This part stood out like a sore thumb to me. Treat me as if I'm five but, can you tell me how things like deciding to take the trash out, taking a taxi, riding a bus, and eating can have moral significance?
Every breath you take, every move you make, every bond you break, every step you take is making your life better or worse, however slighly. No?
Selecting a mate could be a mechanical task adverse to these values (think of battery hens) but that would at the same time deprive one of the enjoyment of one's values even as it undermined them
The biological and philosophical imperative are one and the same here.
Far from it. The philosophical imperitive I described has no necessasary connection with the flesh. After all, we have free will to accept or reject the philosophy with our actions. Philosophy is the voice of truth, but biology is the voice of 3 million years of evolutionary development. If the two were always in concert there wouldn't be any need for values!
Certainly, mating with a sociopathic and patently insane mass-murderer is not an optimal condition for a stable family and children. The philosophical imperative is also against mating with such a monster. Hence, the two are not mutually exclusive here
He's attractive, he's got money and important friends, international respect and keen fashion sense, and not a neglibible amount of power. What box does that not tick for a woman in heat? Take values out of the equation and there's nothing stopping you.
The biological imperative is to do things that further our life, and further the successful living of that life.
Sure, but only within the limited perview of biological life. This reduces to the same in all animals with only different species variations. That is, to hatch and grow and reproduce before you die. The highest cause for biology is species replication, but the highest cause in rational philosophy is individual happiness.
Again, mating with someone who is of an addictive and unstable nature runs against both the biological and philosophical imperatives.
Nevertheless, it is the scenario I have presented you to answer and not an unheard of predicament in the world.
I contend rather that the biological and philosophical imperatives are one and the same - or at least not mutually exclusive. Philosophy provides a framework for determining with whom one is most likely to have a long-term, stable relationship, but the need for such a relationship is biologically based.
Well I strongly disagree that they are the same thing and anybody who ever experienced an ambivalance between their head and their heart knows I'm right. And it hasn't escaped my attention that there are some good-looking women around who manage to simultaneously have as much grasp of rational values as their counterparts in a butterfly zoo.
You put biology first, with all man's inventions and arts in the intellectual and material world as ends to having sex! Are not Apollo 13, the Magna Carta, Objectivism, and bubble gum owed to a higher purpose than the sexual friction of mucous membranes?