We can have “whys”, but they look a little different. Mine look like “because people have rights”, mostly. Or “because I am a moral agent”, looking from the other direction.
I think one reason that so many people here are consequentialists is that these kinds of ideas do not hit bottom. I think LW attracts people who like to chase explanations down as far as possible to foundations. Do you yourself apply reductionism to morality?
“Reductionism” is one of those words that can mean about seventeen things. I think rights/moral agency both drop out of personhood, which is a function of cognitive capacities, which I take to be software instantiated on entirely physical bases—does that count as whatever you had in mind?
an approach to understand the nature of complex things by reducing them to the interactions of their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things
The bold part is plenty close enough to what I have in mind. Your response definitely counts. Next question that immediately leaps to mind is: how do you determine which formulations of morality best respect the personhood and rights of others, and best fulfill your duty as a moral agent?
We can have “whys”, but they look a little different. Mine look like “because people have rights”, mostly. Or “because I am a moral agent”, looking from the other direction.
I think one reason that so many people here are consequentialists is that these kinds of ideas do not hit bottom. I think LW attracts people who like to chase explanations down as far as possible to foundations. Do you yourself apply reductionism to morality?
“Reductionism” is one of those words that can mean about seventeen things. I think rights/moral agency both drop out of personhood, which is a function of cognitive capacities, which I take to be software instantiated on entirely physical bases—does that count as whatever you had in mind?
From Wikipedia:
The bold part is plenty close enough to what I have in mind. Your response definitely counts. Next question that immediately leaps to mind is: how do you determine which formulations of morality best respect the personhood and rights of others, and best fulfill your duty as a moral agent?
My theory isn’t finished, so I can’t present you with a list, or anything, but I’ve just summarized what I’ve got so far here.