Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pm Hi, Leontiskos,Hello, Scott. You're welcome and thank you for your own reply.
Thank you for your reply!
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmYes, I agree, you went out of your way to clear up any ambiguity. The reason I focused on the single statement is because I assumed your clarification was meant to function as an example of how we are supposed to interpret your language, even in those times when you don't provide the three additional propositions.Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 am Granted, there are two ways one can interpret the claim, "I do not believe we 'should' drink coffee tomorrow morning":Indeed.
[Color added.]
- "I believe we should not drink coffee tomorrow morning."
- "I do not believe we have any [moral] onus to drink coffee tomorrow morning."
I agree with the second statement and not the first.
If I believed "we should not drink coffee tomorrow morning", I would have said that. In contrast, I said what I said.
Incidentally, to be extra extra clear about what I meant by my words, I went out of my way to also explicitly say both (1) I do not believe we 'should' drink coffee tomorrow morning, and (2) I do not believe we 'should' not drink coffee tomorrow. So it seems to me it would be impossible to reasonably interpret it said otherwise.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmThat's not even considering how clear I was about such things it the OP:Fair enough. I was trying to focus on your more recent statements since the OP is over two years old, and it is not uncommon for people to change their views after years have elapsed. But if you are willing to stand by the OP then I am furnished with additional information.
Scott (in the OP) wrote: ↑January 23rd, 2021, 9:37 pm I don't believe in "shoulds" or "oughts" or other moralizing. So if hypothetically I'm asked "what should the government do" or "what ought my neighbor do", I cannot answer. There are no shoulds or oughts in my philosophy, only cans and cannots; and then from ‘can’ there is only do and do not. In my philosophy, there is no ought, no should, and no try. I can tell you what I will or would do, and only time and happenstance will tell if my answer is honest and true.I very purposely provided the above in the OP to help make sure the rest of my sentences after that were more surely clear, and by extension that was clear what I mean when I say things like, "I do not believe we 'should' drink coffee tomorrow" and "I do not believe we 'should' not drink coffee tomorrow".
Let me say at the outset that I agree with the way you phrased it in the OP. You spoke of " 'shoulds' or 'oughts' or other moralizing." All "shoulds" and "oughts" are, in my opinion, moral statements. Above you clarified my interpretation (2) to speak of a "[moral] onus" rather than an onus simpliciter. In my estimation this is not necessary since all onuses are moral. Your phrasing in the OP seems to agree with this.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmI agree that one could engage in self-defense without making moral claims, just as a tiger might protect its cub without making moral claims. But when you say, "Don't should on me," you are issuing a directive to someone else and telling them how to act or not act. Given what I said above, this is a moral act.Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 am But other cases are more clear. For example, when someone says, "Don't should on me," they are inevitably engaging in the sort of 'moralizing' that you indicate.No, they could be sometimes since people use the same words differently but it is not a given. As I explained in the OP, when I say that I will defensive force to kill a murderer before he murders my family, that does not mean I am saying it would be 'immoral' for him to do it, or that I am saying he 'ought' not do it.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmTrue. I was only trying to illustrate the principle at hand.Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 am"Don't moralize" is a form of moralizing. "Don't issue imperatives" is an imperative.First, it's worth noting that I never said those two things.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmNonetheless, I disagree with the broad assertion that anyone who says those 2-3 word sentences would necessarily be engaging in moralizing or such, let alone that we could say much about anything about what the unknown person means based solely on a single out of context 2-3 word sentence that the hypothetical person said. That is not even to mention the Philosophical Principal of Charity, which would make concluding a contradiction even less reasonable or likely.Oh, I surely do not agree with this. "Don't issue imperatives" is itself an imperative. It is a phrase in the imperative mood. Similarly, if I tell someone, "Don't ever tell anyone what to do," I am at the same time telling someone what to do. I don't see any way around this simple truth.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmWords are equivocal and it's not always clear what someone means, and generally all humans project such that someone who moralizes will be more likely to misinterpret non-moralizing words as moralizing and vice versa. That's in the same sense that, even when they read the same exact words, an angry judgemental person will tend to read another persons words with an angry or judgemental tone versus who see the world differently. Or, in yet another example, someone with social anxiety might be more likely to interpret a quiet person as fearfully shy, whereas someone else would is quiet due to some other reason (e.g. confidence or indifference about the situation, or some kind of arrogance or anger, or any million other reasons) would be more likely to project that or something more similar to that as the explanation.Above I noted that the phrasing in your OP indicated that you believe "shoulds" and "oughts" are inherently moral, and I agreed with you. But here you seem to be changing course. You seem to be attempting to say that only some "shoulds" are moral, and only some "shoulding" is moralizing. Perhaps instead of focusing on these two words I should just say that, in my opinion, all imperative statements are moral statements. "Don't touch my butt" is obviously an imperative statement, and therefore a moral statement. I mostly think that those who eschew morality while issuing imperatives are inconsistent, but if someone wishes to consistently eschew morality while at the same time issuing imperatives then they would need to explain which imperatives are related to morality and which are not.
I can imagine many scenarios where you could hear me say to you or someone else, "don't touch my butt!" or "stop touching my butt!" You would be understandably misunderstanding my meaning if you thought I was saying that I believe it is immoral for you to touch my butt, or for whoever was about to touch butt or did touch my butt despite my protests.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmLikewise, if a moralizer and a non-moralizer both overheard someone else saying "don't touch my butt" to another person, they would likely tend to interpret the speaker's words differently due to the role projection plays.It seems to me that both will understand that the person has issued an imperative statement.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmNo, I have not read the book. My judgment comes from the excerpts I have read, the posts of yours I have read, and my belief that all such practical-philosophy books are written to persuade others. More generally, I would say that anyone who publishes a book believes that someone else ought to read it. If they did not hold such a belief then they would not have had the book published. This is a 'softer' "ought" than the Jehovah Witness', but it is an "ought" nonetheless. Even to say, "This book is worth reading," or, "It is worthwhile to read this book," is to issue a moral utterance (about how others ought to behave).Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 amHe can correct me if I am wrong, but it seems to me that Scott wrote his book because he wants to convince other people to embrace the same philosophy he has chosen for himself.I don't really think so, actually. May I ask, have you read my book, In It Together? I'd be very interested to learn what your best guess is as to my primary motivation(s) for writing it after having read it (assuming you haven't already).
Incidentally, your OP is full of such moral language, so much so that I would not know where to begin. To simply take the first instance that caught my eye, you spoke of, "those people who are way too attached to the material world of the flesh." "Too attached" implies "More attached than they ought to be," does it not?
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmThen perhaps vegetarianism is not something you wish others to adopt. Given such a stance, I would suppose that you have no intention to publish a book on the merits of vegetarianism.Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 am He wishes to convince others to adopt a "free-spirit" manner of living.Do I? I'm not sure.
In person, I usually do my best to use tasteful discretion to avoid mentioning that I'm a vegetarian. I think I may have been asked 1,000 times why I'm a vegetarian. I generally do my best to avoid even receiving that question, at least in person. But even on a social media or such it's generally a bit of a borderline secret I keep.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmIn my younger days, over 15 years ago, I worked full-time going door-to-door for a political party. I also went door to door, but for no pay, when I ran for and was elected for public office in my hometown as a politician, which was an unpaid position as well. It's hard to imagine myself going around like a Jehovah's Witness now, knocking on people's door, and asking them, "Have you heard the great news about spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline)? Can you spare a moment to talk about inner peace and spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline)?Jehovah's Witnesses do promote an idea or philosophy, but there are other ways to promote an idea than by going door-to-door. Such an approach is too aggressive for most people.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmAs I said many times before, "live and let live", that's one my mottos. It's like my self-chosen diet. Even my own kids aren't vegetarian, and I've never done anything to encourage to adopt that diet I have adopted. Whether it's a literal diet or behavioral one (e.g. I refuse to rape or murder people), I don't see a lion eating an antelope and lose my inner peace over it. It's all beautiful.To be clear, are you claiming that you wish to never say or do anything that would influence another person to act in one way rather than another?
Let me offer something else to give you more access to my view. I don't generally use the pejorative "moralizing," but insofar as I see it as a viable verb it would not for me merely connote imperative actions, language, or intentions. One who issues a moral statement or an imperative statement is not necessarily moralizing. It rather depends on the manner in which one is issuing such statements. "Don't have an abortion," is an imperative (and therefore moral) statement, but whether the speaker is moralizing depends on the circumstances.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmHow about this: "He has found value in a particular philosophy of life and has decided to share this with other people." I assume we can agree to that? The next question for me is, "What motivated him to share it?"Leontiskos wrote: ↑February 25th, 2023, 12:32 am He has found value in a particular philosophy of life and, as an unselfish person, wishes to share this with other people.I can't say for sure that I agree or disagree with that as it is worded, but if you change the word 'wishes' to 'is typically willing to', then I can and do agree.
Scott wrote: ↑February 26th, 2023, 4:38 pmThank you,Thanks Scott,
Scott
-Leontiskos
Socrates: He's like that, Hippias, not refined. He's garbage, he cares about nothing but the truth.