- Epistemic nihilism is false. I’m not sure its truth can actually be evaluated, but at minimum, it’s useless and unproductive.
With you on this one, especially pointing out its uselessness and it being unproductive. Just from a pragmatic POV it should be rejected, but even beyond just pragmatism it seems false.
- God almost certainly doesn’t exist.
Disagree here. I remember being quite the defender of this view on DDO (when I went by SNP1), but I no longer feel it is a justified position. I feel as if too much of the debate has been centered on atheism vs monotheism, but the moment you through polytheism into the discussion it changes things.
- Highly uncertain about this, but free will probably exists.
Agreed, but I am curious on if you are a compatibilist or hold to more of a libertarian free will? While I do think compatibilism is easier to support, I do have a lot of sympathies for libertarian free will. Our intuitions just scream that some extent of libertarian free will is true.
- Moral realism is probably true, though highly uncertain.
Mostly agreed.
I tend to think that Aristotelian Virtue Ethics is one of (if not the) best moral theories.
- Creating new happy lives is a good thing, though not as good as making existing people happy. Creating new bad lives is a bad thing (though not as bad, other things equal, as inflicting suffering on existing people).
Agreed. Future people are important, but we cannot sacrifice too much from present people for them. Does not mean certain things that limit present people should not be implemented for the benefit of future people, just that we cannot sacrifice too much in the process.
- Countries don’t have very large special obligations to their own citizens. They should prioritize their citizens a bit more than non-citizens, for pragmatic reasons, but policy should, in general, focus a lot more on the rest of the world.
Pretty strongly disagree here. The purpose of a country is to look after its own citizens. Without that, the country serves no purpose. This does not mean that value cannot be given to people outside the country, just that if a decision is made between the interest of the citizen vs the non-citizen that there needs to be a good reason to do anything but prefer the interest of the citizen for each situation.
- Individuals have a moral obligation to assist those in need.
I do think charity is a virtue, yes. I do think, however, that there are limitations (like in all things), and that certain forms of assistance can be more harmful in the long run.
- We should care, morally, as much about future generations as the current one. Of course, for practical reasons, it often makes sense to prioritize the interests of people alive today, but the moral worth of someone 300 or 3000 years from now is no different than the moral worth of someone alive today.
This is where I disagree and think that you have some conflict in your points. if you assign a future person as having as much moral value as a present person, then how do you justify the view that "Creating new happy lives is a good thing, though not as good as making existing people happy. Creating new bad lives is a bad thing (though not as bad, other things equal, as inflicting suffering on existing people)"? I think future people certainly have moral worth, and we should act to look after future generations, but does that give it equal weight to people here today? I do not think so. Future people do not exist (yet) while present people do. I think more moral value is given to things and people that exist than things and people that do not (similar logic as to why theft, murder, etc. is wrong but playing GTA is alright).