|  07-05-2010, 01:00 PM | #661 | 
| Bah, humbug!            Posts: 39,072 Karma: 157049943 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Chesapeake, VA, USA Device: Kindle Oasis, iPad Pro, & a Samsung Galaxy S9. | 
			
			My personal belief is that animals that are intelligent have the potential in varying degrees for moral actions. I would include at the least animals from dogs to apes in that assessment, but it's not something I can prove.
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|  07-05-2010, 01:04 PM | #662 | |
| Bah, humbug!            Posts: 39,072 Karma: 157049943 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Chesapeake, VA, USA Device: Kindle Oasis, iPad Pro, & a Samsung Galaxy S9. | Quote: 
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|  07-05-2010, 01:20 PM | #663 | |
| Big Ears            Posts: 191 Karma: 2229 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Pontoise, France Device: Onyx Boox 60, iPad | Quote: 
 Last edited by TimMason; 07-05-2010 at 02:02 PM. | |
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|  07-05-2010, 01:23 PM | #664 | 
| Big Ears            Posts: 191 Karma: 2229 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Pontoise, France Device: Onyx Boox 60, iPad | 
			
			Sorry - it's much smaller than that on the original Wikipedia page.
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|  07-05-2010, 01:48 PM | #665 | 
| The Dank Side of the Moon            Posts: 35,930 Karma: 119747553 Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Denver, CO Device: Kindle2 & PW, Onyx Boox Go6 | |
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|  07-05-2010, 02:41 PM | #666 | |
| Country Member            Posts: 9,058 Karma: 7676767 Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Denmark Device: Liseuse: Irex DR800. PRS 505 in the house, and the missus has an iPad. | Quote: 
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|  07-05-2010, 03:06 PM | #667 | |
| High Priestess            Posts: 5,761 Karma: 5042529 Join Date: Jul 2008 Location: Montreuil sous bois, France Device: iPad Pro 9.7, iPhone 6 Plus | Quote: 
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|  07-05-2010, 03:42 PM | #668 | |
| Big Ears            Posts: 191 Karma: 2229 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Pontoise, France Device: Onyx Boox 60, iPad | Quote: 
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|  07-05-2010, 04:18 PM | #669 | |
| Big Ears            Posts: 191 Karma: 2229 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Pontoise, France Device: Onyx Boox 60, iPad | Quote: 
 As Moore argued against a naturalistic ethics, I take it you are not calling him as a witness for the defence on that point, but rather invoking his 'this is a hand' argument against scepticism - an English gentlemanly common-sensical response to the wily deviousness of continental skepticism. Well, I think the skeptics riposte still holds: you cannot refute my point by waving your hands in the air. You simply put the argument to one side, consigning it to a convenient pocket while you get on with the business of life. Your ethical common sense is, I fear, rather like the cartoon dog who, having overshot the lip of the cliff, keeps running. Post-Christian ethics, in so far as it sidesteps the objections of Sade and Dostoevsky, is running on empty. Thus it is that many of the 'new atheist' theorists are unable to see quite how difficult their position is: AC Grayling is a case in point. They seem to believe that they can have the Christian ethic without the Christianity. I'm not convinced that you can. Let me take up another thread: I will deny that animals can have anything like a morality. This is because I conceive of morality - or ethics - as conversational, and dogs do not have conversations. (They may exchange information, but they do not converse). At this point, we are at something of a lull in the conversation. One of the major partners - those whose ethical arguments are informed by their belief in god - has, over a short period of some one or two hundred years, been forced to concede huge stretches of terrain. He's not yet out of it; he makes rallies of some vigour from time to time. But he's no longer what he was. But he has left many of his pieces on the table. We still use them, from time to time - perhaps most of the time - but they can no longer have the weight and power that they used to have. Sometimes one of the newer players chips in a piece which s/he feels to have fashioned from her or his own material. And other players stamp their boots. | |
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|  07-05-2010, 04:20 PM | #670 | 
| Big Ears            Posts: 191 Karma: 2229 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Pontoise, France Device: Onyx Boox 60, iPad | 
			
			I'm sorry - I'll be away tomorrow, and perhaps the next day, so I won't be able to reply to your further objections, or admit defeat or whatever it is that I should be doing.
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|  07-05-2010, 04:33 PM | #671 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 4,395 Karma: 1358132 Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: UK Device: Palm TX, CyBook Gen3 | Quote: 
  What's niggling me is that we haven't pinned down what ethics/morality actually is - it seems to have been shape shifting throughout this thread. Or, more likely, I just haven't understood what's been going on. I don't find notions of morality relating to human wellbeing very satisfactory - too parochial and ultimately self-referential imho. If that's all it is, what's the big deal? At the moment I'm clinging to my view that humans aren't ethical creatures (unless it suits them) - but it's an opinion that's teetering on the traditonal views of objective good and evil as a basis for morality. | |
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|  07-05-2010, 04:35 PM | #672 | ||
| High Priestess            Posts: 5,761 Karma: 5042529 Join Date: Jul 2008 Location: Montreuil sous bois, France Device: iPad Pro 9.7, iPhone 6 Plus | Quote: 
 I skimmed the French version of this article, which seems much more documented than the English one, and is at least longer (does that prove anything? Mm, probably not. But I like the French version better  ) This is not a story of the progress of civilization against barbarism. It's the story of a political crisis where the failure of central government encourages minor nobles to take what they can, creating bloody local conflicts that were destructive, among other things, to the Church. Who reacts by using its moral influence to dissuade nobles to bring the pillage and destruction to its lands, by threatening them with anathema. Here is a small excerpt from the French article (badly translated with Google's help): Quote: 
 Sorry for this historical interlude, folks   | ||
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|  07-05-2010, 05:28 PM | #673 | ||
| Bah, humbug!            Posts: 39,072 Karma: 157049943 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Chesapeake, VA, USA Device: Kindle Oasis, iPad Pro, & a Samsung Galaxy S9. | Quote: 
 Quote: 
  We'll keep your chair warm for ya'! Hope that whatever is calling you away is something pleasurable.   | ||
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|  07-05-2010, 06:00 PM | #674 | ||
| Country Member            Posts: 9,058 Karma: 7676767 Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Denmark Device: Liseuse: Irex DR800. PRS 505 in the house, and the missus has an iPad. | Quote: 
 Here's a quote from SEP: Quote: 
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|  07-05-2010, 06:29 PM | #675 | |
| Groupie       Posts: 161 Karma: 608 Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Plano, TX Device: Sony PRS-505  + B&N Nook + Motion LE1700 + Motorola Xoom Wifi | 
			
			Personally, I quite enjoyed it!   And I think I came away from it with a similar view point to yours. The Peace of God was simply the Church's way of protecting its clergy, property & supporters in a time of near chaos. It had nothing to do with righting social/moral wrongs. However, if that's what was meant by "curb the excesses" then I would guess it at least goes to support the initial clause of his proposition: Quote: 
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| philosophy, plato | 
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