though the subject may not be the author of her desires and primitive emotional attitudes, she is nonetheless cognizant of the truth of her desires and emotions and therefore they are the truth-makers to which her subsequent thoughts and statements—her truth-bearers —are dependent upon...emergent drivers and motivators of action that are out of my control — Cartesian trigger-puppets
though the subject may not be the author of her desires and primitive emotional attitudes, she is nonetheless cognizant of the truth of her desires and emotions and therefore they are the truth-makers to which her subsequent thoughts and statements — Cartesian trigger-puppets
This is not strictly true though. What we perceive as desires and emotions are constructions, models we build from physiological inputs and socially mediated expectations — Isaac
It makes it difficult to qualify a truth-maker, as no-one could actually establish what was the case — Isaac
My point was that we have desires and that we experience emotions, though we seem to not have much control over these things — Cartesian trigger-puppets
if you stumble upon a venomous snake, you may experience the emotional state of fear which comes from your desire to live and avoid pain. Now, we can moderate such emotions and desires do change with time, as with everything else, but we do not have the ability to just will fear away or keep it from emerging, nor do we have the ability to simply not desire things or keep desires from emerging. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Why do you keep conflating subjectivism with realism? — Bartricks
Subjectivism in metaethics is the view that moral statements are truth apt and their truth makers are subjective states. — Bartricks
You can be a subjectivist and believe no moral statement is true. — Bartricks
Individual subjectivism is false. If it was true, then my approving of raping j, would entail that it is right for me to rape j. But that's clearly false - false that my approving of it entails its rightness.. Thus individual subjectivism is false. Indeed, insane. — Bartricks
You are an individual subjectivist because of a basic error in your reasoning. You are confusing the cause of a belief or impression with its truth conditions. — Bartricks
Here's what you've done: you've started out with some psychological/biological theory about how we've come to have moral beliefs and feelings, yes? Then, satisfied that our moral beliefs and the statements we use to express then have been fully explained, you conclude that such beliefs and statements must be 'about' their subjective causes and thus have subjective states as their truth makers. — Bartricks
It's a rookie mistake. You need to recognize it now, as a matter of urgency, or your metaethical theorizing will go nowhere.
I have little time for contemporary metaethicists, but they do at least recognize the falsity of the kind of view you are defending. — Bartricks
Again, this is exactly what the paper disproves. We do not necessarily have the emotion 'fear' deriving from our desire to live and avoid pain. We construct the emotion 'fear' as a model of physiological interoceptions and part of the construction of that model will be other experiences (which we obviously can control), social influences (which we obviously can control), upbringing (which we obviously can control - as a society at least) and the cognitive process of construction itself (which we may be able to control - the jury's still out). — Isaac
What is meant by the term 'construct' is not our conscious building or formation of concepts by putting together parts of our experiences; but rather what it is meant to describe is how our experiences have, since before our birth, 'constructed' our concepts of the world by affecting the development of the brains physiological architecture. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What you mean by saying, 'We construct,' is more or less the same as saying, 'The processes of the brain construct,' or, 'The human race constructs,' or, 'A psychological construct,' etc, not the deliberate efforts of our conscious executive control over our cognitive processes—that I am speaking of. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Even if I were to grant that we do possess such executive control over our subjective states, it would nevertheless fail to deliver an adequate objection for the premise that our subjective states exist and thus necessitates the truth of our evaluative propositions that describe our subjective states — Cartesian trigger-puppets
we know the phenomenological reality of our own qualia (the individual instances of subjective, conscious experience). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
↪Bartricks
Why do you keep conflating subjectivism with realism?
— Bartricks
I'm not conflating anything. Subjectivism, like realism, can be a form of cognitivism. Just as you describe subjectivism here:
Subjectivism in metaethics is the view that moral statements are truth apt and their truth makers are subjective states.
— Bartricks — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Realism in metaethics comes in a few different forms, each with a different set of commitments. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
You can be a subjectivist and believe no moral statement is true.
— Bartricks
I'm aware of the non-cognitivist forms of moral subjectivism. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
This may be true. I am certainly capable of being wrong and it would not surprise me if, in fact, I was in error somewhere within this meta-ethical theory I've constructed. This is precisely why I have given my arguments to support my view as being the case, so that others may analyze my arguments and bring to my attention any inconsistencies found therein. You have done a miserable job at pointing out where my logic has failed because it is not persuasive to simply assert that I am confused, in error, wrong, insane, making a rookie mistake, etc, without providing any elucidation as to where the error is. If you wish to do so then, first accurately represent my views and then, if it is a logical problem, next show me which propositions form the contradiction. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What is meant by the term 'construct' is not our conscious building or formation of concepts by putting together parts of our experiences; but rather what it is meant to describe is how our experiences have, since before our birth, 'constructed' our concepts of the world by affecting the development of the brains physiological architecture.
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
You're confusing active inference modelling with synaptic pruning, they're not that same thing. — Isaac
No, many of the processes are deliberate and conscious. — Isaac
Even if I were to grant that we do possess such executive control over our subjective states, it would nevertheless fail to deliver an adequate objection for the premise that our subjective states exist and thus necessitates the truth of our evaluative propositions that describe our subjective states
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
It would, because one of the feedback processes involved through the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, as Morawetz shows, is to modulate emotional valence via our evaluative processes. The very act of attending to emotional valence changes the emotional valence assessment. In fact, as shown only recently by Ralf Wimmer https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26503050/ the PFC can even modulate signals from the thalamus, affecting directly the interoceptive sensations that we use as data of the inference models. — Isaac
we know the phenomenological reality of our own qualia (the individual instances of subjective, conscious experience).
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
There is no "individual instances of subjective, conscious experience". There's never been any demonstration of the existence of such a thing and every study I've read on the subject has shown the concept to be shaky at best, if not completely fabricated. You construct your 'individual instances of subjective, conscious experience' in the process of introspection by selective attention, what type of experience you come up with will depend on what you're looking for at the time. — Isaac
you are saying that a commitment to moral realism is part and parcel of moral subjectivism. — Bartricks
Er, what? That's really confused. I am not talking about non-cognitivism! I am talking about subjectivism. Why are you not getting this? It's simple.
I gave you the example of pain to try and show you how painfully simple this is.
Subjectivism about pain is uncontroversial, right? Pain 'is' a subjective state.
Does it follow that it exists? No. It is entirely possible that no-one is in pain right now. In which case pain does not exist and no statement of the "I am currently in pain" kind would be true.
Thus, subjectivism about pain does not entail that pain exists.
The same applies to subjectivism about morality. It is NOT equivalent to realism. If it were it would be logically impossible for subjectivism to be true, and yet for nihilism to be true. Yet the two are compatible.
This has nothing - nothing - to do with non-cognitivism. Nothing — Bartricks
You can be a subjectivist and believe no moral statement is true — Cartesian trigger-puppets
You used the word moral a few times incorrectly, I was roughly (very roughly) correcting you. Fret not, I shall create a proper response in short coming. — ghostlycutter
Moral statements are also lie-apt, some moral propositions are false. 'Morality' as prescribed by the OP is false, and thus the OP begets a negative response from someone who is moral. — ghostlycutter
Words and thoughts need not correspond with empirical reality to be true, I can say something and your experience of this statement, asks for you to correspond - we do not need a third party - only agreement with our intellects(i.e. we need to be on a similar level intellectually). Intellect itself must correspond to empirical reality. — ghostlycutter
Where you are perceiving things negatively(i.e. focusing on truth-aptness and not lie-aptness) when you've tried to take a leap forward, you've taken a few steps back. — ghostlycutter
No, I am saying that the form of subjectivism that I have subscribed to is committed to the statement, "At least some moral statements are true," and that does not necessarily entail that I am a realist. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Lie aptness is important, so you, technically, are the one speaking riddles. — ghostlycutter
Instead of addressing both sides, which you should, as you have not merely implied lie aptness through truth aptness, you have consequently subserved through the truth-apt side, only, justly 'coming off wrongly'' as I put off earlier. — ghostlycutter
Basically, how can you use the term moral without directly associating morality (good and evil)? If we're to engage in discussion about anything to do with morals, surely it's wise to understand them properly. — ghostlycutter
I defined good as beneficence concerning a core, and evil as stupidity(or maleficence) concerning a core. — ghostlycutter
Now that I have shown you proper interpretation of good and evil, are the standards of this discussion still the same or have they improved? — ghostlycutter
No, I am saying that the form of subjectivism that I have subscribed to is committed to the statement, "At least some moral statements are true," and that does not necessarily entail that I am a realist.
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
And I'm telling you that if you include that claim then you are a 'subjectivist realist' about morality. — Bartricks
—WikipediaEthical subjectivism or moral non-objectivism is the meta-ethical view which claims that:
1. Ethical sentences express propositions.
2. Some such propositions are true.
3.The truth or falsity of such propositions is ineliminably dependent on the (actual or hypothetical) attitudes of people.
—PhilosophybasicsEthical Subjectivism holds that there are no objective moral properties and that ethical statements are in fact arbitrary because they do not express immutable truths. Instead, moral statements are made true or false by the attitudes and/or conventions of the observers, and any ethical sentence just implies an attitude, opinion, personal preference or feeling held by someone. Thus, for a statement to be considered morally right merely means that it is met with approval by the person of interest.
—Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyTo deny both noncognitivism and the moral error theory suffices to make one a minimal moral realist. Traditionally, however, moral realism has required the denial of a further thesis: the mind-dependence of morality. There is no generally accepted label for theories that deny both noncognitivism and the moral error theory but maintain that moral facts are mind-dependent; here I shall use the term “non-objectivism.” Thus, “moral non-objectivism” denotes the view that moral facts exist and are mind-dependent (in the relevant sense), while “moral objectivism” holds that they exist and are mind-independent. (Note that this nomenclature makes the two contraries rather than contradictories; the error theorist and the noncognitivist count as neither objectivists nor non-objectivists — Joyce, Richard,
Two points then, that you seem incapable of understanding.
Point 1: nobody, but nobody, uses 'subjectivism' about morality to include a commitment to realism. It is 'compatible' with realism, but it does not include a commitment to it. Of course, you are free to use words however you like, but it is misleading and silly to use the term in the way you are and it just makes you seem confused (and you are, clearly).
Point 2: if you think some moral statements are truth apt and some of them are true, then you think their truth conditions obtain. And so you are therefore a moral realist. For you believe morality exists. For by your own lights, morality itself is the truth conditions of moral statements. — Bartricks
So, these sources are wrong?
Ethical subjectivism or moral non-objectivism is the meta-ethical view which claims that:
1. Ethical sentences express propositions.
2. Some such propositions are true.
3.The truth or falsity of such propositions is ineliminably dependent on the (actual or hypothetical) attitudes of people.
—Wikipedia — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Ethical Subjectivism holds that there are no objective moral properties and that ethical statements are in fact arbitrary because they do not express immutable truths. Instead, moral statements are made true or false by the attitudes and/or conventions of the observers, and any ethical sentence just implies an attitude, opinion, personal preference or feeling held by someone. Thus, for a statement to be considered morally right merely means that it is met with approval by the person of interest.
—Philosophybasics — Cartesian trigger-puppets
To deny both noncognitivism and the moral error theory suffices to make one a minimal moral realist. Traditionally, however, moral realism has required the denial of a further thesis: the mind-dependence of morality. There is no generally accepted label for theories that deny both noncognitivism and the moral error theory but maintain that moral facts are mind-dependent; here I shall use the term “non-objectivism.” Thus, “moral non-objectivism” denotes the view that moral facts exist and are mind-dependent (in the relevant sense), while “moral objectivism” holds that they exist and are mind-independent. (Note that this nomenclature makes the two contraries rather than contradictories; the error theorist and the noncognitivist count as neither objectivists nor non-objectivists
— Joyce, Richard,
—Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I understand that Wikipedia is not academically peer-reviewed, but those particular statements were cited by two academic sources:
1. Richard Brandt (1959). Ethical theory; the problems of normative and critical ethics. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
2. Harrison, Jonathan (2006). Borchert, Donald M. (ed.). Encyclopedia of philosophy (2nd ed.). Detroit: Thomson Gale/Macmillan Reference USA. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
And how does this not contradict you: "To deny both noncognitivism and the moral error theory suffices to make one a minimal moral realist. Traditionally, however, moral realism has required the denial of a further thesis: the mind-dependence of morality," — Cartesian trigger-puppets
That is incredibly dishonest of you. They did NOT say such things. — Bartricks
people like you, who lack any concern to get things correct — Bartricks
No conflation of subjectivism with realism. So a) stop dishonestly pretending that what you're quoting is coming from professional philosophers. — Bartricks
How on earth does that contradict what I said??? — Bartricks
Realism also makes the claim that moral statements have a truth value, and that some of those truth values are true, but, in addition, realism also claims that such truth values exist objectively, as in a mind-independent property of the world.
— Cartesian trigger-puppets
No, you're conflating moral realism with objectivist moral realism. — Bartricks
I meant that Wikipedia cited these authors. The citations are right there on the page if you don't believe me. I'm not being dishonest, perhaps I could have written that a little more clearly. Wikipedia clearly cited these authors, whether or not these citations are accurate representations of what these authors actually said is another issue — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I am doubtful that the second claim is true because im not entirely sure what im committed to by saying that some moral statements are true. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
On your view:
Are beliefs considered to be a part of an individual's subjective states? If so, can such beliefs be cognitive? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Can there be facts about an individual's subjective states? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Philosophical theories about the nature of morality generally divide into assertions that moral truths express subjective states and assertions that moral truths express objective facts, analogous to the fact, for example, that the sun is more massive than the earth.
So-called subjectivist theories regard moral statements as declaring that certain facts hold, but the facts expressed are facts about a person’s subjective states. For example, the statement “It is wrong to ignore a person in distress if you are able to offer aid” just means something like “I find it offensive when someone ignores a person in distress….” This is a statement about the subject’s perceptions of the object, not about the object itself (that is, ignoring a person in distress).
Do you find anything wrong with this author's description here? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
For example, the statement “It is wrong to ignore a person in distress if you are able to offer aid” just means something like “I find it offensive when someone ignores a person in distress….” This is a statement about the subject’s perceptions of the object, not about the object itself (that is, ignoring a person in distress). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I remember you offering one such objection that went something like: 'If moral subjectivism is true, then my belief that raping J is good would make raping J a moral thing to do. Raping J is not a moral thing to do. Therefore moral subjectivism is false.' Forgive me if I have misrepresented your argument here. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
The problem with the above argument is that it fails to acknowledge the metaethical semantics of subjectivist moral theories (such as Dwayne H. Mulder acknowledged in his article). With this in mind, the statement, "Raping J is good," simply means something like "I find it morally acceptable to rape J" which is simply a description of the authors subjective states. This description seems to be truth-apt, and at least a psychological fact, but I suppose im uncertain whether or not it is true. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
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