So the question becomes: is there any measure of quality? (Robert Pirsig Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance comes to mind.)
Is there an argument for the bolded part? It sounds like you're saying that part of God is greater than God. That doesn't make much sense
The idea is that moral facts exist as an aspect of God. This isn't an argument, by the way. It's a worldview
Christianity uses the Bible as a touchstone. It's a living religion, so it doesn't reduce to scripture. It's made of history, the human psyche, and the lives of millions of people for the last 1800 years.
Are you saying that ethical intuitionism is moral realism?
I hold that the only way to address the question of what is real, is to witness what is clearly free of ambiguity regarding its ontological status. We find Descartes useful, for his method was to do just this: discover what cold not be doubted and entirely beyond ambiguity.
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I CAN certainly doubt the multitude of prepositions one can make about the pain dealing with categorical knowledge claims (the pain is really this or that or some other reference to a science category), for these are constructs ABOUT the pain; not the pain itself.
This is where Moore comes in. Pain, the qualia of pain, if you will, or the pure phenomenon of pain, does not belong to interpretative error because it is not an interpretation. It, if you will, screams reality!
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Ethics is at its core, about value, and value is the general term for this dimension of reality, only made clear by example
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Something has to be at stake like this, or no ethics. And things "like this" are as real as it gets.
The time honored perspective is that we know there are moral facts because of God, and they exist in God's nature, and we discover them in the Bible. I don't think there is any other commonly accepted framework for moral facts.
I think that rejecting the above is to reject moral facts.
It is a rare and beautiful thing when a chap changes his mind even a little as a result of discussion. I am inclined to say it is also a good thing to be swayed by cogent argument and to seek the truth. Truth is better than falsehood. and this is necessarily the case because a community of habitual falsehood speakers would have no use for each other's speech, and meaning and language would be lost entirely.
So in general, I would suggest that morality is social value, and the sense of unreality arises because social value and personal value can and do conflict at times. No one complains that their own desires are unreal, it's always those values that conflict with them that might not be real...
I realized this morning I kind of hijacked your thread
In some sense if we don't have a knowledge of ethics then we are functionally nihilists, even if we believe there are true moral statements, because then what makes the decision is sentiment and attachment to this or that principle rather than a process of deliberation or a cadre of experts who know.
Reject ethical truth values and all there is, is violence. – Banno
And I think it's this intuition which gets along with @Bob Ross's use of the Guillotine -- in some sense I am committed to non-violence, and that's the sentiment what underpins my reasoning here
But I must admit that these desires and doubts are not arguments.
Honestly, my sense is that you are somewhat new to philosophy and/or logic, so I am trying to do little more than give you nudges in the right direction for the better development of your ideas.
P2-A*2*2: There are no known subject-referencing prescriptive statements which are facts. — Bob Ross
This sounds to me like, "There are no moral facts."*
Presumably if there are no moral facts then the moral realist is wrong, but this is still question-begging because it is asserting the very issue at stake
It is not conceivable that any moral realist would respond to your assertion by saying, "Oh, I see now. There are no moral facts. I am wrong after all!”
Banno already addressed this issue in his very first post:
That one ought not kick puppies for fun is a moral statement.
It is a true statement that one ought not kick puppies for fun.
Facts are true statements.
Therefore there are moral facts. — Banno
You responded:
technically “one ought not kick puppies for fun” is non-factual
P1 can be true and be subjective. It would be a true statement because it corresponds to one’s psyche, and the prescription itself is non-factual (being a part of one’s psyche).
More technically, I would deny, if pushed on it, P2; because technically “one ought not kick puppies for fun” is non-factual, so it is not a proposition or it is false (and only true as a non-factual claim). It would have to be “I believe that one ought not kick puppies”: then it is propositional.
But why is it non-factual?
What's happening in this thread and in your threads generally is a shifting of the burden of proof. What begins as, "I am going to argue for moral antirealism," always ends up in, "Prove to me that moral realism is true!"
I am not convinced that it has progressed beyond, "Moral facts don't exist." "Sure they do: here is a moral fact." "That's not a moral fact."
* Or, "There are no moral statements that are factual," where a 'moral statement' is a "subject-referencing prescriptive statement."
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics? — Banno
This strikes me as an important point in these conversations.
Sure, you should try to defend P2-A*1 if that is how you wish to defend P2-A. Give us a persuasive reason to accept your thesis.
Traditionally, to hold a realist position with respect to X is to hold that X exists objectively. On this view, moral anti-realism is the denial of the thesis that moral properties—or facts, objects, relations, events, etc. (whatever categories one is willing to countenance)—exist objectively.
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So understood, moral anti-realism is the disjunction of three theses:
moral noncognitivism
moral error theory
moral non-objectivism
Non-objectivism (as it will be called here) allows that moral facts exist but holds that they are non-objective.
Again, "true fact" is redundant.
P2-A* (fucksake!) is not an argument, it is an assertion. As has already been explained.
The phrase I have bolded is much stronger than antirealism. It claims that there are no moral facts.
A close look at Ross' argument shows that he assumes that normative statements are not factual at P1.
It surprises me that no one else has pointed this out.
He doesn't prove his thesis; he assumes it, then allows it to ride into his conclusion on the back of normative statements.
He does this again, explicitly, in his updated version:
P2-A: All prescriptive statements (P) which dictate ‘what one ought to do’ (D) are non-factual (T).
We get ‛T is a normative true statement’, and what we want to know is whether asserting this is equivalent to asserting the truth of T
If we’re allowed to use statements as bound variables – that is, if Ex can quantify over “facts” and “statements”, not just “objects” or “states of affairs” -- then it looks like we can quote the statement without committing ourselves to its truth, or even to whether it’s true-or-false.
But if only states of affairs can count as existing, then we have to make what is (to me) an awkward translation
Where I would like some help is in understanding whether Banno's objection, quoted above, must be correct. Are we making a normative statement in the sense that we're talking about truth, or in the sense that we're talking about whatever the normative behavior is? Does it require both truth and normativity to create a normative statement? Have I even made a meaningful distinction? I think so, but . . . see above re my logical competence.
To say of some normative statement, that it is true, is itself to make a normative statement, isn't it?
Are we making a normative statement in the sense that we're talking about truth, or in the sense that we're talking about whatever the normative behavior is?
Does it require both truth and normativity to create a normative statement?
So this could have been summed up by, "I agree with Hume." Yet the forum is filled with critiques of Hume. I thought you were attempting to go beyond Hume in one way or another.
As I said in my first reply to you, you are begging the question.
P2-A is the contentious premise, and it receives no defense/justification
P2-A*1: If Hume’s Guillotine is true, then P2-A is true.
P2-A*2: Hume’s Guillotine is true.
P2-A*C: Therefore, P2-A is true.
Edit: This seems to be your argument in a simplified form:
1. Anything which depends on non-facts is a matter of taste.
2. Moral claims depend on non-facts.
3. Therefore, moral claims are a matter of taste.
(2) needs to be defended by something more than a mere appeal to Hume.
I’m not trying to prove that one ought not harm another. I’m trying to make sense of moral realism. Moral realists claim that there is something like an objective, mind-independent fact that one ought not harm another, and that because of this fact the proposition “one ought not harm another” is true.
“One objectively, mind independently, ought not murder” is true because one objectively, mind independently, ought not murder.
Okay, that is somewhat helpful, but the other problem is that you don't seem to present any arguments for your position in the OP. Your whole thesis rests on a single sentence:
I think that Hume’s Guillotine can be deployed to validly extinguish the existence of moral facticity, if ‘moral’ language signifies ‘what one ought to be doing’, since in any event of reasoning about ‘what one ought to do’ it is going to be grounded in non-facts.
No matter what prescription is being utilized, even if it is a normative fact or not, it will eventually take the form of the following (no matter how many syllogisms it takes to get there):
P1: [normative non-fact]
P2: [non-normative fact]
C: [target normative statement {or some other normative fact/non-fact that derives the target}]
As a quick short-circuited example, let’s say that the target normative statement, T, is a normative fact, then one would have to argue something which will bottom-out at:
P1: One ought to abide by the normative facts.
P2: T is a normative fact.
C: T
This implies, even if it is conceded that normative facts exist, that what informs the individual of ‘what they ought to do’ is a taste
I don't understand the distinction between something I ought to do and something I actually ought to do.[
If we exclude statements as bound variables in themselves, then “X is a normative fact” and “It is true that X is a normative fact” are equivalent.
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But if we allow statements into our universe of discourse, we get a different interpretation. “X is a normative fact” and “The statement ‛X is a normative fact’ claims to state a truth” now say two different things, because they quantify over different ranges,
What would it mean for a fact to be moral?
Do these two propositions mean different things?
1. one morally ought not harm another
2. one non-morally ought not harm another
A moral realist might claim that the statement "one morally ought not harm another" is made true by the mind-independent fact that one morally ought not harm another
A moral realistmightcould validly claim that the statement "onemorallyought not harm another" is made true by the mind-independent fact that onemorallyought not harm another, but, this does not (logically) entail that one ought to not harm another: one would also need to add a claim, or something similar, that ‘one ought to abide by what is a normative fact’--then it is of ‘moral’ significance.
Subsequent paradigm shifts in moral philosophy demonstrate that no matter what necessarily regulates our conduct, it is not sufficient in itself to explain those factual occasions where manifest conduct does not conform to it.
That being the case, Hume’s argument with respect to mere sentiment in general, and its regulatory power over our conduct, is falsified, insofar as under those conditions, rather than no ought follows from an is, it is the case an ought is all that can follow from an is.
The concept of “fact”, the primary intended meaning of that which the word represents, being empirical, shouldn’t be adjoined to that human condition having no definitive empirical predication whatsoever.