Especially now that your prior idea was shown to be invalid, I don't detect the relevance if your question. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Please see point 4 above. — ProgrammingGodJordan
It is silly to advise me that belief does not necessitate non evidence, because the OP had long underlined that belief may occur in both science and non science. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Belief is a model that generally permits the ignorance of evidence. — ProgrammingGodJordan
I think I do. Have you or anyone made any progress? I don't think so. — Noble Dust
Non-beliefism underlines, that "one may rank his/her presentations as incomplete expressions (susceptible to future analysis/correction), where one shall aim to hold those expressions to be likely true, especially given evidence, rather than believe, i.e. typically accept them as merely true especially absent evidence". — ProgrammingGodJordan
However, belief is a model that mostly permits ignorance of evidence, and we can avoid that model altogether, by generally not ignoring evidence. — ProgrammingGodJordan
People have different ideas of what constitutes evidence. Can you provide evidence that people generally ignore evidence or is that a belief that ignores evidence? :s — Janus
As I mentioned before, belief is a model that mostly permits the ignorance evidence.
It's quite trivial to see that science does not work this way, science does not mostly permit the ignorannce of evidence. — ProgrammingGodJordan
On the contrary, belief is defined such that people tend to generally ignore evidence, which contrasts nonbeliefism. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Data shows that most of the time, belief permits ignorance of evidence.
Why would I select a model that most of the time, does not permit that evidence is prioritized, (i.e. belief) instead of one that generally permits priortitization of evidence (i.e. "non-beliefism")?
Alternatively, why would you select a model that most of the time, does not permit that evidence is prioritized, (i.e. belief) instead of one that generally permits priortitization of evidence (i.e. "non-beliefism")? — ProgrammingGodJordan
Sure; and if objective morality is impossible, so is subjective morality.
The argument that morality is not objective, therefore it is subjective, is as valid as the argument that fish are not poetry, therefore fish are prose. — Banno
The will is the cause of our free choices. It's free from the temporal existence which we know of as the chain of causation, because it is immaterial, like the soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
So whether those values are objective or subjective is irrelevant to your decision.
And that is where this discussion has been headed. Thanks for playing along. — Banno
The point with free will though, is that the particular choice is not caused by any desire, it is caused by the will, which is free from that chain of causation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's the point: suppose further that the system tells you that you ought do something that you find morally reprehensible; kill your firstborn or explode a bomb in a school.
What do you do? — Banno
But equally, what makes your value system any less than the psychopaths? — Banno
SO, what moral system will you follow, yours or the psychopaths or the crowds? — Banno
But what do you think? — Banno
Try this example. Suppose that there were a moral system that set out for you, in any and every case, what you ought do.
Ought you do what such a system says? — Banno
Don't you mean to say that the very assumption that a code is representative of, or is generated by, a particular underlying function is what determinism means here?
To use our example, doesn't it mean that the determinist understands 010101010 as being generated by a particular function? Yet in my example, i explicitly defined that string to represent all of the current information that exists in that universe. So where is this ghostly 'particular' function that is proposed to exist over and above the string and control its existence supposed to live? — sime
Of course the string was generated by something transcendental of that universe, for it was me who determined it. And of course I literally exist in the same physical world as the string i wrote, hence an outsider could represent me with a binary hash number, say #Sime and crudely represent my creative act by concatenating me and the string together in some way — sime
But then the same problem arises as before. To what principle can the determinist now turn to, in order to interpret my act of creating the string as being representative of some transcendentally predetermined act of creation? Presumably the "laws" of physics. But then after we encode our understanding of those laws as binary information and add them to the picture, the determinist has nowhere else to turn to justify his metaphysical determinism unless he appeals to the invisible hand of god, or insists upon a hard distinction between mind and matter, thereby interpreting physics as being a principle transcendental of consciousness. — sime
The free willist experiences the capacity to interfere with that causal chain of events, to bring into existence what is desired, and to avoid what is unwanted in the future. — Metaphysician Undercover
SO you are quite happy to make moral decisions without having intrinsic moral guidelines, and without having an objective moral system to refer to? — Banno
Again, tell me what you think - is the psychopath right?
And what does your answer tell us about you? — Banno
Alternatively, the concept of belief could be discarded altogether, because it is a model that generally permits evidence ignorance.
It's not "complicated" to see the above. — ProgrammingGodJordan
It is worth noting that even if nothing is intrinsically morally wrong, it does not follow that nothing is morally wrong. — Banno
No I am saying exactly what I meant to be saying. You are confusing matters of fact with matter of opinion. Own it; deal with it. — charleton
Here lies the problem. Morality has no other reason to exist except to serve organisms. If you refuse to make this leap and accept that we can't talk about morality as we do about physical laws, but only in the context of life that we are living - this is what I meant under 'softer' - than you are not only asking the impossible, but also opening a more general discussion about objectivity in general, foremost the existence of objective world unrelated to our subjective experiences. — Dalibor
If we disagree about the definition of the group 'bad things' then that is the discussion we need to be having. If we agree on the definition of the group 'bad things' then we can confidently make objective claims as to whether murder is in it or not, in exactly the same way as we did with the proposition "the earth is flat". — Pseudonym
Even in maths 2+2=5 is objectively wrong only because we've defined 'wrong' as being an answer that does not allow further functions within that framework.
If the point you're trying to make is that the meaning of the word 'wrong' is created by humans, then I'm not sure you'd have anyone disagree with you. If not, then you need to specify what meaning, in this context, you're trying to claim is unprovable for moral statements. — Pseudonym
If not, then you need to specify what meaning, in this context, you're trying to claim is unprovable for moral statements. — Pseudonym
Do you recognize that things of the past (whether or not they've been observed or recorded), have a fixed, determined existence, i.e., that they cannot be changed? And do you recognize that things of the future are not absolutely necessary, that they may or may not occur, depending on whether or not they are caused to occur, and this is why we say that the existence of temporal things is "contingent"? — Metaphysician Undercover
010101010
By definition this is currently all the information that the universe consists of. Now does it make sense to ask if this universe thus far is determined? — sime
Simply, science prioritizes evidence, while belief (by definition and research) is a model that does not prioritize evidence. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Unless belief is redefined to prioritize evidence, or unless some new research suddenly shows that belief generally permits evidence prioritization, the concept of belief, which is both defined, and researched to generally permit ignorance of evidence, ought to be avoided altogether. — ProgrammingGodJordan
Why contact a model that doesn't prioritize evidence (i.e. belief) instead of a model (i.e. science) that prioritizes evidence? — ProgrammingGodJordan
SonJnana's statement stirs within the majority of those reading it feelings of discomfort. — tinytoro
Objectivity of certain moral laws still can be shown on 'softer' ways than what you demand in this thread — Dalibor