...if it can be shown that "H₂O" and "water" have different extensions then you'd accept that they are different individuals? — Moliere
I think I can rest my case here. There's no need for you to repeat yourself yet again. — Banno
But there is a difference. In one you have performed an immoral act.The outcome of the action performed in both (1) and (2) is the same: my hunger is sated. — Michael
Well, yes, it does. That's the point.Whether I ought or ought not eat meat does not affect the choice — Michael
...because you refuse to recognise the ethical import of "ought".it just doesn't matter. — Michael
My bolding. One ought not do what one ought not do.Of, relating to practice or action, as opposed to speculation or theory. — OED
Yes, they do. In the first one, eating meat is immoral. In the second, it isn't. What more practical difference could there be?(a)s have no practical relevance. — Michael
You are simply playing on the word "practical" by limiting it to what "is" the case, and excluding what "ought" be the case. — Banno
I haven't said that. — Michael
Hmm. Then this might need clearing up.The world is what it is and will be what it will be and that's that. — Michael
That you ought not eat meat does have practical relevance. You are simply playing on the word "practical" by limiting it to what "is" the case, and excluding what "ought" be the case.That facts about how the world ought to be have no practical relevance... — Michael
It seems you can agree with Michael while not disagreeing with me.Do I? I thought I was agreeing with Michael — bert1
Notice that this is a quite different question to whether there are moral truths. Indeed, "apprehend" still carries the sense of perception over from the way the world is. I hope Michael is carrying over our previous discussion and still maintains that moral statements are truth apt; here he seems to be saying that they are all false. Yet in the main there is agreement that "One ought not kick puppies for fun" is true.What process (if not obeservation) do we come to apprehend moral truths? — bert1
Indeed, that appears to be a consequence of the path he is adopting in this thread: that we never make choices.The world is what it is and will be what it will be and that's that. — Michael
Can you define, "What counts"? — schopenhauer1
Yes, individuation is a social activity. Language is not private. And yes, there are differing, and even inconsistent ways of individuating the things around us.That's ok so far as it goes. — Ludwig V
The advantage of possible world semantics is that it provides a way of talking about counterfactuals that we know to be consistent. It is important to note that possible world semantics is extensional. There will be intensional word uses not captured by an extensional system.My thought here is that in common usage we don't distinguish between the elements that are within a glass of water. — Moliere
Yep, we may well choose to do that. I\'m just pointing out that doing so is making a choice, not just making an observation. Moliere, ice is also water, but not wet....biological organisms can generally be identified by their DNA — Janus
Here again is the common distinction between sense and reference, between extension and intension. Possible World Semantics is extensional.I don't think people necessarily really mean h2O when they say water. — Apustimelogist
I am working at getting a grounding on the metaphysics of an individual by way of thinking about it causally. — schopenhauer1
it seems there's a causal connection that makes sense of the position. — Moliere
I think it's just the case that some people aren't actually reading what I'm writing. — Michael
This is the perfect, absolute way one would use if one wants to become "superliterate". — Alkis Piskas
I'm not so certain that the account of a posteriori necessity works very well for water, though. Even the water in my cup right now. This is because I tend to agree with Hume on causation -- that it is a habit of ours as creatures who look for patterns, and that tomorrow water could turn out to be something aside from what we thought it was by exploring those patterns. This is a feature of most scientific knowledge: the knowledge is always provisional, and built around technical problems of a particular group of knowledge-producers. If water is H2O, then water is necessarily H2O -- of course! But is it actually H2O? — Moliere
Maybe I've taken your point further than you intend, Banno — 180 Proof
Morality is mostly about looking backward, not forward. — frank
Sounds like you really bought in to the Garden of Eden stuff.Every person starts out innocent and covers themselves with wrongdoing as they grow and learn. — frank
Well as I've made clear several times I am considering the implications of ethical non-naturalism. — Michael
Is this even cognitivism? — Michael
Yes, so as the OP asks, why consider morality when choosing how to act? Why not consider wants and desires and pragmatism? — Michael
I didn't say nothing morally bad will happen. I said that nothing non-morally bad will happen. — Michael
I didn't mean "bad" in the moral sense. — Michael
If I eat meat then it doesn't matter if I ought not eat meat. Nothing bad will happen if I disobey an obligation and nothing good will happen if I obey an obligation. So why should I care about such an obligation? — Michael
