater" because "I like being underwater," and "water contains oxygen," then you have an INVALID decision, because, while both premises are true, the conclusion doesn't necessarily follow the premise.
It's important WHY it is incorrect, in the same way it is important to measure the flows of logic effectively.
But if I misunderstand reality in a different way... If a breathe air, but believe I am breathing in "life fairies," my conclusion-decision may be "unsound," but that doesn't mean that "I ought not breathe" or that "breathing delivers no value"... it's just not proven yet that I "ought to breathe" with accurate premises.
I know you think this is academic, but it's hugely important to logical flow.
Making a decision to breathe underwater may be "incorrect" insofar that it contains invalid/unsound logic to reach a conclusion, but that doesn't conclude an opposite. It doesn't conclude that I "ought not" to breathe underwater just because my decision to do so was bad logic.
Moda.....
You can't breathe underwater. You "ought not" try, whatever your beliefs. Yes the assumption is you want to survive and want to acheive your goals.
That is always the assumption. You cannot want to
not acheive your goals or they wouldn't be your goals. You always want to do things that get you what you want or whatever. I don't see how that link can be broken. The definition of a goal is what you want to acheive so this doesn't need to be broken out. That is the concept.
As Tech pointed out a person who wishes to die has no use for values since none are required to submit. If the argument is "maybe I want to drown", the response is "then go drown I'll talk with a person who wants to live". They shouldn't be difficult to find.
Of course that might be just another worthless, vague premise that I'm using to snowball you.
14 of these 17 points so far are just so we can have a productive discussion of the basics. They may seem vague and useless to people who have already made up their mind they will reject any conclusion but I think they are all important, even if just so we can understand statements of fact vs. statements of opinion.
Some of us are not as advanced as others and have to work this out rather than just rely on an ancient document written by guys with ten wives and slaves to tell us how we should live.
K,
You can't just
assume a value, especially if you want to universalize it and have it be a function of REALITY instead of just a subjective Premise that you're inserting into a decision equation for yourself.
Tech's comment was basically an ad hominem disguised as logic. Human-beings tend to value different things. That doesn't mean that the most popular of these values is actually objectively fundamental to reality... they could be subjective preferences that individuals have.
Unless you want to define "ought" as "a behavioral imperative to maximize what we individually value most," then you haven't built your logic correctly. However, we might not always think about it so overtly, but oughts ALWAYS have to have a value-variable, and those values aren't always the same.
But you're certainly not getting that specific with your definition of "ought." It's simply a decision-guiding operative word, but guiding decisions from different options HAS to have some sort of value-measurement. If you want to include in your argument some defining principals around 1) what those values are, and 2) whether they are universally binding, then go ahead and try to, but just assuming that because "if someone wants to die (not what the arguer is asking... they are asking "what if
someone wants to die?"), they should just rid us of their presence and I can debate someone who wants to live."
To clarify via example: A police-man "ought" to pull someone over if he sees them going 100 mph on a highway (his assumed duty to protect other drivers and uphold the law, which he has contractually agreed to with the "owner" of the road), given one subjective measure of value. But he "ought not" to do so given another (the NAP as you see it).
So I think we need to spend sometime hashing out these decision-driving-values that exist within "ought" conclusions. I don't necessarily mean "moral" values, yet. But just value judgement in general.
For instance, I can't PROVE it, but I believe human happiness to be intrinsically more valuable than human suffering. I SEE this as fundamental to the human race (and beyond that, to a degree), but I can't PROVE that. I have to take it on (gasp) faith.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine