I am merely asking what you are referring to when you say ‘X is good’ or ‘Y is bad’. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Is it not that certain statements about the speed of life are objective ? — Pie
Do they? — Isaac
At least as I have always understood it, with ethical naturalism and ethical non-naturalism being the two main types. — Michael
The realist, on this account, holds that moral statements are capable of truth, and indeed that some are true. If we say this, we can still distinguish between realism and objectivism in ethics. Realism is the claim that moral judgments are sometimes true; objectivism is the claim that the sort of truth they have is objective truth.
Crispin Wright (1992) has suggested that, if this is what is at issue between realism and noncognitivism, the matter will be quickly resolved in favour of realism. In his view, the mere fact that moral discourse is assertive, and that moral utterances are governed by norms of warranted assertibility, is enough to establish that we make no mistake in calling some true and others false.
Second, realists hold that moral facts are independent of any beliefs or thoughts we might have about them. What is right is not determined by what I or anybody else thinks is right. It is not even determined by what we all think is right, even if we could be got to agree. We cannot make actions right by agreeing that they are, any more than we can make bombs safe by agreeing that they are.
But that's not equivalent at all. I wouldn't point to the property that a tree has to be considered a tree. I'd just point to the tree. — Isaac
Inferentialism is the conviction that to be meaningful in the distinctively human way, or to have a 'conceptual content', is to be governed by a certain kind of inferential rules. The term was coined by Robert Brandom as a label for his theory of language; however, it is also naturally applicable (and is growing increasingly common) within the philosophy of logic.
The rationale for articulating inferentialism as a fully-fledged standpoint is to emphasize its distinctness from the more traditional representationalism.
When you say the word ‘tree,’ presumably, what it is that your language is trying to do is to capture and transmit the conceptual information pertaining to the properties of a tree (long trunk made of bark, green leafs, etc) through corresponding signs, which are encoded with the conceptual information, across a medium we call language in order for a recipient to subsequently decode and form a mental image of the shared concept (the tree). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Do you not understand my question, or are you being evasive? This conversation keeps getting off track. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Are you saying that my original question (what does it mean when realists use normative/moral terms?) is loaded? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Are you saying that my original question (what does it mean when realists use normative/moral terms?) is loaded? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Moral realism (also ethical realism) is the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world (that is, features independent of subjective opinion), some of which may be true to the extent that they report those features accurately.
If this is what you mean, then I'm a moral realist. If someone says 'murder is wrong,' they don't just mean that they don't like it. In fact, they might like it very much, knowing that it's wrong, perhaps because it's wrong.
To me this is a point about language, how the concept 'wrong' (typically) functions — Pie
I just want to know what it you mean by it. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Autonomy is self-government, self-determination. I think the Kantian conception of
autonomy can be summarized like this: one is self-determining when one’s thinking and
acting are determined by reasons that one recognizes as such. We can think of
“autonomy” as labelling a capacity, the capacity to appreciate the force of reasons and
respond to it. But determining oneself is actually exercising that capacity. That is what it
is to be in control of one’s own life.
Note: Im not asking for a definition, but your meaning. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
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