ChristianKl comments on Rationality Quotes April 2014 - LessWrong

8 Post author: elharo 07 April 2014 05:25PM

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Comment author: ChristianKl 13 April 2014 09:39:33PM 0 points [-]

Surely most pre-modern philosophers also had absolute moral systems?

Beforehand there was the idea that God's simply beyond human comprehension. One day he tells the Israelis to love their neighbors and the next he orders the Israelis to commit genocide.

You were supposed to follow a bunch of principles because those came from authoritative sources and not because you could derive them yourself.

If you read Machiavelli, he's using God as a word at times when we might simply use luck today. Machiavelli very much criticizes that approach of simply thinking that God works in mysterious ways.

Greeks and Romans had many different Gods and not one single source of morality.

Of course absolute morality is not all the modernism is about.

Comment author: DanArmak 14 April 2014 02:45:30PM 2 points [-]

Beforehand there was the idea that God's simply beyond human comprehension. One day he tells the Israelis to love their neighbors and the next he orders the Israelis to commit genocide.

I was thinking about classic and medieval Christian philosophy, which tied morality to an unchanging (and so absolute) God.

As an aside, when the Israelis were ordered to love their neighbors, the reference was to the neighboring Israelis and peaceful co-inhabitants of other tribes. Jews were never told by God to love everyone or not to have enemies; that is a later, Christian or Christian-era idea.

Comment author: ChristianKl 14 April 2014 03:26:43PM *  -1 points [-]

I was thinking about classic and medieval Christian philosophy, which tied morality to an unchanging (and so absolute) God.

But still a mysterious God who's so complicated that humans can't fully understand him so the should simply follow what the priest who has a more direct contact to God says. Furthermore you should follow the authority of your local king because of the divine right of kings that your local king inherited.

The idea that you can use reason to find out what God wants and then do that is a more modern idea.

Things switched from saying that if the telescope doesn't show that planets move the way the ancestors said they are supposed to move, then the telescope is wrong to the idea that maybe the ancestors are wrong about the way the planets move. The dark ages ended and you have modernity.

Comment author: [deleted] 13 April 2014 11:05:32PM 0 points [-]

I don't have much to say about the actual point you're making, but you've been setting off alarm bells with stuff like this:

Marx replaced what Hegel called God with history.

...You look at the limit of that function and that limit is the perfect morality...

Beforehand there was the idea that God's simply beyond human comprehension.

What's your background on the history of this period? And on the philosophy of Marx and Hegel? The things you are saying seem to me to be false, and I want to check if the problem isn't on my end.

Comment author: ChristianKl 14 April 2014 08:30:43AM *  0 points [-]

What's your background on the history of this period?

What do you mean with this period?

I don't think that modernity started with Hegel but with people like Machiavelli with is around ~1500. Hegel and Marx on the other hand did their work in the 19th century. I did read Machiavelli's The Prince cover to cover.

In the case of Marx and Hegel I'm a German and in this case speaking about German philosophers. That means I have been educated in school with a German notion of what history happens to be. I don't see political history in the Anglosaxon frame of Whig vs Tory.

I did spent a bunch of time in the JUSOS with is the youth organisation of the German SPD and the abbreviation roughly translates into Young Socialists in the SPD. I therefore did follow debates about whether socialism as end goal should be kicked out of the party program of the SPD or be left in.

Lastly I did a lot of reading in political philosophy both primary and secondary sources. Most of it a while ago.

But one sentence summaries of complex political thoughts are by their nature vague. Of course Hegel already had the notion of history and me saying replaced might give the impression that he didn't. But Hegel did have God and Marx did not.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 15 April 2014 02:23:09AM *  1 point [-]

I therefore did follow debates about whether socialism as end goal should be kicked out of the party program of the SPD or be left in.

Just out of curiosity, what was the result of those debates?

Comment author: ChristianKl 15 April 2014 08:35:33AM 0 points [-]

It's still in there but more for symbolic reasons. Party leadership didn't really want it but the party base did. The relevant phrase also happens to be democratic socialism. Meaning that the goal is economic equality but representative democracy and not a bunch of soviets and "consensus" decision making.

In practice the party policies under Schroeder were more "third way" and as a result they wanted to "update" the party program to reflect that policy change.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 16 April 2014 01:49:03AM 1 point [-]

Meaning that the goal is economic equality

What do you mean by "economic equality"? Do you mean that everyone should have the same amount of money/resources? (This is not a stable state of affairs if people then proceed to engage in commerce).

Comment author: ChristianKl 16 April 2014 09:41:42AM 2 points [-]

If you have a government which constantly redistributes money you could hold it constant if you wanted to do so. But the people with whom I spoke usually don't go that far. Concerns are rather that everyone has access to a "living wage".

Defining how exactly the end state will look like isn't that much of a concern if you can decide whether or not you move in the right direction. There the feeling that third way policies of cutting government pensions don't go in that direction.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 17 April 2014 01:46:43AM 1 point [-]

If you have a government which constantly redistributes money you could hold it constant if you wanted to do so.

Yes, but that's not exactly compatible with anything resembling freedom.

Concerns are rather that everyone has access to a "living wage".

The problem is what's considered a "living wage" changes with changes in society.

Defining how exactly the end state will look like isn't that much of a concern if you can decide whether or not you move in the right direction.

It is a concern if you want to evaluate whether you should even be trying to move in that direction.

Comment author: jbay 17 April 2014 05:20:15AM 3 points [-]

Is this line of conversation still "just curiosity" about the results of SPD debates, or are you trying to bait an argument?

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 18 April 2014 01:48:59AM 2 points [-]

I'm trying to figure out what Christian, and more generally the typical German, mean by "socialism" these days. Does it have a more moderate end goal then the older socialists, or do they have the same end goal and have simply decided to approach it more slowly.

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 17 April 2014 10:16:10AM *  2 points [-]

What is a living wage changes with changes in society, and that isn't obviously a problem. If society becomes richer, people expect higher wages, and if society becomes richer, it can afford them. Depending on the quantities.

Comment author: TheAncientGeek 17 April 2014 10:37:52AM *  1 point [-]

Amazingly enough, freedom supporting policies can negatively impact equality. To put it another way, if there were no conflicts between values, there would be no politics. To put it a third way, you keep writingas though you are the Tablet, and have the One True Set of Values inscribed in your brain.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 18 April 2014 02:05:46AM 3 points [-]

Christian mentioned having the government constantly redistributing money as a possibly desirable end state. I was pointing out one of the implications of said end state.

Also I'm getting increasingly frustrated at people, yourself included, who keep trying to pass off their false beliefs about the nature of the world as different preferences.

In particular, to use the economic equality example, if you constantly redistributed money to keep everyone equal, as I mentioned it would destroy anything resembling freedom. But suppose you claim to have a utility function that puts no value on freedom. Well, another consequence is that it would destroy the motivation for people to engage in productive work (if the benefits would just get redistributed) so you'd wind up with a bunch of equally starving people. Assuming, that is, that this redistribution was somehow magically enforced, more realistically you'd wind up with everything in the hands of the redistributors.

Comment author: [deleted] 14 April 2014 02:33:59PM 0 points [-]

Thanks, that's helpful.