Yes, it appears that social existence is key to the question of morality, gives it some semblance of truth and objectivity but note this is telelogical in character - morality (justice) is needed to run society in the best way possible, its truth is secondary or irrelevant. — TheMadFool
Moral claims can't be true i.e. when someone claims everyone is equal, a moral claim, he does not do so because it is true, incidentally it isn't. Ergo, moral claims must be about something else - bewitchment by language? What that something else is...??? — TheMadFool
Morality is made up by humans like math — TheMadFool
Yeah, you can see this if you challenge the morality of humans continuing to survive. They you can't use the argument that justice is good for society, since the existence of society is now under question, morally speaking. Which some environmentalists and anti-natalists do on grounds of hedonism or concern for other living species. What possible fact about the world would settle that dispute?
It's just for humans to survive. Is that statement truth-apt? — Marchesk
the structure of a moral claim is not a statement (known to be true) — Antony Nickles
the structure of a moral claim is not a statement (known to be true), but that it is a claim that expresses my/our poverty or wellness — Antony Nickles
a claim that expresses my/our poverty or wellness(...). My claim is not a theory but my pledge to be responsible for its state — Antony Nickles
Diamond proposes that a moral claim can be general, as universally claimed (...), most importantly, is that I am claiming it — Antony Nickles
The claim of a moral principal and an aesthetic judgment are expressed in a similar structure — Antony Nickles
The idea of wanting something to be "truth-apt" is to have something to depend on, justify our acts, ensure agreement, etc. The sense of a statement that is true or false takes our place--which I say is the structure of a moral claim, in our having to be true to something. — Antony Nickles
I am interested in the performance of "accepting" a claim without doing anything; I've called this platitudes, slogans, quotations; but that is to put the responsibility on the speech, not the speaker. — Antony Nickles
the structure of a moral claim is not a statement (known to be true)
— Antony Nickles
.....does that mean not a known true statement, or, not a statement at all? I took it to mean not a statement at all, insofar as I hold the structure of moral claims to be grounded in the moral feeling alone. — Mww
The expression of my poverty or well-being is also derived from feelings, but the pledge respecting that expression is a statement, and because it expresses a subjective condition a priori, it must be known by me to be true. — Mww
to say you are claiming responsibility for mine, or that I pledge anything about yours, is outside the realm of moral consideration. — Mww
The claim of a moral principal and an aesthetic judgment are expressed in a similar structure
— Antony Nickles
.....is only superficially true, insofar as aesthetic judgements are grounded in a subjective condition with respect to empirical predicates, re: the beautiful — Mww
but the claim of a moral principle... here taken from your implication of staking a claim in a moral principle, claim-ing a moral principle, taking possession of it implicitly re: the sublime, in your case apparently, responsibility, are grounded in a subjective condition predicated on pure practical reason. — Mww
their respective expressions, the former being a judgement expresses as a cognition, the latter being necessary ground for the judgement, expressed as a feeling. — Mww
no principle can be itself a judgement... it's easy to lay claim to a principle without ever considering the source of it, and consequently, the truth of its necessity. — Mww
Morality is made up by humans like math — TheMadFool
Social constructs are not real? That's not quite right. Injustice is very real. Again, thinking in terms of justice not being an "objective feature of the world" obscures its import. Objective or not, it is a feature of the world! Always remove "objective" and "subjective" from an utterance in order to check what work they are doing.My concern would begin with whether justice was real or just a social construct. — Marchesk
at the point when a decision is contemplated, all the beliefs and attitudes that will inform that decision are usually already in place. And just as with non-moral beliefs and attitides, that is possible because we have been developing those beliefs and attitudes all throughout our lives, long before this particular action opportunity presented itself. — SophistiCat
it might be worth considering further. Let's look at Anscombe's shopping list. If it is a list of all the things she bought, it will be true if it lists all and only the things she bought. If it is a list of the things she is intending to buy, is it still true if it lists all and only the things she intends to buy...? I'm wiling to consider alternatives. — Banno
I'll go over the difference in direction of fit one more time. To decide if "the cat is on the mat" or "The cat is not on the mat", one looks at how the world is, and makes a choice as to which words fit. But making observations is of no help in deciding if "the cat ought be on the mat" or "the cat ought not be on the mat" is true. Rather these last are an expression of an intent to act upon the world. — Banno
My concern would begin with whether justice was real or just a social construct. — Marchesk
So that it is made up makes it not truth-apt? But "1+1=2" is true; and so is "The bishop stays on the same colour squares" and "slavery is unjust".
But it might be worth considering further. Let's look at Anscombe's shopping list. If it is a list of all the things she bought, it will be true if it lists all and only the things she bought. If it is a list of the things she is intending to buy, is it still true if it lists all and only the things she intends to buy...? I'm wiling to consider alternatives. — Banno
Social constructs are not real? That's not quite right. Injustice is very real. Again, thinking in terms of justice not being an "objective feature of the world" obscures its import. Objective or not, it is a feature of the world! Always remove "objective" and "subjective" from an utterance in order to check what work they are doing. — Banno
Your acceptance of a claim of what justice is thus appears contingent on your knowledge of it. And one answer I take as a wish that there was a fact about it, and the other would be some sense that we made it up or agreed to it, as if there were no necessary fact about it. I would say there is no "fact" about a moral truth that will satisfy the criteria to obviate your place in the state of its truth, but that, nevertheless, it is not insupportable, only not without our part, our bringing them to life, carrying them forward in our culture, adapting them to new contexts, allowing them to constitute us and compromise us. — Antony Nickles
justice insists that what one person deserves for a given action be the same as for another. — Banno
My issue is that if morality is entirely human-made, then there's no objective truth to it... Which means that anyone's morality, including our modern enlightened sense of fairness, is arbitrary. Nothing real makes it true. — Marchesk
Not a statement known or judged to be true or false, so, not a statement (is there any other); the idea of a declaration is more appropriate, announcing to everyone that it is me staking myself to this truth. — Antony Nickles
a moral claim-ing can be general, which means anyone can do it, which is certainly a true moral statement.
I meant general, as not specific (see discussion above re Wittgenstein), but also that I claim it to be a truth for all of us, which is a claim to community as much as it is to truth. — Antony Nickles
Your responsibility is your own, but I hold this truth to be available to both of us, acceptable to both of us, but that you must come to it yourself or reject it, and, though, your reasons may be yours alone, that you are categorically answerable to them. — Antony Nickles
no principle can be itself a judgement... it's easy to lay claim to a principle without ever considering the source of it, and consequently, the truth of its necessity.
— Mww
There is no necessity for it except that which you see in it, or are willing to be answerable for in its rejection, — Antony Nickles
The world, the universe, I wish to point out, is not just or good in any sense of that word. — TheMadFool
One or the other. Not both. — Banno
...but not equitable. Seems to me this argument is based on word-play. — Banno
It'd be difficult to maintain both the world is amoral and that the world is immoral.
One or the other. Not both. — Banno
How about Cicero and the notion of right reason? It is a democratic value to know the truth because right reason is essential to things going well, and wrongly reasoning can lead to trouble. Education for good moral judgment is about understanding cause and effect and the importance of right reasoning. This also goes with Socrates' concern about expanding our consciousness because if we don't know enough, we are more apt to make bad decisions. And the miracle of democracy is having many points of view, a broad consciousness — Athena
You are declaring your pledge of responsibility to a moral truth generally claimed by everyone, or, claimed universally. — Mww
That I am categorically responsible for my reasons and by association my judgements given from them, does not immediately demand I am categorically responsible for accepting a general moral truth. — Mww
Willingness to be responsible for rejection is negation of validity (of truth). — Mww
The onus is on those advocating that it isn’t [a small, vanishing chance for truth], to present, not a mere claiming of, but a justification for, why it isn’t. — Mww
I agree that a broad education is important. It does bring up the issue again of avoiding a rote understanding of truth. I take this as the difference between "knowing" the truth and accepting it (telling myself rather than being told). As well as understanding its depth of meaningfulness, we come to its importance as a personal process, a journey of my life maybe as much as my acknowledgement of its implications. The reading of Cicero that stuck with me was that it mattered to the truth who I was as a person, which I read as that I am part of the state of a truth. That this can be done well or poorly, rather than right or wrong. That we are not here concerned about ends (things going well). — Antony Nickles
Endemics, on the other hand, are a constant presence in a specific location. Malaria is endemic to parts of Africa. Ice is endemic to Antarctica. — Intermountain Health Care
The reading of Cicero that stuck with me was that it mattered to the truth who I was as a person, which I read as that I am part of the state of a truth. That this can be done well or poorly, rather than right or wrong. That we are not here concerned about ends (things going well). — Antony Nickles
Democracy means nothing if it is not "concerned about ends". — Athena
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