value wrote: ↑March 12th, 2024, 1:24 am Chinese philosophers [url="https://plato. stanford .edu/entries /confucius/"]Confucius[/url] (the paragon of Chinese sages) and [url="https://plato .stanford .edu/entries/mencius/"]Mencius[/url] would have "looked down upon a blatant recklessness toward animals".Are values universal? What makes them universal? You allude to Kant's attempt at moral rationality and universality. But Kant's deontological moral system based on his Categorical Imperative is highly abstract and largely unworkable. That is partly because we are not entirely rational beings and partly because, even if we were entirely rational, it is not clear that a system like Kant's is itself rational, or that it is one that we would choose if we were rational. For one thing, it produces unacceptable outcomes. For example, it tells us not to lie. But sometimes we need to lie to prevent a much more horrible consequence that would ensue if we told the truth.
Mencius, a prominent philosopher in Chinese history, strongly advocated for pacifism and the prevention of war. He believed in practicing benevolence and righteousness as a way to ascend to political dominance without the need for warfare. Mencius rejected the idea of "righteous" wars in ancient records and emphasized that the benevolent have no enemies under Heaven.
The beautiful comment of chewybrian in a recent topic, shows a similar perspective: We should all be on the same team if we declare we are engaging in philosophy.
I wrote the following in a topic about racist hate, Honesty about Racism:
Intellect and reason is a higher good than hate and revenge. Therefore my argument: philosophy can and should be held responsible.
"Within the context of reason, there is no place for hate and evil."
Kant wrote in "Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason,": "pure reason is the faculty of concepts, and concepts are not concerned with the inclinations, but only with the understanding and its object"
Therefore, according to Kant (who authored one of the most profound works on reason), pure reason cannot be the source of hate and evil, which arises from the inclinations and desires of the human will. Kant believed that every human being has the capacity to resist evil and choose the moral path, which is the path of reason.
It is evident that pure philosophy doesn't allow racist hate, not by prohibiting it, but by fundamentally making it irrational, a priori.
More appropriate might be to ask, will humanity choose the intelligible path, e.g. Kant's 'path of reason'? Will humanity join in on 'the same team' for the higher good interest of intellectual progress? It appears to me that such an intention would align with Universal values and that governments would follow suit.
People choose sides in the Palestinian conflict. But we can see wrong on both sides and no overarching moral system such as Kant's can show objectively that one side is right and the other wrong. That is because there are no objective values. Unless we can come up with an entirely rational moral system that we all agree to, (which we cannot because we are not entirely rational or objective), we are stuck with the subjective moral sentiments that were bestowed on us by evolution, along with all the squabbling between groups that those moral sentiments give rise to.
Our morality was selected for by evolution because it allowed the members of small bands out on the savanna to cooperate rather than compete against each other in a zero-sum game. Our evolved, subjective moral sentiments enhanced the survival prospects of those who could cooperate in smallish groups and so achieve benefits that could not be achieved alone. However, whilst our evolved morality promoted cooperation WITHIN groups, it did not necessarily promote cooperation BETWEEN groups. And that, in part, is the reason we still have wars.
Of course, our moral sentiments are a work in progress. We can try to develop and refine them along the lines of what today may seem to us like rational principles. But, for now, our subjective moral sentiments are not much changed from those of our forebears out on the savanna. We may want to change, and we can try to change, but we are sailing into the wind and will need to tack.