Belindi wrote: ↑February 27th, 2020, 7:23 pm
But canine nature is usually taken to be a definable essence which pervades every dog whereas human nature is undefinable and has no detectable essence which pervades every human individual.
I have no idea what "essences" are, Belindi --- how to define or recognize them, or how to evaluate propositions asserting them. All "essentialist" claims I've encountered are non-cognitive.
It's no fallacy despite that we don't know what the essence of the human is. If human nature was a definable essence we could know what the good human is; a human individual and a human culture could be measured against a criterion.
You're still committing the naturalistic fallacy. No natural property of a thing imparts "goodness" to it. Whether that thing or that property is "good" is a judgment passed upon it by some valuer, not a property of the thing, and is subjective. If the "essence" someone attributes to a thing is "good," then it is only because that person has attached his judgment of the thing to it as a property, or inserted "goodness" into his definition of that essence.
This is not to say the individual would not be moulded by their culture they would be, but I do claim that if we knew the essential qualities that pervaded all human beings we would also know which cultures were true to the human essence.
I don't know what "essences" are, but I do know what "essential properties" are. That term is usually used to denote those properties of a thing such that, if something X lacks it, it is no longer an X. Also called "defining properties." E.g., if something called a triangle lacks 3 sides it is not a triangle. Is that what you mean by "essences" --- defining properties?
I tentatively claim buried under ideologies and religions there is an essence of the human . Unless we can know what that essential definition is we can't make morality objective. You can only work with the raw material you are given.
Why would we NOT know what this essence is, if (as we agree) what constitutes human nature is empirical? Don't we have ample evidence for what that nature is? The empirical evidence is abundant, indeed, overwhelming. What are we overlooking?
Every man who denies ordinary human kindness and sympathy is essential to the natural human is either a cynic or a sociopath. Both of these are disabilities, the man who is a cynic or a sociopath is incomplete. It is difficult to say ordinary human kindness defines the human because many other animals also display what if they were men would be ordinary kindness.
That is surely false, Belindi. The very fact that cynics and sociopaths exist is conclusive evidence that kindness and sympathy are
not essential to humans. Those traits are certainly elements of human nature, but so are malevolence, rapacity, hatred. Human nature is a mixed bag, from a moral point of view.