Come on now; I had only recently come out of lurking here because I have found evidence that this site and its visitors welcome dissident debate, and hold high standards for rational discussion.
Should I become an artist for a living? -- Everyone would die of starvation if everyone did this. Your comparative system prohibits every profession but subsistence agriculture. That means I don’t like your moral system and think that it is silly.
Could you please present some evidence for this? You’re claim rests on the assumption that to “do art” or “be an artist” means that you can only do art 24⁄7 and would obviously just sit there painting until you starve to death. Everyone can be an artist, just make art; and that doesn’t exclude doing other things as well. Can I be an artist for a living; can everyone? Maybe, but it sure would be a lot more likely if our society put its wealth and technology towards giving everyone subsistence level comfort (if you disagree that our current technological state is incapable of this, then you’d need to argue for such, and why it isn’t worth trying, or doing the most we could anyways). The argument is that if individuals and groups in our society actually did some of the direct actions that could have immediate and life-changing results, rather than trying to “amass wealth for charity” or “petition for redress of grievances” alone, we would see much better results, and our understanding of what world’s are possible and within our reach would change as well. One can certainly disagree or argue against this claim, but changing the subject to surviving on art, or just asserting that such actions could only be done on subsistence agriculture, are claims that need some evidence, or at least some more rationale. And, as really shouldn’t need stated, “not liking” something doesn’t make it less likely or untrue, and calling an argument silly is itself silly if you don’t present justification for why you think that is the case.
As for “extrapolating from individual action into communal action”, just because it is not a sure-fire way to certain morality (nothing is) doesn’t mean that such thought experiments aren’t useful for pulling out implications and comparing ideas/methodologies. I certainly wouldn’t claim that such an argument alone should convince anyone of anything; as it says, it is just “another way of comparison” to try and explain a viewpoint and look at another facet of how it interacts with other points of view.
I’m sorry, but I have failed to understand your last paragraph. It reeks of sophistry; claiming that there are a bunch of irrational and bias-based elements to a viewpoint you don’t like, without actually citing any specific examples (and assuming that such a position couldn’t be stated in any way without them). That last sentence is a completely unsupported; it assumes its own conclusion, that such claims only “appear to have objective weight” but really “really just an extension of your assumptions and an oversimplification of reality”. Simplified it states: It is un-objective because of its un-objectivity. Evidence and rationale please? Please remember Reverse Stupidity is Not Intelligence
Your first paragraph attacks the validity of the art example; I’m willing to drop that for simplicity’s sake.
Your second paragraph concedes that it’s not a good way to approximate morality. You say that nothing is. I interpret that as a reason that we shouldn’t approach moral tradeoffs with hard and fast decision rules, rather than as a reason that any one particular sort of flawed framework should be considered acceptable. You say that it’s a useful thought experiment, I fundamentally disagree. It only muddles the issue because individual actors do not have agency over the actions of each other. I do not see any benefit to using this sort of thought experiment, I only see a risk that the relevancy and quality of analysis is degraded.
You might be misunderstanding my last paragraph. I’m saying that the type of thought experiment you use is one that is normally, almost always, only used selectively, which suggests that it’s not the real reason behind whatever position it’s being used to advance. No one considers the implications of what would happen if everyone made the same career choices or if everyone made the same lifestyle choices, and then comes to conclusions about what their own personal lives should be like based on those potential universalizations. For example, in response to my claims about art, you immediately started qualifying exactly how much art would be universal and taken as a profession, and added a variety of caveats. But you didn’t attempt to consider similar exemptions when considering whether we should view charity donations on a universal level as well, which tells me that you’re applying the technique unfairly.
People only ever seem to imagine these scenarios in cases where they’re trying to garner support for individual actions but are having a difficult time justifying their desired conclusion from an individual perspective, so they smuggle in the false assumptions that individuals can control other people and that if an action has good consequences for everyone then it’s rational for each individual to take that action (this is why I mentioned games theory previously). These false assumptions are the reason that I don’t like your thought experiment.
Come on now; I had only recently come out of lurking here because I have found evidence that this site and its visitors welcome dissident debate, and hold high standards for rational discussion.
Could you please present some evidence for this? You’re claim rests on the assumption that to “do art” or “be an artist” means that you can only do art 24⁄7 and would obviously just sit there painting until you starve to death. Everyone can be an artist, just make art; and that doesn’t exclude doing other things as well. Can I be an artist for a living; can everyone? Maybe, but it sure would be a lot more likely if our society put its wealth and technology towards giving everyone subsistence level comfort (if you disagree that our current technological state is incapable of this, then you’d need to argue for such, and why it isn’t worth trying, or doing the most we could anyways). The argument is that if individuals and groups in our society actually did some of the direct actions that could have immediate and life-changing results, rather than trying to “amass wealth for charity” or “petition for redress of grievances” alone, we would see much better results, and our understanding of what world’s are possible and within our reach would change as well. One can certainly disagree or argue against this claim, but changing the subject to surviving on art, or just asserting that such actions could only be done on subsistence agriculture, are claims that need some evidence, or at least some more rationale. And, as really shouldn’t need stated, “not liking” something doesn’t make it less likely or untrue, and calling an argument silly is itself silly if you don’t present justification for why you think that is the case.
As for “extrapolating from individual action into communal action”, just because it is not a sure-fire way to certain morality (nothing is) doesn’t mean that such thought experiments aren’t useful for pulling out implications and comparing ideas/methodologies. I certainly wouldn’t claim that such an argument alone should convince anyone of anything; as it says, it is just “another way of comparison” to try and explain a viewpoint and look at another facet of how it interacts with other points of view.
I’m sorry, but I have failed to understand your last paragraph. It reeks of sophistry; claiming that there are a bunch of irrational and bias-based elements to a viewpoint you don’t like, without actually citing any specific examples (and assuming that such a position couldn’t be stated in any way without them). That last sentence is a completely unsupported; it assumes its own conclusion, that such claims only “appear to have objective weight” but really “really just an extension of your assumptions and an oversimplification of reality”. Simplified it states: It is un-objective because of its un-objectivity. Evidence and rationale please? Please remember Reverse Stupidity is Not Intelligence
Your first paragraph attacks the validity of the art example; I’m willing to drop that for simplicity’s sake.
Your second paragraph concedes that it’s not a good way to approximate morality. You say that nothing is. I interpret that as a reason that we shouldn’t approach moral tradeoffs with hard and fast decision rules, rather than as a reason that any one particular sort of flawed framework should be considered acceptable. You say that it’s a useful thought experiment, I fundamentally disagree. It only muddles the issue because individual actors do not have agency over the actions of each other. I do not see any benefit to using this sort of thought experiment, I only see a risk that the relevancy and quality of analysis is degraded.
You might be misunderstanding my last paragraph. I’m saying that the type of thought experiment you use is one that is normally, almost always, only used selectively, which suggests that it’s not the real reason behind whatever position it’s being used to advance. No one considers the implications of what would happen if everyone made the same career choices or if everyone made the same lifestyle choices, and then comes to conclusions about what their own personal lives should be like based on those potential universalizations. For example, in response to my claims about art, you immediately started qualifying exactly how much art would be universal and taken as a profession, and added a variety of caveats. But you didn’t attempt to consider similar exemptions when considering whether we should view charity donations on a universal level as well, which tells me that you’re applying the technique unfairly.
People only ever seem to imagine these scenarios in cases where they’re trying to garner support for individual actions but are having a difficult time justifying their desired conclusion from an individual perspective, so they smuggle in the false assumptions that individuals can control other people and that if an action has good consequences for everyone then it’s rational for each individual to take that action (this is why I mentioned games theory previously). These false assumptions are the reason that I don’t like your thought experiment.