Fulfilling those impulses would require significant conscious deliberation, and (unlike not eating/drinking) not fulfilling them would not be extremely unpleasant, so if I deliberated on them, I’d think “I have this impulse, but why should I fulfill it?” and I wouldn’t fulfill it. In the case of food, I’d also think “I have this impulse, but why should I fulfill it?”, but if I’d wait long enough, I’d feel so hungry that my deliberative process would be overridden. So, it takes not just having an impulse, but having an impulse strong enough to override conscious decisionmaking.
Basically I’m confused as to what process you went through to decide that sitting around doing precisely nothing is what you’d do. There’s nothing that comes to mind to weight it over other options, and you seem pretty determined to stick to it.
To do anything that requires thought/deliberation, I would have to choose to do it, and I’d have no reason to choose to do it, so I would remain in the default state, which is doing nothing (beyond relieving instinctual needs).
Currently, I have reasons to do what I do, but if it were proven to me that there were no morality, it would also have to be proven that there are no reasons why I should do anything.
so I would remain in the default state, which is doing nothing (beyond relieving instinctual needs).
That doesn’t answer anything, really. All you’ve done is wrapped the same thing in some extra words. That doesn’t seem to be anything resembling a “default state” to me, for instance, since humans tend to do a lot more than that even when they’re not thinking about morality.
So you don’t have any impulse to relieve your own boredom, or to spend time with other people, or to seek out better-tasting food?
Fulfilling those impulses would require significant conscious deliberation, and (unlike not eating/drinking) not fulfilling them would not be extremely unpleasant, so if I deliberated on them, I’d think “I have this impulse, but why should I fulfill it?” and I wouldn’t fulfill it. In the case of food, I’d also think “I have this impulse, but why should I fulfill it?”, but if I’d wait long enough, I’d feel so hungry that my deliberative process would be overridden. So, it takes not just having an impulse, but having an impulse strong enough to override conscious decisionmaking.
Wouldn’t it be easier to just go with those impulses?
Perhaps, but why should I do what’s easier?
Basically I’m confused as to what process you went through to decide that sitting around doing precisely nothing is what you’d do. There’s nothing that comes to mind to weight it over other options, and you seem pretty determined to stick to it.
To do anything that requires thought/deliberation, I would have to choose to do it, and I’d have no reason to choose to do it, so I would remain in the default state, which is doing nothing (beyond relieving instinctual needs).
Currently, I have reasons to do what I do, but if it were proven to me that there were no morality, it would also have to be proven that there are no reasons why I should do anything.
That doesn’t answer anything, really. All you’ve done is wrapped the same thing in some extra words. That doesn’t seem to be anything resembling a “default state” to me, for instance, since humans tend to do a lot more than that even when they’re not thinking about morality.
I suspect we’re using the term “morality” differently.