1.
Utilitarianism condones killing of innocent human beings, even murder, if it makes the world a better place.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
2.
It is obvious, I think, that national democracy withers. This has to do with globalisation.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
3.
There comes a time where next to everyone will resort to techniques that enhance cognitive, mental including emotive, physical, and other capacities. When this has happened, if not before, the ban on doping in sport will have been lifted.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
4.
These theories, deontology, the moral rights theory, and utilitarianism, contradict one another. Moreover, they give conflicting (inconsistent) recommendations. It is hence not possible to hold them together, in a pursuit of moral truth.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
5.
I am indeed a hedonistic utilitarian. I have defended hedonistic utilitarianism for quite a while.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
6.
Are there any good arguments in defence of moral nihilism? I think not.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
7.
It is of note that for a long time moral nihilism was a kind of unquestioned default position in analytic moral philosophy.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
8.
According to deontology it is wrong to kill an innocent human being, period.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
9.
We own ourselves. This is the core of a libertarian theory of rights. But on this theory, while we are at liberty to kill ourselves (regardless of the consequences of others), we are not allowed to kill others, not even if this means that there we be fewer murders in the future, totally speaking.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
10.
If two norms conflict, if they are mutually inconsistent, then at least one of them must be false.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
11.
You should not take the content of your intuitive response as evidence until you have submitted your psychological reaction to what I call cognitive psychotherapy. You should do what you can to learn as much as possible about the origin of your reaction.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
12.
The US two party system is very different, of course. Here the people decides about who should rule them, but it is not reasonable to claim that the people rules itself through the political institutions. In comparison, I find that the standard European system is better, also as a model for global democracy.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
13.
I wanted to know what it means to know something, whether we can know at all, and, if so, how.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
14.
I want to think that there are better ways of obviating murder than to resort to capital punishment, but I realise that this may be wishful thinking on my part.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
15.
People in different cultures think very differently about abortion. Abortion is not seen as a moral problem for example in Sweden or Russia, but it is seen as a difficult moral problem in China and in the USA.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
16.
The best explanation why people agree is that they have converged on true answers.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
17.
Even where people in different cultures agree they may all have gone wrong.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
18.
When I was in my late teens I was already interested in philosophy.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
19.
The possibility to go on indefinitely with our lives may become a reality and it will present us with a temptation.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
20.
My conjecture is that most people will refuse to let go, even when their lives have become boring (at least in comparisons with possible lives lived by new generations). If this happens, there will eventually be no room for new generations. A kind of collective irrationality will lead to a bleak life for the last generation that decides to stay around. Unless we put and end to the human race (through global warming, for example), before this happens, individual egoism will block the path to a better world.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
21.
Global governance need not take a democratic form.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
22.
I am a left winger, thought.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
23.
I do believe that what I have called populist democracy is to be preferred to what I have called elitist democracy.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
24.
In many European countries we have populist indirect democratic systems. The people elect, in a proportionate manner, a parliament. The parliament with all its parties is representative of the political opinions among the citizens. It is reasonable to claim that the people rule itself through the political institutions.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
25.
We can be certain that, if there are conflicting views in different cultures, some of these views must be false. This may help us to transcend our own narrow cultural horizon.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
26.
It is of note that even if utilitarianism has proved to be superior to deontology and the libertarian moral rights theory in the area of killing, we are not allowed to say that it has been finally vindicated; it has to face other challenges in other areas, in particular in situations of distributive justice.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
27.
You are only allowed to treat the content of your intuition as evidence if the intuition stays after you have exposed it to cognitive psychotherapy; in some cases you have to reject it even if it does indeed stay.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
28.
Moral nihilism comes with a price we can now see.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
29.
We should not accept moral nihilism unless we find strong arguments to do so.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
30.
I am now a decided non-naturalist realist. And today we may even speak of a trend towards non-naturalist moral realism.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
31.
Being a moral realist I see normative ethics as a search of the truth about our obligations and a search of explanation; the idea is that moral principles can help us to a moral explanation of our particular obligations.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
32.
I look at the most promising putative moral theories. I construct crucial thought experiments in areas where they give conflicting advice. I confront their conflicting advice with my own moral sensitivity, my moral intuition. I take the theory that can best explain the content of my intuitions as gaining inductive support through an inference to the best explanation.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
33.
Different areas present us with possibilities to test different theories.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
34.
Once we realise that utilitarianism comes with the idea of blameworthy rightdoing (such as when you push a big man onto the tracks in order to save five lives) and blameless wrongdoing (such as when you don't push a big man onto the tracks in order to save five lives), then utilitarianism all of a sudden appears to give the right answers.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
35.
I believe that one basic question, what we ought to do, period (the moral question), is a genuine one. There exists a true answer to it, which is independent of our thought and conceptualisation.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
36.
The perspective that many today are beginning to see as fully realistic is that democracy in our country, and in our part of the world, will suffer the same fate as the Swedish monarchy did before. The democracy is beeing emptied of all power political content at the same time as the forms remain, treated with reverence and preservasion.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
37.
It is obvious that humanity faces existential threats of a global nature. They are global in the sense that is not possible to deal with them unless we resort to global governance.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
38.
It is quite possible that we will soon come to live under some sort of global despotism, enlightened or not. This is not a nice prospect. And there is only one way of avoiding that this happens: to establish a global democracy. And it is not too late to strive for such a democracy, of a straightforward populist nature, where people on the globe elect a world parliament, which in turn elects a world government.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
39.
It is true (independently of our conceptualisation) that it is wrong to inflict pain on a sentient creature for no reason (she doesn't deserve it, I haven't promised to do it, it is not helpful to this creature or to anyone else if I do it, and so forth). But if this is a truth, existing independently of our conceptualisation, then at least one moral fact (this one) exists and moral realism is true. We have to accept this, I submit, unless we can find strong reasons to think otherwise.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
40.
There are some particular moral truths that I believe we have access to (such as the one not to inflict pain on a sentient being for no reason).
Torbjorn Tannsjo
41.
What we need is legislation, not negotiation, for the entire globe.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
42.
To kill or not to kill, that was the question that haunted me.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
43.
I am indeed a moral realist.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
44.
I have now come to the conclusion (roughly) that capital punishment is defensible, if it can be shown to have a deterrent effect on murder. In that case, a few executions save not only some people from being murdered but also some people from becoming murders.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
45.
The Chinese are generally speaking much more reluctant than Westerners to killing as a means to the rescue of lives.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
46.
It is hard to tell if capital punishment has such an effect. And even if, in some contexts it has (such as in the American South with a very high incidence of murder), this effect may very well go away if a decent welfare state was replaced for the existing social order.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
47.
Actually, I defend the right to free abortion.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
48.
I have been brought up in a culture where capital punishment is indeed anathema. I have always thought of myself as a principled opponent to capital punishment. However, when thinking about how the topic is handled in other cultures, in particular the American, Russian and Chinese ones, I have realised that my own tack on the issue was utterly superficial.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
49.
One way of submitting your moral intuitions in relation to some issue to cognitive therapy is to learn more about how people in other cultures think about it.
Torbjorn Tannsjo
50.
It is true that it feels very differently to enjoy a good meal, taking part in an interesting conversation, or to think of how successful your children are. Suppose we do all these things at a particular time. How happy are we at the time? We do not need to calculate the value of each such feelings on any singular scale to answer this question. We need not see our happiness at the time as a mathematical function of these items. It is rather that all these experiences, together with many other factors, causally puts us at the time at a certain level of happiness, i.e. in a certain mood.
Torbjorn Tannsjo