Poll: Ethics

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Korolev

No Time Like the Present
Jul 4, 2008
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Contractarianism is the ethical model which I believe comes closest to describing the way the world really is. People are social animals - natural selection picks those who can co-operate with others, for the most part. Our brains have a natural impulse to "fit in". Of course, biology is messy and some of us are born with brains that do not desire to fit in, but most human beings try to form a "contract" with society. I do not kill you and you do not kill me, and that increases both our chances for happiness, reproduction and survival. You do not steal from me and I do not steal from you and at the end of the day, we both feel safer.

We find crime detestable, even if it does not happen to us, because if we didn't find crime detestable, society would not exist. The truly sociopathic tend to get themselves killed very quickly, thus, elminating their genes from the system. It's just the natural order of things. Now because neural development is a messy affair, and genes can recombine and get "shuffled", sociopaths occasionally arise and always will - but for the most part, human beings aren't like that. Nature has set us up to form social contracts with each other, because if we didn't.... WE WOULDN'T EXIST!

Contractarianism is basically a way to let individuals pursue their own selfish interests. Individually, no matter how strong, fast or smart we are, we can't get much done and our chances of survival are very slim. However, by creating a caring, orderly society, we increase our chances of survival greatly.

Truly co-operation is humanity's greatest power. Only by co-operating in large numbers can we achieve anything. Even Issac Newton, widely regarded as the most intelligent person who ever lived, said that he only got where he was by standing on the shoulders of giants.
 

Skeleon

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Nov 2, 2007
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Utilitarianism, but never without the corrective principle (protecting human rights).
 

Marv21

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Jan 1, 2009
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I can't choose one...give a wiki link to all of them to help people understand what they are!
 

twistedshadows

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Apr 26, 2009
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Gormourn said:
I like some of the ideas from Utilitarianism, Relativism and others, despite contradictions.
I'm actually right there with you, though they can be quite contradictory.

If I absolutely had to choose one, I guess I'd go with relativism, though I believe in a few universal principles that don't necessarily work with that ideology.
 

lostclause

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Mar 31, 2009
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I'd say relativist myself, though I think a bit of natural rights added for flavour.
 

LongAndShort

I'm pretty good. Yourself?
May 11, 2009
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Relativism and Contractarianism, with a little Utilitarianism and Naturalism at important places.
 

felltablet

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Nov 12, 2007
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Sadly many of these ethical frameworks are built around the same system, however, critics have reshaped the opposing themes in negative ways.

For example I had a professor tell me that utilitarianism actually supported the killing of black people within America.
 

Jamous

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Apr 14, 2009
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Mainly relativism, but anything aside from anything that is or is like Absolutism. However, after that you get the argument that because I never use absolutist ethics I DO in fact use absolutist ethics because I absolutely never use them...
 

felltablet

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Nov 12, 2007
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1ronJ4m said:
Dude, I don't even know what these things mean :D
Google is a wonderful tool; and smarterfox https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/9825 allows you to quickly find information on unknown topics.
 

slipknot4

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Feb 19, 2009
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I'd have to go with egoism, partly because i have no one to actually care about and i value myself more than anyone else.
 

lazy_bum

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Mar 25, 2009
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i always work on the principle of the end justifys the means used to get there. However cruel it may seem to be at the time.
 

lazy_bum

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Mar 25, 2009
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stinkychops said:
lazy_bum said:
i always work on the principle of the end justifys the means used to get there. However cruel it may seem to be at the time.
So you support torture in the name of science?
If the result is highly beneficial or the torture is absolutly nessesary. but not for frivilous purposes of if there is an alternative method that could be used that would work just as well.
 

lazy_bum

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Mar 25, 2009
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stinkychops said:
lazy_bum said:
stinkychops said:
lazy_bum said:
So how many peoples lives are worth a new renewable enrgy source that functions in standard combustion engines?
that would depend on how readily available it would be, what sort of impact it would have on society and the rest of the planet and the effectiveness of it. Also i cant see how torture would be nessesary to help find this re-newable reasourse in the first place.

However would you oppose the torture if the deaths resulted in cures that could potentially save your life and the lives of thousands or even millions?
 

lazy_bum

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Mar 25, 2009
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stinkychops said:
Hmm, I'm not quite sure really, if I said yes than that would mean I supported Unit 147(or some such, the Jap's that tortured soldiers horrifically, often operating without aneasthetic and removing organs until the person died).

After considering, no, I would not support the tortures. What right do we have?
I would have to say the right to survive as a species as well as a duty to future generations so that they would not have to make the same sacrafices. after all it is a cruel and uncaring universe and i personally feel that if we cannot make sacrafices, however distastefull then we will not be able to survive as a species.
However i respect that you may feel differently.
 

lostclause

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Mar 31, 2009
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stinkychops said:
Hmm, I'm not quite sure really, if I said yes than that would mean I supported Unit 147(or some such, the Jap's that tortured soldiers horrifically, often operating without aneasthetic and removing organs until the person died).

After considering, no, I would not support the tortures. What right do we have?
I can understand where he's coming from, after all we already do this to a limited extent with animal testing (a form of torture?) and less strict human testing is only a short step up that has potential benefits, it's just a question of balancing those benefits with the cost. Not that I support this view, after all I believe in natural rights, just that I understand how one could subscribe to it.
 

DrunkWithPower

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Apr 17, 2009
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felltablet said:
Sadly many of these ethical frameworks are built around the same system, however, critics have reshaped the opposing themes in negative ways.

For example I had a professor tell me that utilitarianism actually supported the killing of black people within America.

Hmmm, I can see it because of the "needs of the majority or the minority" but I don't know about the killing of African Americans. Interesting to read into I guess.
 

Axeli

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Jun 16, 2004
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Perhaps a more meta-ethical thought, but...

Personally, I like to break things apart into the basic two things when it comes ethics, which would be pain and pleasure. Basically because those are the only two things that are objectively good and bad, no one liking to be hurt unless a greater satisfaction is gained (or vice versa).

Not in a hedonistic manner, mind you, but rather looking at things how they will affect people in the long run.

This alone, of course, does not say whether an individual should care only for themselves, all people or everything that can feel pain or pleasure (i.e. most animals).
I suppose the answer is in following the right amoral whims of psyche, judging which will give the greatest satisfaction in the long run, rather than choosing what brings the most instant and easiest pleasure. I.e. acting on accord of empathy might seem counter-beneficial to the individual, but acting in a manner that afterward causes pride and no guilt can be the biggest reward in itself.

Sociopath on the other hand would have no "emotional penalty" for stepping on others for their own benefit, making it from their perspectice the right thing to do. Unfortunately for them, openly acting in such way makes a lot enemies and few people can survive without a support of others. People are social animals after all. Sadly, modern society gives more than few openings for people like that, and they are often good manipulators even if they have no real friends.