I think this is maybe a bit different though, because the event itself crucially changes the standard by which you evaluate circumstances. To pre-button me, the circumstances after I push the button AREN'T better; they are worse, because they entail me acting in ways that I, pre-button Syme, don't want to act. To post-button Syme, who would have no qualms about acting in those ways, those may indeed be better circumstances. But he ain't me.
To expand on my answer, though, I also don't feel that I need to be entirely without guilt/shame/conscience to get where I want to get in life in the first place. So even if I was okay with the person who I'd become after pushing the button, I wouldn't feel much of a desire to.
I think you may find that when it comes to certain things, certain people will find the strictures of their conscience more than mildly prohibitive. When it comes to certain things, some people would even rather die than do what they think is wrong.Originally Posted by gwahir
Again, for myself personally, I'm not really convinced that being conscience-free would make me feel great for the rest of my life (that presupposes that real joy is nothing but the absence of shame/guilt), and that it's not possible for me to lead a life I'm happy with unless I have no conscience. I'm not convinced that an unlimited capacity for guilt-free scheming and scamming is the ticket to a life of happiness.Originally Posted by gwahir
I wouldn't say "my conscience does not want me to do it"; that seems to imply that there's some discrete entity in my head, separate from the "real" or "core" me, trying to make me act in ways that the real/core me might not want to. I don't really see it that way. It's not that my conscience doesn't want me to do it. I don't want to do it. My desire not to do it isn't being imposed on me from the outside. It comes from within my mind just as much as any other desire or thought I have.Originally Posted by gwahir
My own view, if I was asked for it, is that ANY behavior according to moral principles isn't rational. Any person who sets for themselves (or accepts from others) genuine moral principles, who really honestly bases their actions on ideas about what's right and wrong, isn't being rational. I don't think there's any way that ideas about right and wrong can be supported rationally. This doesn't mean I don't still have ideas about right and wrong, of course. But I don't pretend that I arrived at them by some rational process.Originally Posted by gwahir






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