Making iambiguous's day

There’s been a lot of talk about iambiguous and his obsession with dasein lately.

This has sparked my interest.

Now I know what you’re all thinking: shut up, gib! Don’t stir the beast! Let it die!

Well, I’m sorry, but I’m going to act for me this time, not for you.

I’m curious to know about deisin, at least Biggy’s rendition of it.

So, Biggy, if you’re reading this, what can you tell me about dasein? We are talking about Heidegger’s concept, aren’t we? From what I understand, which is very little, dasein is one’s “being in the world”. It is a form of phenomenalism, of subjectivism (maybe even idealism?). Right?

And are you a strict follower of Heidegger’s philosophy? Part of it only? Or are you just taking his concept of dasein and running with it in your own direction?

Can’t wait to see what I’m getting myself into! :smiley:

OH, COME ON!!!

This is the philosophy forum.

So, if you have a genuine interest in discussing dasein [as I understand it] in an intelligent and civil manner, here’s what to do.

1] Go here: viewtopic.php?f=25&t=189516

2] Read the OP.

3] Come back to this thread and note a] the manner in which you do not agree with my reasoning and b] the manner in which it is not applicable to you when your own value judgments come into conflict with another.

First of all, Biggy, thank you very much for giving me a chance.

Second, that thread don’t seem to long. I’ll have a read and get back to you. May not be soon, but I will get back to you.

Fine, I’ll be looking for your reaction here.

And perhaps we can entice others who are considerably more skeptical of my rendition of it.

Hey Biggy,

Just wanted you to know I haven’t forgot this thread. I read about 3/4 through your “debating dasein” thread when I got nauseous. I will read through the last quarter soon and get back to you.

Interesting so far.

Nauseous? That doesn’t portend well regarding your willingness to discuss this intelligently.

Really, I’m not interested in engaging either the Kids here or those out to make me the argument.

Instead, what interests me is this: a] the manner in which you do not agree with my reasoning on the thread and b] the manner in which it is not applicable to you when your own value judgments come into conflict with another.

Yeah, nauseous–just at that 3/4 point in the thread–it’s where the discussion finally degraded to the usual childish tit for tat:

Uccisor: Well, you do this.

Iambiguous: Yeah well, you do that.

Uccisor: But you did it first.

Iambiguous: No, you did it first.

  • ralph!!! *

Anyway, I finally got around to reading that entire thread (it probably would have been much quicker if I just read the OP but I decided to go through the whole thread). It gave me a taste of your philosophical position and style, what you’re trying to do, and also what kind of beef others have with you (Uccisor in particular).

You definitely seem to have your philosophy and your approach down to a well rehearsed formula, and I see nothing so far to suggest it is of poor philosophical quality. It’s your agenda, what you aim to do with your philosophy when you engage in discussions, that most people seem to have qualms with. But we’ll see how things go with me, a subjectivist, idealist, and relativist.

First thing I’d like to note is your comment from the other thread:

We can certainly go there if you want, but that’s not necessarily where I intended to go with this thread. However, I can see how it would easily migrate over to a discussion on a) and b), so I don’t think we’ll be avoiding that.

First, however, I would like to start with my original questions:

and:

and:

Then we can discuss a) and b). But I have to warn you, I’m not sure yet that a) I do disagree with your reasoning, and that b) it isn’t applicable to my value judgements when they conflict with those of others. ← So there may not be anything to discuss on this front.

Well, I’ll be honest:

My main interest in discussing human identity revolves around the extent to which conflicting narratives regarding it are embedded in our reactions to conflicting human behaviors that revolve around conflicting value judgments that are exchanged in a world where ultimately what counts is not what you believe is true “in your head” but in what you are able to establish and then sustain in a world in which political and economic power will ultimately prevail.

As I noted elsewhere…

[b][i]Way back at Towson State University I did read Heidegger in Walt Fuch’s class.

But not since.

Mainly I was struck by the idea of being “thrown” at birth – thrown in a purely fortuitous, adventitious manner – into a particular historical and cultural context. A particular world. And then as an individual accumulating your own set of “personal experiences” that will never, ever completely overlap that of another’s.

It dawned on me: What parts of “I” transcend this? Surely my genetic makeup, my congenital predispositions, my gender, the color of my skin, the purely demographic components of my life.

But what aspects of “I” are more profoundly embedded subjectively in personal opinions and political prejudices?

In other words, that aspect of dasein far, far more problematically embodied in contingency chance and change.

The part that revolves around conflicting goods and political economy.
[/i][/b]

My frame of mind revolves around phenomenon embodied in the actual flesh and blood interaction of men and women out in a particular world such that these interactions precipitate conflicts when different people come up with different [subjective/intersubjective] assessments regarding what the rules of behavior ought to be in any particular human community.

Okay. My own assessment of dasein has led me to this conclusion. My “dilemma”:

If I am always of the opinion that 1] my own values are rooted in dasein and 2] that there are no objective values “I” can reach, then every time I make one particular moral/political leap, I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction…or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction. Then “I” begins to fracture and fragment to the point there is nothing able to actually keep it all together. At least not with respect to choosing sides morally and politically.

What I am most curious to discuss then is the extent to which this either is or is not applicable to you when confronted with those who confront you in turn with value judgments that they insist are more rational than your own.

Is there a way using the tools of philosophy to resolve disputes such as this?

That’s quite a packaged statement. It’s almost as if you just summarized your entire philosophy in one succinct (or not so succinct) sentence.

I think I get the gist of it.

Right now, however, I’m going to put it asside (hope you don’t mind) and focus on your answers to my questions. I feel this is an important preliminary step because these will help define, for me, the background from which you are coming, and I can make better sense out of your statement above.

You answered my last question first:

So it sounds as though you’re taking Heidegger’s concept of dasein and running with it.

Would you say this is how you understand “dasein”?

So it’s this “part” of dasein that you are most interested in, the part that is rooted in our subjective opinions and political prejudices?

I think the closest this comes to a “yes” to my question is in your use of the word “phenomenon” in “…phenomenon embodied in the actual flesh and blood interaction of men and women…” So you seem to agree that we are indeed dealing with phenomena (i.e. how things seem) but you also seem to regard those phenomena as real, objective, entities out in the world (flesh and blood men and women). You go on to say more than this, of course, about our interactions, with our prejudices, biases, opinions, values, beliefs ultimately leading to interpersonal and political conflict, but this I suppose is just more phenomena.

I suppose the question comes down to: are you a realist when it comes to our subjective perspectives on the world, or is all this nothing over and above mental apparitions?

I don’t see how it could not apply to me. I mean, aren’t we all “thrown” into a particular historical, sociopolitical context? Don’t these historical, sociopolitical contexts define who we are to a certain degree?

But when you say “…I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction…or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction…” do you mean in that same moment, that same life, being that same self, in the same historical, sociopolitical context? Or do you mean you could have been thrown into a different historical, sociopolitical context, and grew up with different opinions and prejudices, and made different choices?

And how does admitting this cause the “I” to fragment?

Well, sure there is. Resolving these kinds of disputes is doing philosophy.

From my frame of mind [here and now] philosophy has devolved down to this: How ought one to live?

Is this something that philosophers [using the tools at their disposal] can effectively address? And, in particular, when, in addressing it, different individuals come to embrace narratives/agendas that lead to conflict?

All I can do is note my reaction to the word “dasein”:

Dasein is a German word which means “being there” or “presence” often translated in English with the word “existence”. It is a fundamental concept in the existential philosophy of Martin Heidegger particularly in his magnum opus Being and Time. Heidegger uses the expression Dasein to refer to the experience of being that is peculiar to human beings.

When we are born we are born here and not there. We are born now and not before or after.

What then is the implication of that as it pertains to the manner in which [through our indoctrination as children] we come to acquire a particular identity? And, especially, as we come to embrace particular moral and political values, particular Gods, particular emotional and psychological reactions to particular events?

But: What of those who come to grasp the existential implications of this, and then ask: How is philosophy able to examine this in such a manner that it is able to propose a methodology for discovering/reaching the “real self” able to know objectively which human behaviors reflect the moral obligation of all rational human beings when conflicts occur.

So, yes, the aspect of dasein that most interest me [by far] is “the part that is rooted in our subjective opinions and political prejudices?”

Well there is the distinction that is made between “realism” in a philosophical sense and “realism” in a moral/political sense.

Very different points of departure, right?

I do not believe in God. I do not believe in Platonic “forms” that, linked to God, somehow transcend conflicting human interactions in the cave.

With respect to value judgments, we live in the cave from the day we are born until the day that we die. At least as far as I am concerned. Unless of course someone who does not believe this is able to demonstrate to me that I should not believe it either.

Yes, but my point revolves around those who insist that philosophers are somehow able to transcend all of this and to define/deduce into existence an epistemological “intellectual contraption” whereby all rational men and women are able to invest their one “true self” in behaviors deemed to be the obligation of all reasonable men and women to embrace.

By that I point to this:

1] I was raised in the belly of the working class beast. My family/community were very conservative. Abortion [like premarital sex] was a sin. Big time. Both in and out of church.
2] I was drafted into the Army and while on my “tour of duty” in Vietnam I happened upon politically radical folks who reconfigured my thinking about abortion. And God and lots of other things.
3] after I left the Army, I enrolled in college and became further involved in left wing politics. It was all the rage back then. I became a feminist. I married a feminist. I wholeheartedly embraced a woman’s right to choose.
4] then came the calamity with Mary and John. I loved them both but their engagement was foundering on the rocks that was Mary’s choice to abort their unborn baby.
5] back and forth we all went. I supported Mary but I could understand the points that John was making. I could understand the arguments being made on both sides. John was right from his side and Mary was right from hers.
6] I read William Barrett’s Irrational Man and came upon his conjectures regarding “rival goods”.
7] Then, over time, I abandoned an objectivist frame of mind that revolved around Marxism/feminism. Instead, I became more and more embedded in existentialism. And then as more years passed I became an advocate for moral nihilism.

And what is this but an actual flesh and blood example of how my own values were rooted in dasein. I’m merely noting how it is the accumulation of actual experiences in our life [many of which we have only so much understanding or control over] that can “bump” our lives in any number of different directions. Thus, when we think of “I” in terms of our moral and political values, we need to focus as much on what we did not experience as on what we did.

Because the more experiences you have the more “I” comes to reflect these experiences as an embodiment of the accumulation of them. It’s the difference between being born and raised in a tiny village somewhere where everyone has a place and everyone is in their place [from the cradle to the grave], and being born in the modern world where day after day after day you are bombarded with so much that might be other than who think you are. Meaning there are that many more opportunities that something [or someone] will change that.

Okay, choose a particular moral/political conflict and note that which all of us now agree on [philosophically] as the resolution.

Instead, what we have are the objectivists among us insisting that if you embrace their own political prejudices, then it is “resolved”. Or those who argue that the resolution is out there [theoretically] but that philosophers have just not been able yet to pin it down.

Yes, and this, I believe, is the outcome of synchronizing philosophy with our basic needs as an animal in the game of survival. If philosophy is put to any use at all, it might as well be in line with what we, as a species, are trying to accomplish: our own survival.

As I said before, I think this can be done. But at the same time, I see this question being branched off into two different forms: 1) Can philosophers, as a global community, establish a formal methodology for resolving all conflicts based on historical, sociopolitical (and personal?) contexts that any human being might get ensnared by? 2) Can one particular individual, who happens to get into a conflict with another particular individual over conflicts between their historically, and sociopolitically based opinions and prejudices, resolve the conflict by engaging in philosophy with the other individual?

^^ These are two very different questions, I feel.

My answers the these questions are: 1) maybe, 2): yes, it happens all the time.

The next question, on my mind, would be: if 2) is a definitive yes, then is it possible for several such individuals to come together, using the tools of philosophy to resolve their differences, and form an entire network of individuals who are at least willing to use such tools to resolve interpersonal conflict? Do you think, if this were possible, that such a network might happen upon a general formula that works universally? For all such human conflicts?

Thank you for that! :smiley:

BTW, I’m not always sure whether you’re quoting yourself or someone else. ← Just FYI.

I suppose the implication of that is that none of it is our fault. If we had no say in the particular here and now we found ourselves in when we were thrown into this life, how can we be blamed for acquiring the particular values, beliefs, predispositions, etc. that we eventually acquire? How can we be blamed for making the choices we make?

Are they even choices?

I don’t think this kind of philosophy denies the freedom of choice, the freedom of our will, does it? So even if it is not our fault that we were thrown into the particular set of circumstances we were thrown into, we may still bear some degree of responsibility for all the choices we make thereafter.

However, I don’t think the severity of retribution for any so-called immoral acts would be nearly as severe as the objectivist would make them. I think the fact that we are not responsible for being in this world in the first place would certainly dampen the severity of retribution.

It seems to me they become objectivists.

On the other hand, how can this be if they got there by “grasping the existential implications of this”?

But at this point, I’m still not quite sure what you mean by the “real self”.

All philosophy begins as a prejudice. It begins with subjective, personal opinions raised to the level of a “premise”. From there, the attempt is to draw implications from these premises using semi-rational principles of thought and arrive at a solid conclusion. Are you asking whether philosophy, given this, is able to arrive at something truly objective and universally applicable?

Ok, so you’re a nihilist.

Nihilists, in my experience, typically doubt the reality that we come to know through cognition (knowledge, opinion, rational deduction, etc.), but they have faith in the empirical reality we come to know through sensations.

That seems to describe your outlook so far.

(you’ll have to forgive me–I’m an idealist–everything is mental for me :laughing:)

Well, it’s an interesting question in any case. To be sure, men are capable of arriving at consensus over things that seem undeniably objective–mathematics for example.

Maybe we do. But I think I get your point even without that (having to focus on what we did not experience). You seem to be trying to emphasize how this accumulation of circumstances, as arbitrary and contingent as they seem to be, contributes just as much if not more to our beliefs and values and morality as any instinct within us to “think rationally”. Indeed, if these arbitrary and contingent circumstances were different, we would no doubt have adopted different beliefs, values, and morals. ← It’s against the backdrop of this arbitrariness and contingency that your speaking, isn’t it? I was hung up on our freedom to make such choices verses our not-being-able-to-help-it (I’m not going to use the word determinism) because of being “thrown” into it. ← I take it this is not relevant to the point you’re making… or is it?

Well, ok, but does this mean the I “fragments”? Or does it simply reveal that the I is fluid? That it changes from day to day? That it doesn’t remain constant?

:laughing: Maybe this answers my question above: what do you mean by philosophy being used to resolve these kinds of conflicts?

My answers were: 1) maybe, and 2) yes, it happens all the time.

You look like you’re asking me to provide an example of 1). I don’t have an example. I said “maybe” only because I don’t see why this is impossible in principle.

But 2) I definitely think is possible and indeed happens all the time.

Do you still want an example?

The former I think are stupid. The latter are at least hopeful, though perhaps foolish. But personally, I don’t see what could be gained by giving up hope.

Your actions contradict this statement.

I think you misattributed the quote.

There was a time when our species was just starting out. Long before the invention of philosophy. And long, long before the division of labor that precipitated the modern industrial state. Survival in the caves and survival in the modern metropolis – how is it the same? how is it different? How would philosophers make that distinction?

My point though is this: Yes, perhaps, it might be possible that philosophers can accomplish this. That one day they will. But what would that argument even begin to sound like such that the manner in which I construe the meaning of dasein and conflicting good is rendered more or less moot?

I don’t see this distinction. With respect to the conflicting goods clearly embedded in an issue like abortion [the birth of the baby vs. a woman’s right to kill it] there either is an optimal resolution amongst philosophers or between individuals or there is not. Or so it would seem to me.

What happens all the time? Sure, between two particular individuals an agreement can be reached in which both parties are able to overlap philosophically. But how is this the same as establishing that their agreement is a reflection of the objective truth? For example, in a democracy everyone agrees to abide by the law and the law either allows for abortion on demand, no abortions at all or some abortions in particular sets of circumstances.

But this in my view does not establish that any particular law is a reflection of the objective truth pertaining to conflicting views on the morality of abortion.

And then there those individuals who insist that morality revolves solely around their own self-gratification. Their concern with the law is only that if they break it [or if they behave in a way that the community deems to be immoral] they don’t get caught.

Well, other than in the form of a political consensus reached in any particular community [or in one or another world of words i.e. Plato’s Republic], when has such a network ever been established such that particular behaviors have been shown either to be or not to be in sync with an “ideal” or a “superior judgment”? A frame of mind in which dasein as I understand it becomes moot?

Yes, but increasingly in the modern world the child becomes an adult and acquires more autonomy. How then, in choosing more for herself, is she able to embrace behaviors said to be rational and virtuous rather than irrational and lacking in virtue? How is dasein any less implicated in her life given that what she chooses will still revolve largely around the experiences that she has [and does not have] the people that she meets [and does not meet] and the knowledge/information that she comes into contact with [and does not come into contact with]?

In my view, they become objectivists given the extent to which they come to believe that the “real me” does embody the most rational/ethical behaviors.

Once you come to grasp them as I do, moral objectivism is no longer an option. Or, rather, it isn’t until someone is able to convince me otherwise.

That part revolves around this part:

[b][i]It dawned on me: What parts of “I” transcend this? Surely my genetic makeup, my congenital predispositions, my gender, the color of my skin, the purely demographic components of my life.

But what aspects of “I” are more profoundly embedded subjectively in personal opinions and political prejudices?

In other words, that aspect of dasein far, far more problematically embodied in contingency chance and change.

The part that revolves around conflicting goods and political economy.[/i][/b]

In other words, as though, if you stripped away all of the existential layers of your life, you would get to the “core you” – the essential part able to grasp the way the world really is objectively. Including the part that revolves around “right” and “wrong”, “good” and “evil”.

In whatever manner others might construe the meaning of philosophy, my own interest in it revolves around its limitations – limitations pertaining to conflicting human behaviors that revolve around conflicting goods embraced in the manner in which I have come to understand the meaning of dasein.

Well, not me. I don’t doubt the objective reality of mathematics or the laws of physics or the logical rules of language. And our senses often deceive us.

Instead, my interest in nihilism revolves around the relationship between human identity, moral values, political ideals and political economy.

Yeah, that works for me.

iambiguous

Is the way in which someone looks on their self and their individual human identity the same as the feeling of “what it is like to be me”?

I kind of thought that dasein is more like what is experienced on the deepest level when everything else has been stripped away, our ego, our personal identify, our so-called chauvinism, our intellectual thoughts and what is left is simply a kind of nakedness which cannot be denied which we have to affirm in ourself and accept. I thought dasein was who we are and know ourselves to be at our core. Don’t mean to be redundant here.

In other words, what it is like to be me - without all of the baggage.

I suppose that I am wrong in this according to you or am I?

Sartre is famous for suggesting that, “Hell is other people”. And I always assumed that he was not merely pointing out the obvious: that people can make our lives hell. Instead, people are hell because they objectify us. They take out of us only that which they first put into us: themselves.

I merely suggest that, the more you think about it, the more we are in turn hell to ourselves. Why? Because there is so much about what we think and feel [pertaining to “I” and to our value judgments] that is prefabricated in our youth. And so much that is predicated on a particular set of experiences, relationships and sources of knowledge that we come upon [oft times fortuitously] as more autonomous adults. And in a world teeming with contingency, chance and change.

So, from my frame of mind, dasein can be as much about what you have long forgotten as about what you have not. There are thousands upon thousands of variables that came together over the course of any one particular life as they did versus how you remember them coming together. “I” is simply how you have come to piece them all together “here and now” in order to embrace one moral/political agenda rather than another.

And, besides, whichever side you happen to come down on, both sides are able to make arguments the other side’s arguments don’t make go away. That’s the part where dasein meets conflicting goods: out in a particular world rooted in political economy.

This is more or less the opposite of my own frame of mind. Dasein [for me] always revolves far more around “becoming” than “being”. At least pertaining to the relationship between “I” and conflicting moral/political values/ideals. From my frame of mind there is no “core self” able to attach itself to an objective truth. There are only the particular existential layers of the life that you have lived that predispose you to go in one direction rather than another.

There is then either becoming aware of this or not. And then deciding that, once you are aware of it, what are the implications for your own “self”, your own “values/ideals”?

My hunch is that many folks [whom I call objectivists] don’t feel at all comfortable with the implications of what I suggest here at all. What do they suggest about their own self-identity? What do they suggest about their own values?

After all, I suggest that so much here is embedded in both an existential fabrication [as a child] and in an existential contraption [as an adult]. That “I” is considerably less “solid” here than many are willing to acknowledge.

And I know this in part because I still recall so vividly my own reaction to Mary’s abortion in conjunction with William Barrett’s conjectures regarding “rival goods”. The first cracks in my own “objectivist mind” began to appear. And it became disorienting to say the least. And now here I am today ever entangled in my “dilemma” above.

Well, there are obvious differences–money, for example–but you must be talking about something much more abstract–perhaps how me must adapt our natural instincts? As a response to my comment about synchronizing philosophy with our basic animal needs, it is true that philosophy emerged long before any considerations of what its pragmatic uses might be (how we ought to live), but if philosophy has funneled down to that question, it can only be because that question has been deemed by modern philosophers as the most important, and that is because of our modern understanding of our position in the game of survival. This could change if our understandings of the world and our cultural values change.

I don’t profess to know this. Moreover, I don’t even know how it could possibly be applied. Most people who end up getting into conflicts over their values and belief, regardless of whether it stems from dasein or whether there is an objective way of settling such matters, just want to win the conflict. They aren’t interesting in a generalized formulaic solution to such conflicts that a team of philosophers may have come up with, let alone understand it or even heard of it.

This is why I’m placing all my bets on 2); that is, two individuals doing a bit of philosophy to solve their differences. Option 1), though possible in principle, is entirely impractical, even if it one day happens.

Well, for one thing, option 1) amounts to a generalized formula for resolving all differences between conflicting human values and beliefs rooted in dasein, whereas 2) amounts only to a solution to a particular problem (between two particular men); say, for example, an employer and a manager were disputing the prospect of highering a man of a different race (say X). The employer is an X-ist while the manager is not. They can engage in philosophy to raise and attempt to answer the question: is someone who is X but has Y in their blood (say Y is the race of the employer and manager) still subject to the same treatment as someone who is X through-and-through? If this question is as yet unanswered between the two men, then there is the opportunity to do a bit of philosophy to arrive at an answer that satisfies them both.

For another thing, option 1) is the approach whereby the formula is arrived at first, and then it awaits conflicts in the world to be applied to, whereas 2) starts with a conflict and then philosophy is engaged in to arrive at a solution.

Yes, but when you funnel it down to a particular conflict, like abortion vs. the right to life, you don’t need a generalized formula that is universally applicable. You can come up with solutions that make sense in the abortion vs. right to life conflict but may not make sense in other conflicts, and if it is between a particular set of individuals, the solution they come up with may not be satisfactory to other individuals in conflict over the same issue (for example, the particular individuals in question may be debating the right for a women to abort her child because she was raped, whereas the same debate may come up at a later time between different individuals but the woman in question was not raped).

Does it have to be objective? If a conflict is resolved, is that not all that matters?

But let’s see if we can answer your question anyway. Obviously, not all conflict resolutions are going to be objective, but that doesn’t mean none of them are. I guess it depends on what you mean by “objective”: do you mean using objective means (i.e. rationality and logic) to arrive at conclusions, or do you mean arriving at objective “truth”? I think it’s easily possible to be rational throughout a debate such that an impartial logician could give his assessment saying, yes, the arguments are objectively valid. But I don’t think it’s possible to arrive at an objectively true conclusion around issues of morality or value judgements, if that’s what you mean, conclusions such as “abortion is wrong” ← I don’t think there’s anything objective about that.

Well, given that your interest is in arriving at objective truth, I think the chances of this happening are dismal. I’ve been thinking more in terms of using philosophy for individuals to reason out their differences, but to arrive at objective truth is a different and much taller order. But if there is any hope at all, it might be in observing how individuals work out their differences using philosophy and reason and trying to extract a pattern or common methodology. If there is such a pattern or methodology to be discovered, it might be raised to the level of a generalized formula that can be applied to any human differences. But again, I must stress that it most likely will not be a formula that can be imposed on individuals–they most likely will have to mutually agree to use it on their own initiative.

Are you asking how it’s possible to escape the effects of dasein given autonomy and maturity? In other words, it is thought by many that through the freedom we acquired after maturing and gaining our autonomy, we can “rise above” all our past conditioning and indoctrinations, that we can see what really matters, objectively, rationally. And I think there is some truth to this, but it too is no doubt greatly influence by a culture that encourages rising above petty biases and inherited values and beliefs (assuming we know how to identify them).

It’s an interesting question as it requires distinguishing between whether such a thing is merely possible and whether it happens to any great degree. Even in thinking about the nihilists who seem to be capable of dismissing the ideas of morality and values and religious beliefs, etc., it must have been their dasein, their life circumstances and experiences that lead them to their nihilistic stance; and even if we could say that such a nihilistic stance is “objective truth” in the final analysis, they would still at least look like just another force in the social tapestry of conflicting values and positions.

That would be the rational conclusion to come to, I would think. But the irony is with the type of people you’re talking about: those who grasp the implications of dasein, as you say, but then proceed to inquire about an objective and universally applicable methodology for resolving interpersonal conflicts rooted in dasein using the tools of philosophy. This conviction must hinge on the belief that there is the potential for human thought to look at the world through objective and impersonal spectacles, and I think there is, but as I said earlier, this potential is confounded by more than just a few variables: how can one be sure they are viewing the world with truly objective spectacles instead of yet more of dasein’s effects, for example? Also, how to know whether the person you’re dealing with (the person you’re in conflict with) is willing and able to do the same. And given that this is possible, will it provide everything we need to resolve all conflicts revolving around value judgements? I mean, having the ability to view the world objectively does not convert inherently subjective value judgements to objective truths–they just fail to show up on the radar.

So this is an “I” which is projected to exist beyond “genetic makeup, my congenital predispositions, my gender, the color of my skin, the purely demographic components of my life…” This would be an extremely difficult “I” to prove the existence of, extremely difficult to prove the persist of.

And you believe arriving at objective solutions to the conflicts arising from dasein is one of those limitation.

Ah, but here, we’re talking about the objective reality of abstract things, not concrete objects. A lot of nihilists would dismiss the reality of these things on just these grounds, but I can still see how they would be relevant to your questions. Your question, if I may paraphrase, is whether philosophy is capable of establishing the objective legitimacy of certain conclusions revolving around moral value judgements (and other such things) even if that entails talking about purely abstract concepts. It’s important, therefore, to not be nihilistic about these things.

These are the things whose reality you doubt, correct?

From my perspective, the main distinction here is more in line with that which the KT objectivists always bring up: natural morality.

In the beginning – think the opening scene from the film 2001 A Space Odyssey…or the entire film Quest For Fire – “natural morality” had little or nothing in the way of historical or cultural contexts. At least not in the manner in which we have come to understand these things today. In other words, rooted in, among other things, “civilization” and “enlightenment”. Back then, at the birth of the species, it was far closer to the law of the jungle, survival of the fittest, might makes right.

Period.

And back then people basically lived in small, homogeneous communities in which there was a clearly defined place for everyone and it was just understood that everyone would go to the grave clearly embodying his or her place.

Re dasein, how far has the modern industrial state come from that?

Well, as always, it depends on who you ask.

But there are those among us today who will insist – in reflecting one or another rendition of Nietzsche’s “will to power” – that modern moral philosophy is largely just a sham. Or a scam. That, in a Godless world, we are “beyond good and evil”. But: in order to qualify as “one of us” you have to agree that what is “natural” pertaining to human behavior is what “we” say it is. And, at KT, that is always what Satyr/Lyssa says it is.

In other words, abstractly, in the lectures. In a scholastic “analysis” that is said to constitute “serious philosophy”. Serious philosophy that is said to encompass a “general description” of the human condition.

And we have the same sort here in turn.

That seems reasonable to me. And this is when I suggest one of three possible “models” that aim to achieve it:

1] might makes right – a purely autocratic regime
2] right makes might – a theocratic regime; or one propelled by political ideology; or one [theoreticallly] sustained by philosopher-kings
3] democracy and the rule of law – the modern industrial state

I merely point out in turn the manner in which [in the modern world] political and economic power will always be crucial factors in determining what those laws will be. In other words, the global economy owned and operated by the moral nihilists concerned by and large only with this: show me the money.

Though, sure, two individuals, in sharing a respect for the tools of philosophy, might use them in order to come to an agreement when one of their own value judgments come into conflict.

I merely note the gap between this and any assumption that might form between them that their own resolution reflects a frame of mind such that if others do not embrace it in turn they are wrong. Or, for the KT ilk, they become “retards” or “morons” or “imbeciles”.

You may not need a “generalized formula that is universally applicable”, true; but, in the absence of it, it would seem to always come down to the particular circumstantial parameters of this or that abortion; and then the subjective/subjunctive points of view regarding an understanding of them. But how does that obviate the points I raise regarding dasein and conflicting goods? We are still confronted with the real world implications of either allowing the baby to live or allowing the woman [and the doctor] to kill it.

And the same sort of thing can be noted regarding all of the other moral and political conflicts that have ever divided the “civilized” and “enlightened” world now for centuries. What has really changed from the time of, say, Plato and Aristotle?

As opposed to what has in fact changed regarding medical science and its capacity to perform abortions with considerably less risk to [and considerably more comfort for] the pregnant woman?

As for the relationship between abortion and rape, the fact that an innocent unborn baby exists as a result of a rape doesn’t make him or her any less dead if aborted. Is this then the “right thing to do”? How can this possibly be determined objectively?

My own frame of mind here then becomes entangled in this:

If I am always of the opinion that 1] my own values are rooted in dasein and 2] that there are no objective values “I” can reach, then every time I make one particular moral/political leap, I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction…or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction. Then “I” begins to fracture and fragment to the point there is nothing able to actually keep it all together. At least not with respect to choosing sides morally and politically.

And that is when I ask the moral objectivists [either pro-life or pro-choice] to note how they are not entangled in it themselves.

Well, other than by noting that “in their head” they do not “believe” that they are. Or that they simply just “know” that they are not.

In other words:

But my point revolves entirely around challenging those who insist not only that it does have to be objective, but that they have in fact already discovered/invented what the actual objective resolution is. And that, of course, is precisely when I confront them with the manner in which I myself construe these conflicts [instead] in terms of dasein, conflicting goods and political economy.

Okay, note one that is. Note one in which if you don’t share that frame of mind you are necessarily being irrational; or you are wrong; or, if you act otherwise, you are behaving immorally.

I make it quite clear regarding what I construe to be an “objectivist mind”. It is one in which the objectivists argues that you must share their own values or emulate their own behaviors. In other words, if you do embrace their own alleged rational and logical premises than your conclusion will in turn reflect the objective truth. Why? Because theirs does.

Otherwise you are “wrong”. You are not “one of us”.

Yes, I can basically agree with this. In fact, you might even call it my point. Then we can shift gears so as to explore the manner in which I came to this conclusion based on the manner in which I scrutinize human interactions that come into conflict from the perspective of dasein, conflicting goods and political economy.

As opposed to the components of your own argument that had persuaded you to think like this.

Yes, this is largely what I seek to explore here at ILP:

[b][i]In my view, one crucial difference between people is the extent to which they become more or less self-conscious of this. Why? Because, obviously, to the extent that they do, they can attempt to deconstruct the past and then reconstruct the future into one of their own more autonomous making.

But then what does this really mean? That is the question that has always fascinated me the most. Once I become cognizant of how profoundly problematic my “self” is, what can “I” do about it? And what are the philosophical implications of acknowledging that identity is, by and large, an existential contraption that is always subject to change without notice? What can we “anchor” our identity to so as to make this prefabricated…fabricated…refabricated world seem less vertiginous? And, thus, more certain.[/i][/b]

In other words, using the tools of philosophy, what can we know to be true for all of us: having already recognized the extent to which as children we are basically indoctrinated to view the world [morally and politically] as others instruct us.

And it should be noted that while it is “indoctrination”, it is often imparted lovingly. In other words, out of a genuine conviction that you are teaching your children to believe that which is the one true distinction between right and wrong.

That’s why it is invariably so effective.

I don’t doubt that the manner in which I peruse [and then construe] these things [these relationships] might not be reflective of a truly sophisticated frame of mind. That, in other words, those who do have a far more sophisticated understanding of philosophy as a discipline, might be able to poke any number of holes in the arguments I make.

“I” is after all the most complex and enigmatic form of matter that has ever evolved from the Big Bang; or from whatever it is that first brought existence itself into existence. Whatever that might possibly mean.

But it does seem reasonable to me that a distinction can be made between those aspects of my “self” that are anchored biologically, demographically, factually etc., in the “objective truth”, and those aspects which seem to be considerably more problematic. Contingent instead on the manner in which I construe the meaning of dasein as it pertains to one’s sense of identity, one’s moral and political values, one’s emotional and psychological reactions to events in the world around us.

Yes, I believe that most folks embrace a set of moral values because 1] they are indoctrinated as children in a particular historical and cultural context to embody one frame of mind rather than another and 2] because they had a particular set of personal experiences, relationships, sources of information/knowledge etc., that predisposed them to go in one rather than another direction.

And that these existential components are deeply embedded in them such that they may or may not be privy to [aware of] just how much [or how little] control and understanding they really have of or over these enormously complex interactions. Some obviously more so than others. But even to the extent that one thinks this through long and hard, they are still confronted with the gap between what they think they know about them and all that would need to be known in order to actually be fully or wholly informed.

On the contrary, an objective understanding of the laws of nature is precisely what makes it possible to engineer all of things [objects] that most of us just take for granted. Including this very technology that we use to exchange these abstractions.

From my frame of mind, in a world sans God, moral nihilism seems to be the most reasonable manner in which to address conflicting value judgments that precipitate conflicting behaviors.

On the other hand, moral nihilists are just as capable of precipitating and inflicting human pain and suffering as are the moral objectivists. Even more so if you focus the beam in on those who own and operated the global economy. After all, I suspect that very few of them are motivated by…deontological considerations?

I’m not sure there was such a thing as morality back then–not in concept anyway–but I think there were certain acts or things people would say or personality types that would anger most people–lying for example–and when you think about most of these behaviors and such that usually anger people in virtue of their “immoral” character (what we would call “immoral” today) they do seem like the kinds of things that would undo the survival of the species if taken to excess. If everyone lied constantly, for example, then communication and social harmony would break down and we would lose one of the most essential pillars of our survival: social cohesion and security.

Yes, I am saying that an instinct for morality existed even back then, at least an aversion to certain behaviors and such, which was loosely rooted in our genes (I say loosely because these aversions can be easily overridden or changed, but it’s common enough to say that there must be some universal instinct within man to abhor certain kinds of behaviors).

However, it must be said that, at least in my experience, the instinct to respond to so-called “immoral” behaviors seems largely directed towards others and not to one’s self. So whereas it might infuriate you when someone keeps lying, you most likely wouldn’t bat an eye at the thought of lying yourself.

Are you saying it is the moral nihilists who will climb to the top in any of these regimes?

Yes, if the main concern is to find the ultimate objective “moral right” then this approach is useless. But as a moral nihilist, I would think this isn’t the main concern. The main concern would be: how to establish harmony and peace between people given their conflicting views and values. Though this itself is nearly just as impractical.

I don’t know. Is this taken into consideration by the individuals involved in the dispute? Is this your concern? Are you asking with a view towards finding the objective moral right or simply resolving the dispute between the two individuals involved.

Like I said, it depends on what you mean by “objective”. I asked this question because it occurs to me that you are after an “objectively true” conclusion as opposed to using objective means to arrive at what might still be a subjective conclusion. I agree with the rationalists and objectivists that reason and logic–an objective method for dispute resolution–can be used to objectively arrive at conclusions (which might still be subjective in their content); but as far as arriving at conclusions that are demonstrated to be “objectively true” in that very process, I take back what I said, at least in regards to morality and value judgements rooted in dasein.

I don’t think this is what’s at the core of the objectivist mindset; it’s just a typical end result. Whatever beliefs or values she holds, the objectivist/rationalist believes that she arrived at those beliefs (or verified them) through an objective and rational process. Therefore, it is sometimes the case that she takes it as a foregone conclusion that any disagreement with her amounts to a misuse of, or a failure to use, that same process. It isn’t just because they disagree that the objectivist accuses others of being irrational or blind or wrong, etc., but it will often correlate with disagreement.

It has more to do with stubbornness, in my opinion, than being an objectivist, stubbornness in regards to re-examining the grounds upon which the objectivist rests her beliefs and values, for unless she thinks herself infallible, she should take the time to examine the reasoning the other person brings to the table and compare with her own reasoning to see if any new light is shed on the matter which might possibly point to alternate conclusions.

But there is always going to be great resistance to this. Why? Not so much because one is an objectivist, but because objectivism is being used as a crutch, a crutch to hold up some preferred position, some preferred value system, that can be used as leverage against others who work against one’s own interests. By painting such positions and values in the objectivist light, one feels she has bolstered her position and made it all the more difficult for others to contend with. But the minute that sticking to her objectivist/rationalist guns forces her to abandon her original position (because, like I said, even objectivists make the occasional mistake), there will be great resistance to re-examining her reasoning, for that would entail a great risk to her own interests, interests that were just previously being served by that same reasoning now being challenged.

So what are you saying here? Are you saying such an “I” actually exists? And if so, is it different from the I that “fragments”?

Yes, it makes it possible, but that’s still different from saying the laws of nature really exist as tangible things. This is part of what makes human thought work so well–it actually abstracts out imaginary constructs, uses them to form inner models of reality and make predictions about it, then in applying the principles that hold these models together and allow for these predictions, you get things like technology, art, and human civilization. My favorite example is the mathematical construct i–the imaginary number–so named precisely because mathematicians are up front about the fact that they just made it up, but they would never confess to making such a bold move unless they knew it would be useful, and you do get marvelous artifacts of technology from it. Concepts and ideas can prove to be very useful, but that doesn’t mean they reflect anything real (not in a concrete/tangible sense in any case).

I hear that loud and clear.