That I endorse a more sensible way of approaching the matter — S
What is the
specific claim about interpreting Euthyphro. — Terrapin Station
you are skeptical of, and, in what way are you skeptical of it? — Mww
It seems to me that many commentators do not appreciate the force of Spinoza's statements about the nature of ultimate reality. According to him, only God exists. God is the only substance. Substance is one, infinite and indivisible. All finite and divisible things are a product of the imagination, which means that plurality, finiteness and divisibility are all illusory. "Measure, time and number are nothing but modes of thinking, or rather of imagining" — bobobor
The ‘valuing part’ you refer to is a set of measurable/observable events in the brain that can be related to the experience of valuing. That doesn’t amount to a value relation, — Possibility
That's why it would be wrong to say "it's my gut feeling that we should arrest anyone whose names begins with M", because a) its so unlikely, given our common experience, that this is a gut feeling, and b) without some seriously convoluted thinking, such a policy is unlikely to yield anything close to the sorts of gut feelings people tend to have. — Isaac
Looks like Bartricks might be right. Seems the majority of philosophers are moral realists and moral cognitivists according to philpapers survey. — bert1
Moral values are relations between a subject and their experience of behaviour: theirs and/or others’. It is a property of the subject only in relation to behaviour, and a property of behaviour only in relation to the subject. This means that moral values are contingent upon both subject and behaviour. — Possibility
2 seems clearly false to me — bert1
The ancients assumed that reason would lead us all to the same understanding. But their criterion was not ‘objectivity’ in the modern sense - the ideas of objectivity and for that matter subjectivity have changed considerably in the transition to modernity. The Eclipse of Reason discusses this in detail. — Wayfarer
Still, you say it is a bad argument because moral values are the values of a subject, namely Reason. — Janus
You tell me — Bartricks
That's another claim. Citation please. — Bartricks
Citation in support of that please. — Bartricks
Your claim that the one making the claim has to do the work. — Bartricks
Back that up. Provide a citation in support of your claim. — Bartricks
You have the internet. Do some research. — Bartricks
It appears self-evident to the reason of most that moral truths are necessary, not contingent. — Bartricks
How else do you explain why the Euthyphro is considered by virtually all contemporary moral philosophers to be such a damning criticism of subjectivist views??? — Bartricks
If moral values are the values of a subject, Reason, then they will be contingent, not necessary — Bartricks
2. Moral values are necessary, not contingent — Bartricks
Well, the problem is that it appears self-evident to the reason of most that if something is morally valuable it is not just morally valuable here and now, but always and everywhere. That is, moral value does not vary over time and space alone. If it is bad today to be a sadist, then it is morally bad tomorrow to be one, other things being equal. — Bartricks
It seems that even the short posts aren't focused quite frequently. — uncanni
A methodology which doesn't permit all kinds of nonsense. — S
So then you do allow for a methodology which permits all kinds of nonsense, like the example I gave? And... you don't see that as problematic? — S
You must stay away from the discussions with around 2,000 responses. Just because a discussion gets long doesn't mean it can't keep its focus. — uncanni