Did the U.S. ever pay reparations to Vietnam? Or one of the many countries it destroyed during its crusade in the Middle-East?
Am I doing it wrong? — Tzeentch
I don't support payment of reparations for past behavior. It's not the injustice of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries that need to be addressed. It's the ongoing unfairness and privilege that remain today. — T Clark
If you were tasked with putting words to such a cry for help, what words would you use? — ucarr
Who says we understand reality? — Agent Smith
What does it mean to solve the puzzle of consciousness. — RussellA
I'm mostly interested to understand why a given matter is thought to be a puzzle. — Tom Storm
So you value facts more than values? How's that? — Banno
When we set out a fact, we make our sentences fit the way the world is. When we set out a value, we say how we want the world to fit our sentences. — Banno
What could be more important than what you value? — Banno
in the USA, where 96 percent of the population is a devout Christian? — god must be atheist
The ten commandments are inadequate — Tom Storm
I feel confident saying that the overwhelming majority of atheists lead meaningful productive lives and are not nihilists. — EricH
Andrew seems to me to be saying 'being an agnostic hasn't morally worked out for him ... and somehow that's atheism's fault.' — 180 Proof
If you want to increase the benefits of cooperation in ways that will better achieve your goals, then you ought to follow your cultural moral norms when they will predictably solve cooperation problems and abandon them when they will create cooperation problems”. — Mark S
Overwhelmingly, people do cooperate. — Banno
So no ethical theory convinced you. Note that whether or not you were convinced is different to whether or not the theories were true or false. You might be, indeed presumably were, unconvinced because the theories were false. If so then they do indeed have a truth value. — Banno
It's not, I hope, at all difficult to present ethical statements on which we would agree. So for example i doubt that you would agree with kicking puppies for pleasure. And that is to say, we agree that "One ought not kick puppies for pleasure" is true. — Banno
We do have expectations for the behaviour of ourselves and of others. So if moral nihilism is the view that moral statements do not have a truth value, then it does not seem to be the default position. — Banno
What's the alternative to nihilism you can identify in the world today that does not come with any harms or problems? — Tom Storm
I went to an event last night that had eighty folk in one small room enjoying an excellent musical performance. No one hurt anyone else, folk moved so as to allow entry and egress, applauded the performance, ordered and paid for food and drink - all done without the threat of violence from some authority figure. — Banno
So you find no truth value in the OP? Humm… — Mark S
The important thing to do in your analogy is to go out and look for your missing friend, and muster what support you can for the search. — Banno
Not sure what this has to do with the topic at hand, but there's not often a need to resort to force in order to social norms. — Banno
Uh huh. :roll: — 180 Proof
I've been trying, unsuccessfully so far, to understand what you're saying. You're agnostic and you want to know whether your actions are good or bad, but then you say that it can't be done. — EricH
Just like no one has discovered a truth value to medical diagnostics or treatments. — 180 Proof
As an ethical naturalist and fallibilist, the truth value of moral claims about 'what harms persons, other animals and ecosystems' is discernible, ergo preventable or reducible — 180 Proof
There is a large body of ethical theory that insist that moral statements have a truth value, but do not rely on a deity. — Banno