thoughts:philosophy:morality
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
thoughts:philosophy:morality [2021/05/06 02:43] – Owen Mellema | thoughts:philosophy:morality [2021/05/25 17:26] (current) – Owen Mellema | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== My Perspective on Morality ====== | ====== My Perspective on Morality ====== | ||
//Please note that I have no philosophy background.// | //Please note that I have no philosophy background.// | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Motivation ===== | ||
I think a lot about how to live a good life. By " | I think a lot about how to live a good life. By " | ||
- | The obvious, naïve answer is hedonism. Depending on the definition of Hedonism used, I either agree or disagree. If you mean that everything people do should be for their own benefit, I agree. If you mean that the only benefit is pleasure, that is, those things that increase dopamine (video games, sex, TV, good food, etc...), | + | The obvious, naïve answer is hedonism. Depending on the definition of Hedonism used, I either agree or disagree. If you mean that everything people do should be for their own benefit, I agree. If you mean that the only benefit is pleasure, that is, those things that increase dopamine (video games, sex, TV, good food, etc...), I disagree because this perspective of hedonism assumes an incorrect model of a human. |
This is because the brain is wired for social interaction. There are a number of evolutionary reasons for this. First, in order to find a mate, humans must be a part of a society. Secondly, in order for offspring to survive, a mother needs to have a relationship with her child, and, ideally, with her husband. Thirdly, society provides safety. | This is because the brain is wired for social interaction. There are a number of evolutionary reasons for this. First, in order to find a mate, humans must be a part of a society. Secondly, in order for offspring to survive, a mother needs to have a relationship with her child, and, ideally, with her husband. Thirdly, society provides safety. | ||
+ | The less obvious answer is altruism. I also disagree with altruism, because I think that being perfectly concerned with others causes people to become disheartened. For example, how many millions are hungry around the world? A great deal. So, the altruist may think that the correct thing to do is attempt to solve this problem. However, our ability to actually solve world hunger is very limited. In fact, it's unlikely that any of us will ever be able to make anything more than a tiny dent in the problem, even with maximal sacrifice. So, if I can't solve the problem, why even try to solve the problem? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Sure, from a purely utilitarian perspective, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== A new approach ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | My perspective is that the good you do for others should be proportional to how socially close you are to them. To illustrate this, I divide the social sphere into "rings of concern" | ||
+ | |||
+ | The innermost ring (circle?) is the person that you are closest to - yourself. Before taking care of others, you should make sure that you are taken care of, to a reasonable degree. You don't have to always be working to solve the world' | ||
+ | |||
+ | The second ring is your close family. This ring includes your spouse and children. You should be prepared to sacrifice to a maximal degree for these people, and you should treat them better and give them more consideration than to anyone else. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The third ring is your secondary family. This ring includes your parents and siblings. If you do not have a spouse or children, these people should get your top attention. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The fourth ring is your friends. These are people that you like and who like you. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The fifth ring is your acquaintances. While you may not be friends with them, per se, you still see them often enough. These include your coworkers and your neighbors, if they are not in the previous ring. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The sixth ring is your local community. Caring about your local community means being concerned about the homeless population, crime, food deserts, etc in your city, town, or region. To contribute to this ring, you might donate to your local homeless shelter, or work with underprivileged kids on their homework. Most importantly, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The seventh ring is your nation. Why nation and not world? I believe that a strong national identity can foster civic virtues better than a global identity. Furthermore, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The eighth ring is the entire world. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Application to Politics ===== | ||
+ | One of the inspirations for this idea was attempting to see why people care so much about politics, especially on the internet, and if there was a philosophical underpinning to it. I concluded that Twitter activism falls into a "sweet spot" of altruism and hedonism, where the importance of the issue is high, and the required investment is low. The importance of the issues are high because they effect many millions of people. The investment is low because it is just sitting on a computer screen, right? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Wrong. While the monetary cost is low, the overall psychological/" | ||
+ | |||
+ | The problem is that, despite expending a large amount of resources, the individual has very little power to influence national politics. So, the part-time political activist is eternally spinning his wheels to help. Meanwhile, the person could be allocating those resources to much more socially useful goals. For example, we all know that homelessness is a problem, and we would like for it to not be a problem. However, homelessness is something that the Federal government is not well suited to handling. Instead, this is the job of local governments. Therefore, focusing on national politics reduces our ability to handle these important problems. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Now, let me be clear. I am not saying you should not care about national politics. You should vote and be informed about what is happening in the country. I am merely saying that we should temper how much we care about national politics, and not let it take more of a position in our lives than what it deserves. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Objections ===== | ||
+ | This system is not perfect. I have a few problems with it, despite being the one who made it up. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Regional economic differences ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The biggest problem comes when everyone applies this system. Some communities have more resources than others. For example, a city in America will likely have a much larger charitable budget than a village in Africa. Furthermore, | ||
+ | |||
+ | If we apply the principle of helping those who are closest to us first, we may be spending our resources on problems that are trivial compared to the larger problems. One million dollars spent improving the education of inner city kids could be spent overseas to prevent thousands from actually dying of starvation or being severely malnourished. In this light, it seems almost psychopathic to follow my ideas. | ||
+ | Frankly, I don't have an answer. |
thoughts/philosophy/morality.1620268992.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/05/06 02:43 by Owen Mellema