▲ | naasking 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> Or, making actual choices in reality? Where there are limits to what we can do, but making hard choices well has positive impact. Impact is irrelevant in Kantian ethics, deontological ethics [1] and virtue ethics [2]. A choice is good and right because it the nature of the choice itself in deontology, or because of how it defines one character in virtue ethics, not because of what effects it may or may not have on the world. Every novice approaching ethics naively assumes a framework of consequentialism [3], where every choice is judged by its consequences, but this framework is deeply problematic and we have literal proofs that not all ethic theories can be reformulated in terms of consequences [4]. The original post I replied to also naively assumed a consequentialist framing, and I replied that this framing is not universal and so his conclusion does not follow. You can continue to double down on "it's obvious that consequences matter for ethical choices", but that doesn't make it true, and thus, it does not support the original argument. [1] https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ethics-deontological/ [2] https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ethics-virtue/ | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Nevermark 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
> Impact is irrelevant in Kantian ethics From an arm chair perspective, this is a wonderful shortcut isn't it! Roughly, treat everyone how we would want to be treated - or some other limited formulation, with no horizon of thought about downstream impact past that. Presumably, inflexible pacifism would get a sympathetic response from Kantians. A kind of intellectual purity, at the relative cost to others' lives. Interesting as an idea. Not so great for actual humans. What exactly is the imagined benefit, that outweighs the well being of others and ourselves? A circular form of philosophical purity? A view that is better because it deems itself better? EDIT: Just saw this: > Not unless you can present some proof of this. Your implicit assumption that we should care about outcomes over principles has its own set of moral failures, like the repugnant conclusion. Well, most people start by caring about other people and themselves. Not as an assumption but as a real status. Doing so has a particularly interesting and meaningful consequence. By prioritizing better results for human beings, positive impact can better produce more positive impact. Creating a positive spiral where benefits of the ethics of prioritizing impact compound, and compound. So for those that care about our fellow beings, and nontrivial non-limiting implications of choices, there is solid ground for ethics. Nothing arbitrary or foundationally circular. Need to make up assumptions. In contrast, what is the assumption or principle that values principles over people. What is the actual point? How is that deemed better than prioritizing a better world. How is that better or richer than ethics that achieve a higher bar, by continually re-incorporating, navigating and producing an ever more complex enabling future? | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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