Whether to use “awesome” instead of “virtuous” is the question, not the answer. This is the question asked by Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil.
Awesome doesn’t care how many innocent people died. They were not awesome. They were pathetic, which is the opposite of awesome.
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Tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, and floods are awesome. A God who will squish you like a bug if you dare not to worship him is awesome
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Hitler was evil, not bad.
You appear to have invented your own highly specific meaning of “awesome”, which appears synonymous with “effective”. As such, “awesome” (in my experience generally used as a contentless expression of approval, more or less, with connotations of excitingness) is not fulfilling it’s intended goal of intuition-pump for you. Poor you. Those of us who use “awesome” in the same way as nyan_sandwich, however, have no such problem.
If you don’t think Hitler was awesome, odds are very good that you are trying to smuggle in virtues and good-old-fashioned good, buried under an extra layer of obfuscation
That is explicitly the goal here—to use the vague goodness of “awesome” as a hack to access moral intuitions more directly.
You appear to have invented your own highly specific meaning of “awesome”, which appears synonymous with “effective”. As such, “awesome” (in my experience generally used as a contentless expression of approval, more or less, with connotations of excitingness) is not fulfilling it’s intended goal of intuition-pump for you. Poor you. Those of us who use “awesome” in the same way as nyan_sandwich, however, have no such problem.
That is explicitly the goal here—to use the vague goodness of “awesome” as a hack to access moral intuitions more directly.
Actually, aren’t there existing connotations of “awesome”—exciting, dramatic and so on—for everyone?
Not ones that interfere wit the technique, hopefully.