Honestly, I think I would have balked if calcsam had offered specific answers to this question, rather than the general principle of deriving them from the “theology”. He is a relative outsider, and I think this is something we should be hashing out for ourselves.
I’m not sure it makes sense to build an idea around a premise that there is a central problem of propagating norms before we have some examples of norms which should be propagated.
I don’t know the LDS example “Your purpose on earth is to become like God” is pretty big. Big goals are good if they are back up with supportive low-level goals.
Honestly, I think I would have balked if calcsam had offered specific answers to this question, rather than the general principle of deriving them from the “theology”. He is a relative outsider, and I think this is something we should be hashing out for ourselves.
I’m not sure it makes sense to build an idea around a premise that there is a central problem of propagating norms before we have some examples of norms which should be propagated.
What about things like “overcome your biases”, “raise the sanity waterline”, and “win the stars”?
Or, rather, norms which achieve these goals. These don’t seem low-level enough to be norms in themselves.
I don’t know the LDS example “Your purpose on earth is to become like God” is pretty big. Big goals are good if they are back up with supportive low-level goals.
You can’t get all that much higher than ‘win the stars’! :P