Non-sequiturs won't do here.
— creativesoul
Aren't non-sequiturs only pertinent to arguments? I wasn't forwarding an argument in what you quoted relative to this response. I was simply making some comments. — Terrapin Station
We can try. We ought try.
— creativesoul
Sure, but only to the extent of patience, re: when barking at the moon and Wiki have equal dialectical authority, I find myself with nothing to say. — Mww
If one gets that(non and/or prelinguistic thought/belief) wrong, then they've gotten all sorts of other things wrong as a result.
— creativesoul
Quite so. As we can see here........
“Since morals, therefore, have an influence on the actions and affections, it follows, that they cannot be deriv’d from reason... — Mww
If the best you can manage is just to say that every counter-argument to your Delphic declarations is either a red-herring, a non-sequitur or the result of a failure in understanding then you might as well not bother writing anything. This is a philosophy discussion forum, not a podium from which to pronounce to your followers. Pathetic. — Isaac
The rules of morality, therefore, are not conclusions of our reason. — Mww
Morality is codified rules of behaviour. Code is language.
— creativesoul
(1) that would amount to ignoring a significant portion of the phenomena that people typically characterize as morality, moral stances, etc.,
(2) it either ignores or gets wrong what meaning is/how meaning works,
and
(3) it ignores that someone feeling one way or the other about interpersonal behavior--assessments of permissibility, etc. is a unique phenomenon, contra for example behaving in a way that doesn't upset the apple cart in relation to other persons' behavior precipitated by their feelings about interpersonal behavior. In other words, there's an important difference between Joe feeling that it's wrong for him as a 40 year-old to have sex with eager 13 year-olds and Joe behaving in accordance with the prohibition of such sex because of the social repercussions of it should he engage in that activity and be found out. — Terrapin Station
...commonality has no normative weight except for people who happen to be rah rah conformity. — Terrapin Station
There's a weird bias against things that are mental... — Terrapin Station
People are too bound up in projecting outward to demonstrate, rather than retreating inward to discover, those grounds. — Mww
I'm after what grounds all morality in order to compare it with conventional moral discourse.
— creativesoul
Unless you bring it with you, other than my brief and scattered remarks, and perhaps not even then, you won’t find what you’re after here. People are too bound up in projecting outward to demonstrate, rather than retreating inward to discover, those grounds. — Mww
Reason can change one's passions. Therefore, it is not a slave to one's passions.
— creativesoul
Okay, go ahead and reason me out of my passionate belief that murder is wrong. — S
Moral agency requires thinking about thought/belief.
— creativesoul
Because? — Terrapin Station
Morality. All humans follow one after (mostly)adopting their first world-view via language acquisition.
— creativesoul
In my view it doesn't at all depend on language-acquisition. — Terrapin Station
The general theme of your series of comments seems to focus on the pre-rational or early rational chronology of moral agency. If such chronology is more reactive to outside influence from which experiences are attained, yet moral philosophy in and of itself is predicated on active determinations, which presupposes fully developed rational capacity with its set of experiences already attained, then it is reasonable to suppose the former is merely forms of consequential inclination, rather than a true system of morality, which is just as reasonably supposed to incorporate a form of antecedent obligation that a psychologically incomplete rationality cannot abide. — Mww
What is your idea of simple thought? — Mww
There are times when "We are under attack!!!" is known to be false by the speaker but deliberately used nonetheless to manufacture consent for war. The meaning is used to manufacture consent. Thus, the meaning of the statement and it's use are clearly not equivalent.
— creativesoul
It's used to get people to think they're under attack. That's the use of the word if they genuinely are, and that's its use if they aren't but the speaker wishes to deceive them. It's the same use. — Isaac
The expression "we're under attack" is used to engender the response of feeling under attack. The ultimate purpose of someone wishing to engender those feelings is neither here nor there, otherwise the question "what is x used for" becomes pointlessly unanswerable. — Isaac
There are times when "We are under attack!!!" is known to be false by the speaker but deliberately used nonetheless to manufacture consent for war. The meaning is used to manufacture consent. Thus, the meaning of the statement and it's use are clearly not equivalent.
— creativesoul
It's used to get people to think they're under attack. That's the use of the word if they genuinely are, and that's its use if they aren't but the speaker wishes to deceive them. It's the same use. — Isaac
Common denominators are shared and undivided. The world is shared and undivided. All mammals share mammary glands. Commonalites are shared and undivided.
— creativesoul
Yes, that's why I included those things in my list of thing I think "shared" could refer to.
Some people convince others to take certain actions by virtue of making statements. The speaker does not believe what they say. The listeners are convinced that the speaker does.
Here, your position cannot adequately account for the meaning of the statements/language use. Their use is not equivalent to their meaning.
— creativesoul
What? I really can't make any sense of that. — Isaac
I personally prefer the Enlightenment era Continental Idealism, particularly the Kantian variety, even if I wouldn’t bet the family farm on it. But it doesn’t matter which speculative system one chooses, if he chooses at all, which ever way the brain works is how it works, and because there’s no peer-reviewed positive evidence of the fundamental aspects of brain mechanisms, we are free to be as purely logical as we please... — Mww
I don’t know what you mean by “thought/belief”. For me, a belief is a thought but a thought is not necessarily a belief, and if thinking is always and absolutely prevalent, believing is redundant. There is no epistemological or cognitive distinction between “I think.......” and “I believe.......”, and in a sufficient metaphysical reduction, the “I believe......” disappears anyway.
Still, I see you use that connectivity just about everywhere on here, so it must mean something to you. — Mww
Are you disagreeing that meaning is shared?
— creativesoul
I can only understand the word 'shared' in terms of division, or joint ownership, or maybe joint possession (as in some property is shared). I can only make sense of 'meaning' as in the use a word is put to, or maybe the responses it brings about when it's read or heard. — Isaac
You asked, what is it that is being shared between language users? As if there were a single thing that had some significance over others.
If 'shared' is to be used to indicate joint possession or membership, then we share the words themselves, we share a broad collection of the uses they're put to, we share some (but not all) of the responses they generate in our minds. But this is all trivially true. What's the point of the question? — Isaac
...it appears we are thinking about our own thinking, which is technically true, but in actuality, we are just thinking. Instead of some arbitrary object to think about, we’ve chosen ourselves as the object. We think about ourselves in exactly the same way we think about everything else. — Mww