The source of morals Morals consist entirely of thought/belief about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour. They are one kind of thought/belief. All thought/belief share a common basic core. They all have the same basic elemental constituency, so to speak. As a result of having knowledge of the basic minimalist criterion of all thought/belief, there is ground to talk of the origen of one particular kind. Some would agree that there is no stronger justificatory ground than a conceptual scheme following from and/or built upon uncontentious true premisses that has no actual nor conceivable/imaginable examples to the contrary. — creativesoul
I would agree. This would represent the bedrock upon which all manner of conceptual edifice could be constructed. But it seems a bit idealistic. I don't know if this actually exists (other than as a hypothesis); and, if it does exist, it seems as though it would be practically impossible to validate. It is as though we would have to become identical to each other, in the strictest sense, to establish such an apodictic ground of certainty. I would even be willing to suggest that the notion of an epistemological bedrock is a cleverly veiled a priori category.
Nevertheless, I'm willing to try to find it.
I can agree with the utility of assuming everything up to this point, all those factors that lead up to and produce thought/belief - here we can mark a point of origin. But this is only the origin of the source of morals, we must go further. So I suppose, I can say: I hold an open mind in regard to existential quantification.
Btw, great job reframing the issue!
:up: :up: