truth dancer wrote:I don't mean to be off topic but I would like to ask a question....
If a woman lives a good life, loves her family, cares for those in need, tries to live with decency, civility, respect, kindness, compassion, love toward others, etc. etc. etc.
What difference does it make in terms of actual meaning if she does or does not believe her life has meaning outside this earthly life?
In other words, belief is not the determining factor as to ultimate meaning, (life is either meaningful or it is not meaningful) so who cares what one believes regarding how meaningful is her/his life? What difference does the belief in one's ultimate meaning, make?
Does that make sense?
~dancer~
Hi ~dancer~,
What you say makes more sense than what Smith says.
Here is his argument. Every unit of time has a certain “value” attached to it. When you fill your units of time living a good life, loving your family, caring for those in need etc., you are filling your units of time with more units of value than they would otherwise have.
A key assumption to this sophistry is that every unit of time has at least one unit of value.
Another key assumption is that an action is defined as being “moral” if it increases the total amount of value in the universe.
Here is the logic part. Since every unit of time has at least one unit of value, and there is an infinite amount of time, the total amount of value in the universe is infinite. Regardless of how you live your life, there will still be an infinite amount of value in the universe. Therefore, your actions can’t change the total amount of value in the universe. Therefore what you do is irrelevant. Therefore moral nihilism.
This seems exceedingly stupid to me (maybe I just haven’t seen the light with regards to moral realism and aggregative value theory?).
I claim:
1- Morality should be defined as something that increases value over the time and space that are within our influence: not over all time and all space.
2- Units of time outside of our influence should be assigned zero units of value.
3- The value associated with a choice should be assigned to the time when the choice is made. The overall “morality score” of the universe should be expressed as a function of time. If you make a choice that increases value, then the finite score of the universe increases at that moment and at every subsequent moment.