that that meaning is derived from their form as a proposition, — Moliere
Some people believe in a non natural realm so won't have ruled this out. — Andrew4Handel
Well, I've been restricting myself to the nature of moral language -- namely that moral statements are not special with respect to other statements. — Moliere
Clarify then... what comes through a subject that is not subjective? — creativesoul
Thought and belief are neither objective nor subjective — creativesoul
and all thought/belief consists of that which is not existentially dependent upon the thinking/believing subject, as well as that which is, thought/belief is neither. — creativesoul
They have to be zero in size, hence you are no longer dealing with the quantity in question. — albie
Yes, so it is an empirical question. For one interesting piece of empirical research on what people believe, see https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/on-the-human/2010/12/objective-moral-truths/ . Also see Brian Leiter's comment which brings up relevant issues. — Andrew M
Science only analyzes existing concepts, and there is no scientific research before a concept is created. — bogdan9310
A low quality pizza might have old ingredients and be partially cooked (or burnt), whereas a high quality pizza would have fresh ingredients and be properly cooked. Do you reject pizza quality as objective because it depends on facts about humans (e.g., what is edible, healthy, palatable, etc.)? — Andrew M
If so, does that then carry over to other properties as well such as an object's color? — Andrew M
They either think/believe that something is unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour or they do not. — creativesoul
Do you think people ordinarily intend objectivity when making moral claims? — Andrew M
Do you think that well-being (and suffering) is something we can make objective claims about? — Andrew M
Whereas if they say, "That pizza tastes good", they are likely commenting on the high quality of that particular pizza. So a use can be objective, even when discussing pizza. — Andrew M
I'm not sure why you are bringing up this point. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The problem is all our accounts we give are the way we think. — TheWillowOfDarkness
how you arrive at this conclusion when you only have a map in either case. — TheWillowOfDarkness
He figured that we would look at those resources and divide them up in the best intrest of the state. — hachit
that is the motivation behind all systems. Economics teaches that we have infinite wants and finite resources. The systems we invent are ways of seeing who gets what. — hachit
yes that is what I'm saying, don't worry I've met plenty of people that makes that mistake. Also socialism was developed as a way to transition to communism but it never could. — hachit
no it was communism as Karl Marx purpose. All the people would work for the benefit of the state. We never actually had a communist state. — hachit
Do you add energy to the water and heat it up again? No, you travel back along the line of energy, backward thermodynamics. The water starts to heat itself up when the energy is coming back into the water. That is what happens if you turn the arrow of entropy. — Christoffer
That is communism, as I said it has motivation problems. When people do something they think they need to get something in return. The only way it could work is if we're all carbon copys of each other. — hachit
Have you ever been in a class or had a conversation with people about a book or paper and one person never bothered to read the material but still wants to talk? If so, then you know that it's just silly, because either they say things only tangentially related, or make points that would have been answered if they'd read the text. It derails the conversation and wastes everyone's time. — NKBJ
If I heat up water, let it cool down and then travel back to when it was hot, my initial concept is that of traveling to another time, but essentially I traveled to when the energy was high in that water. If energy and mass create time as it's "byproduct" then we are generally traveling along the causality of energy distribution. — Christoffer
Time travel is essentially traveling between different points of energy distribution — Christoffer
Well, the constructivist stance is that there is no objective truth outside the self, and the realist says there is. So as far as that goes, yes you have to choose one. It's A or not A.
Seems to me the constructivist has to deny all of realism, but the realist can allow some constructivism. So, the realist posits there is an objective reality, but humans may have imperfect access to it. — NKBJ
