What name would you give that vice? Edit: Perhaps justice is the virtue that is at issue? Hard to see one man owning another as being fair or just.Under virtue ethics, you can ask what kind of person would keep a slave, and you can say that keeping slaves is indicative of vice. — Sapientia
I assume you don't mean that they're straight. But... philosophy of math is most definitely queer... I mean... really bizarre — Mongrel
Using mathematics is the basis of comparison, since that was brought up prior as a point of comparison for queerness, I maintain that it is reasonable for a person to maintain that mathematical facts are not queer, while rejecting moral facts because they are queer. One need not accept the existence of moral facts simply because they accept mathematical facts, and they can still be rational while both believing this to be the case, and believing this to be the case because of the argument from queerness of moral facts. — Moliere
If morality is objective, then we definitely don't make it up as we go. We are discovering or beginnig to understand what is the case about morality, in a way that is similar to the way man gradually began to understand math- that is my theory. Not sure if it holds water.I think you said something like: assuming that moral statements are truth-apt, how do we know if any of them are true?
We basically make it up as we go.... with various fears and biases thrown in. If you want more than that, as I said... you'll have to lay out a theory of truth to work with. If you don't want to do that, I think you're stuck with the above answer. — Mongrel
I mean that when we justify a mathematical statement that it is more persuasive than when we justify a moral statement, and I also mean that when we justify a mathematical statement that people change their beliefs about math whereas when we justify a moral statement people do not change their beliefs about morality. They continue to believe what they thought before. — Moliere
I am not trying to "blow my own horn" here, but everything seems a lot less personal, less petty and more rational with my philosophical mindset. — Mustapha Mond
I was never convinced that utilitarianism could provide a comprehensive basis for moral philosophy, although elements of it are worthy of incorporation into more satisfying and comprehensive conceptions — John
I'd like to meet someone who is an atheist, and who shares my conviction that morality is objective. I do know of some atheist philosophers who argue in defense of objective morality, so that's a good start.Anyway, I tried various denominations until about 3 years ago, at which time I started calling myself an atheist, and started looking for other atheists to hang out with. The ones I met were just too anti-religion for my taste. I'm also not impressed with the way that the atheists I've met approach morality- which looks to me very much like "religions invented morality, we don't like religions, and we won't be moral- so take that religious people!". I've since decided that the atheists who hang out in groups with "atheist" in the title of said group, aren't the type of people I want to spend much time with. (that's been my experience with the few groups I've spent time with... your mileage may vary). — anonymous66
I did talk honestly about my real-world experiences. I did meet some very vocal atheists who do see morality in a twisted way such that I don't know how they could strive for any kind of moral excellence. Also see my post where I mention Chris Hedges and the New Atheist movement. - From what I know and experienced of the New Atheist movement, I don't want anything to do with them. It's just fundamentalism, but for atheists.No. No it isn't. That is the attitude of a small minority. Most atheists are more sensible than that. I don't think that The New Atheists, for example, or those under their influence, would actually make that claim. They would likely dispute the claim that religions invented morality, and rightly so. And I can't see most people within that sort of group having an attitude reflected in the exclamation "we won't be moral - so take that religious people!". More like, "we reject your presumption of moral authority!" — Sapientia
I have nothing good to say about the New Atheist movement.I find most of the new atheists are engaged in 'straw God' arguments - they take what is the most caricatured version of the idea, namely that of young-earth creationists and reactionary fundamentalism, as being what is meant by 'God'. I never believed in the kind of God that they say doesn't exist, but I still don't consider myself atheist (although many of my Christian forbears might consider me to be that.) — Wayfarer
Meta-ethics: moral realism 56.4%; moral anti-realism 27.7%; other 15.9%.
God: atheism 72.8%; theism 14.6%; other 12.6%. — shmik
No moral calculus has the same force as actual mathematical statements when it comes to accepting their truth. — Moliere
A purported fact is something which is posited as being the case. — John
How are you defining facts?There may be facts about what is universally approved and disapproved of by humans; well, at least by those humans that are motivated by social considerations and 'normal' levels of concern for others.
Would you call those 'moral facts'? — John
Hmmm. I don't know. Aren't you put in the position of just saying, "every time we test it, it works?" But, I haven't read anything by Imre Lakatos.I also want to add that, as I think I already said, mathematical theorems can certainly be falsified. — John
I bet you cannot come up with any hypothetical scenario that could falsify it. — John
She is a firefighter.
Therefore she ought to do whatever a firefighter ought to do.
This works because a firefighter is defined functionally. There is a function characteristic of a firefighter, and this is what it is to be a firefighter (telos and nature are one).
Or does it work? Discuss... — jamalrob
Anyway. Facts are true statements. Moral statements are treated as if they are truth apt.
For all practical purposes, true moral statements are facts. — Mongrel
but that it is, within the limits of our definitions, (and what else do we have to work with?) verifiable as I described. — John
My mistake, I must have misunderstood. Can something be intuitive and falsifiable?It's not really apt to say that I have "admitted that maths is intuitive" since I never claimed otherwise. — John
One of the rules that must be made clear in responding to The Willow of Darkness' posts are that (1) they are not required to 'make sense' (on account of 'making sense' is an arbitrarily imposed 'external rule'); and (2) The Willow of Darkness is free to take issue with any proposition, by any person, on any grounds which The Willow of Darkness sees fit, even if those grounds seem to be in direct contradiction to an earlier post by The Willow of Darkness. — Wayfarer
I can place two oranges on the table, and then immediately see that there are two oranges. Then I can place two more oranges next to them, and directly see that there are now four oranges. I can repeat this experiment as many times as I like and the result, it seems obvious will always be the same; for the simple reason that objects do not appear out of nowhere; and even if they did that would not contradict the formula, if I really did put two oranges there both times. — John
I agree, I think that in the final analysis, both math and logic must be intuitive — John
I haven't read the work; but from various references to it I have come across I have formed the impression that it was an attempt to determine a set of logical principles form which all mathematical truths could be derived. — John
Yeah. Facts and knowledge are weird, aren't they? We think we can verify/falsify the things we think we know. But, just try to prove it. And how to verify claims about verification?No, I am not making that claim at all. Perhaps some things I could claim would be verifiable to me, in the sense that they are intuitively obvious, but would be impossible for anyone else to verify.
When it comes to what we experience, whether it is publicly verifiable or not, nothing is provable, in the sense of being deductively certain. What one person experiences is never empirically verifiable by others unless the experience is of something in the public realm. The exact nature of what I experience can not be known by you, for example, or perhaps even exhaustively known by myself. — John
There are claims about ethics in your argument. You are suggesting Hume's "is/ought" distinction isn't known to be a truth about ethics. — TheWillowOfDarkness