I assume you are one of these no one's you speak for.
All I can say is: what do I care if a bunch of nobodies remember me? — Merkwurdichliebe
In other words: your brain isn't observing facts. Your brain is creating them. — YuZhonglu
So what? Describing in detail how I responded to what you wrote doesn't do anything, logically. — S
It means every so-called "fact" that any human has ever learned or thought about is the product of neuronal activity. If there are no brains, then there will also be no "facts."
If humans disappeared, the Earth might still revolve around the Sun. But there would be no "facts" regarding this phenomenon. — YuZhonglu
In order to respond, your brain had to interpret and remember the visual input coming in from your retina. Then, based on this interpretation, neurons in the brain send signals back to the muscles in your fingers to respond. In other words, as you typed this, sections of your brain are responding to input and stimuli from OTHER sections of your brain.
The same applies to me, too, of course. — YuZhonglu
I was geebus. — Merkwurdichliebe
Technically you're not responding to what I wrote. You're actually responding to a memory of what you believe I wrote. — YuZhonglu
But it is interesting, to many others, because philosophy is little more than neuroscience but without the science or the tools. — YuZhonglu
You didn't seem very interested when I gave you my definition of "horse" and validly drew a few logical consequences.
You're doing the same thing with "fact". — S
But it is interesting, to many others, because philosophy is little more than neuroscience but without the science or the tools. — YuZhonglu
That's just another way of trying to sneak an argumentum ad populum in the back door. Argumentum ad populums are fallacious. Things that most people say or do are only relevant to the question of "What do most people say or do?" There's no other implication to it. — Terrapin Station
What's the relevant sense? — Terrapin Station
You're not following what I'm saying.
You brought up the following above: "the fact that we're talking about god, unspecified, means that we're talking about god, broadly, as per a number of possible conceptions, one of which is an undetectable god."
Is that identical to simply saying "It's logically possible," or is that something different than simply saying "it's logically possible"? — Terrapin Station
If what you say can mean either of two different things then it is ambiguous. I am not interested in playing this game. — Fooloso4
Give me an example. — Janus
So what was the point? I'm not going to do your work for you. — Janus
You are a moral relativist because you believe there is no empirical evidence that could confirm whether a moral judgement is right or wrong. How is the situation different with regard to aesthetic or philosophical judgements? — Janus
A hypothetical fact is not a fact any more than a hypothetical thing is a thing. Try again. — Janus
Fine then give me an example of an unconfirmed fact and I will believe that you are not speaking through your arse. — Janus
So, now you contradict yourself. The claim that you are the best philosopher is not an empirical claim that can be confirmed, but either an ethical, aesthetic or philosophical claim that comes down, according to your own avowed relativism in such matters, to being merely a matter of personal (and in this case your and your alone) judgement. — Janus
I'm glad someone understood the relevance (or maybe everyone did, but thought it unworthy of response) — Isaac
Truth can instrumentally be collective belief. Personally I don't need any more than that. It is true that bishops move diagonally in chess is entirely a description of the collective belief of chess players. — Isaac
I think a better way of framing this is in terms of subjective and inter-subjective. — Janus
"That this text is written in English" is an inter-subjective fact, because it can be inter-subjectively confirmed. — Janus
There may be psychiatrists who could prescribe something to make his "preaching" go away. — whollyrolling
How could it be true according to your relativism, if others disagree? What you mean is that you believe it is true, it is true for you; but that means, not that it is a truth, but that it is merely a belief. — Janus
There is no requirement on this forum to do philosophy well. — Merkwurdichliebe
And how can you do philosophy well without taking the proper digressions. — Merkwurdichliebe
Also, the justice system has scientific precision in determining the morality of a society. That's pretty objective. — Merkwurdichliebe
Then its possible you don't mind the murder and rape of babies, but for the dominant majority of people living in the western world, they would object simply because they have inherited the judeo-Christian ethic, wittingly or not. — Merkwurdichliebe
I find the terms moral objectivism and moral subjectivism to be nonsense...unless you can define them for my edification. I would be eternally grateful. — Merkwurdichliebe
What about the judeo-Christian ethic that pervades the western world, that seems like an objective morality to me. — Merkwurdichliebe
I think applying them to moral statements - looking for objective morality - is a misuse. Not because there are no objective moral facts, but because morality is not the sort of thing that can be objective.
But that does not imply that it is not something about which we can agree.
That's the error made by folk who think that being objective means being in agreement.
It's a minefield. Needs to be kept simple and we need to take small steps. — Banno
Again, you want me to justify my preference for vanilla ice? No? Then why do I need to justify my preference for not committing murder? — Banno
S & Banno:
It is my opinion moral objectivism and moral subjectivism are misleading terms...
I prefer moral relativism and absolute morality. But I don't expect anyone to adopt my definitions, I'm not a nazi of lexicon like S. — Merkwurdichliebe
I think we do. But only about how we ought use the word "objective". — Banno
But kicking puppies is wrong. You agree with me. What more do you want? It's being objectively true (to misuse "objectively") would not make it any more true...? — Banno
I think this more aptly describes the universal rather than the objective. — Merkwurdichliebe