I don't think it's the fact that causes us to believe it, any more than the fact that the root of 2 is 1.41421... is what causes us to believe that. Rather it's either the case that we've been told it and we trust the teacher (as is the case for me with root 2) or it's what we've concluded after performing our own calculation, and we believe that the calculation was performed correctly (as it the case for me with 2 + 2). — Michael
I don't know what you mean by this. If you accept that "X has these properties" and "X is wrong" mean different things then that X has these properties and that X is wrong are different facts. — Michael
Well, you did say that "X is wrong" means "one ought not X" and "to be a certain physical way is to be wrong". So you're saying that to be a certain physical way is to be something that one ought not do? The wording seems comparable to say that being a bachelor is to be an unmarried man, i.e. that "bachelor" means "unmarried man". — Michael
Yes. So one would either have to say that obligations are empirical facts or that non-empirical facts can be causally efficacious. — Michael
But to be wrong just is that one ought not do it. So you're saying that "this act has these particular physical properties" means the same thing as "one ought not perform this act". That doesn't seem right. — Michael
What I mean is that if we believe that we have an obligation to not kill then we may very well be motivated to not kill. But our belief may be wrong; perhaps we don't have an obligation to not kill. So whether or not we actually do have an obligation not to kill has no practical relevance.
For example, it's not the fact that there's a monster under the bed that motivates a child to not look under it (because there isn't one); it's the belief that there's a monster under the bed that motivates the child to not look under it. — Michael
My point is that that one ought not do [it] is an extraneous (non-physical) fact about that act, separate to any empirical fact about it. Only the empirical facts about the act have any practical relevance. — Michael
Perhaps I should have said that it isn't necessarily a sufficient reason. If I were to somehow know that I have an obligation to kill children, I would need a more convincing reason to carry it out. That I am obligated isn't reason enough for me. — Michael
Perhaps I should have said that it isn't necessarily a sufficient reason. If I were to somehow know that I have an obligation to kill children, I would need a more convincing reason to carry it out. That I am obligated isn't reason enough for me. — Michael
We consider what we believe to be moral facts/obligations. Whether or not they are moral facts/obligations has no practical relevance. — Michael
The only thing of practical relevance is whether or not I kill children. The morality of the act seems practically irrelevant. — Michael
I'm asking for a reason to be moral. That it's moral isn't sufficient motivation, as it is possible that one doesn't want to be moral, given that "X is immoral and I want to do X" isn't a contradiction. — Michael
I'm saying that if moral facts are not the same thing as physical facts then there's no practical difference between a world with moral facts and a world without them. In terms of how we actually live our lives, whether or not there are moral facts is irrelevant, as their (non-)existence has no bearing on how we actually behave. — Michael
Then the influencing factor here is our reasoning and beliefs, not the (non-)existence of some actual obligation. — Michael
Presumably "I believe that I ought not X" does not just mean "I don't want to do X"? So "I believe that I ought not X and I want to do X" isn't a contradiction.
And if it isn't a contradiction then I don't see the problem with my question. — Michael
I'm not saying that obligations are distinct from the world. — Michael
And if they're distinct from physical facts then there's a possible world which has the same physical facts but doesn't have the associated obligations. — Michael
The only thing that is of practical relevance is whether or not we actually will kill babies (which is influenced by whether or not we want to kill babies). — Michael
Because presumably there are non-duty reasons to behave a certain way. It's certainly not the case that every decision I make is made on the grounds that I (believe that I) ought do it. So assuming that I have a duty to behave a certain, what is my motivation to behave in this way? Perhaps I don't care that it's my duty and decide to do the opposite.
Or would you argue that it's impossible to do something that one believes is wrong? — Michael
That strangling a baby will result in a loss of brain function and so biological death isn't a priori that one ought not strangle a baby. — Michael
They're certainly not identical things. So the wrongness of that act isn't identical to the physical event of the act. Therefore the wrongness must be something else. — Michael
No, it's exactly because I don't think that obligations are physical facts that I believe that they're of no practical relevance. Whatever an obligation to not kill children is, it's something other than the physical fact of children being killed (and not being resurrected). — Michael
It's not a second decision as to whether or not I ought kill babies. It's a decision as to whether or not I will or want to kill babies. — Michael
So it seems to me that obligations, if anything, are something "extra". — Michael
The point I'm making is that these supposed obligations have no practical relevance. The physical world would still behave the same in their absence — Michael
The question isn't "why ought I to do what I ought to do?". The question is just "why do what I ought to do?" It's a question of motivation. I don't think the existence of some claimed obligation is sufficient. If it could be shown that I was obligated to kill babies, I still wouldn't. — Michael
To make it simple. Explain to me the difference between these possible worlds:
1. No morality.
2. It is immoral to kill babies.
3. It is moral to kill babies. — Michael
That is to say, I don't think there's anything at all unusual about those who say they have limited visualization skills — Hanover
I am no Latin scholar but I note that the Latin original 'cogito ergo sum' contains no pronouns. Literally it seems to say something like 'thinks therefore exists'. Usually, as in other pronoun-drop languages like Italian, a pronoun is implied. But just because a pronoun is usually implied in a sentence with this type of grammatic structure, does not mean it is always implied. Just because the sentence would seem to make sense with the pronoun inserted (in Italian the 'I' pronoun would be Io. I don't know what it would be in Latin), that doesn't mean that Descartes intended to imply one. Perhaps it was intended for there to be no pronoun, implied or otherwise, and - in a pronoun-drop language - one cannot distinguish between a sentence in which an implied pronoun was intended and one in which it was not. — andrewk
The second part 'I am' is a tautology. — andrewk
Step 1 in avoiding philosophical mistakes:
Resist the urge to generalize from yourself to all others. — Marchesk