Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,112
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
The point is, any planet with individuals that are born, live learn, communicate, seek goals (which may include to reproduce), and die have this as a function because it is a function of that pattern. The function of other patterns can, however, be derived, assuming it converges as our patter of existence and capability does, on a strategic recommendation general to the pattern.I'm curious what other planets' life is it a function of?Moreover, AM wants to ignore that morality has sprung up and emerged from wider principles governing strategic direction among groups of agents.
These are properties of agents with arbitrary goals, and properties of the interactions of goals. Aliens, computers, pretty much any other socially interactive self-replicator will emerge similar solutions around such similar problem. I completely reject AM's contention that "morality" (really, here, we are discussing 'ethics' not morals!) can be a human universal and not emergent among communicative replicating agents. Other organisms may organize slightly differently given different relationships with death, symbiosis, and such, but the core of goal oriented action is not a unique function of earth life.
No, we didn't. They were imposed, rather, by the structure of reality. There are a limited set of resolutions found for various problems: heap, stack, race, priority. You can desire for another model all you want, but those categories encompass all of it; race is in fact a subset of priority, priority being determined by an external factor (proximity).I'm going to quibble here. You're conflating cause and effect. These elements didn't emerge within logical processes and functions, we imposed them.You can see these facts in that the elements that we apply to social situations, morally, echo themselves in the elements we apply to logical processes and functions, which are about as alien as any thing can be, But the solutions for problems still apply ethics, the thing our morality is an approximation of
This is not specific to our geometry. In fact, to compare the systemic/axiomatic structures of thought and modeling reality to the just-so elements of what we happened to be is a red herring. They are not the same and I do not claim they are. But I your comparison, you equivocate these things
No, that's AM's claim. I pose there are two things which you here conflate: an unstable morality that vacillates between a primitive darwinian paradigm and a more advanced neo-Lamarckian paradigm; the relativity exists in where one lands in applying Lamarckian strategy over Darwinian, and a stable Ethics which can be used to describe and prescribe how and when and why to apply paradigms such as these.Your comment here is kind of like remarking on the implicit superiority of generally man-height bipeds as an evolutionary adaptation by observing how well tables and charges are fit to that shape
On a more generally note... I think I agree with your core concept - morality (and ethics) are not universal, there is no objective and externally imposed standard. They are the result of evolution within a social species. But, given that they are a result of selection pressures, they are also not entirely stable. They change with the social group. Thus, morality varies from culture to culture, belief system to belief system, and across time.
Ethics is more the discussion of, which paradigm gives better benefits to who and why.