Bob Ross
Michael
Bob Ross
Bob Ross
1. The moral nihilist will argue that no statements of this kind are true.
2. The moral anti-realist will argue that some statements of this kind are true and are made true by some mind-dependent feature of the world.
3. The moral realist will argue that some statements of this kind are true and are made true by some mind-independent feature of the world.
Bob Ross
[P1] That one ought not kick puppies for fun is a moral statement.
[P2] It is a true statement that one ought not kick puppies for fun.
[P3] Facts are true statements.
[C] Therefore there are moral facts.
Michael
If my OP is true, then this position would be false because moral statements are not made true by some mind-independent feature of the world (i.e., they are not moral facts). — Bob Ross
Banno
J
Banno
Banno
A moral realist might claim that the statement "one ought not harm another" is made true by the mind-independent fact that one ought not harm another — Michael
J
Leontiskos
"You shouldn't pick your nose" and "It is true that you shouldn't pick your nose" arguably do say two different things. — J
180 Proof
Leontiskos
Thoughts? — Bob Ross
Leontiskos
No, it makes sense. The claim would be that the statement "T is a normative fact" states something non-normative, something factual, because it's a claim about a statement, not the reality the statement refers to. It's about normativity, not itself normative. — J
To say of some normative statement, that it is true, is itself to make a normative statement, isn't it? — Banno
Leontiskos
Banno
"T is a normative fact," could be read as, "T is normatively binding," — Leontiskos
"T is a normative fact," could also be read as a description or categorization of a fact at a meta-ethical level, in which case the claim is not itself normative. — Leontiskos
So do I, but was in error.I think this is how the OP intended it, — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
"One ought not pick one's nose" has six words... not morally binding.
"One ought not pick one's nose" is true... then you ought not pick your nose. — Banno
Edit: part of that error may be the antirealist thesis that normative statements do not have a truth value. But if that were so then they would have no place in a truth-functional syllogism. — Banno
Apustimelogist
Sirius
A moral realist might claim that the statement "one ought not harm another" is made true by the mind-independent fact that one ought not harm another (much like someone might claim that the statement "electrons are negatively charged particles" is made true by the mind-independent fact that electrons are negatively charged particles).
I don't see how you've shown that this can't be the case
Banno
but the claim of the OP is not that it is true, but rather that it is a normative fact, — Leontiskos
Yes, as inwe can speak about normative propositions in a non-normative manner. — Leontiskos
But saying they are facts has implications."One ought not pick one's nose" has six words — Banno
In any case, at the end of the day I think your argument about the truth or falsity of moral statements is sound. — Leontiskos
Moliere
That one ought not kick puppies for fun is a moral statement.
It is a true statement that one ought not kick puppies for fun.
Facts are true statements.
Therefore there are moral facts. — Banno
180 Proof
So harm (e.g. theft via hacking micro-transactions, betrayal of a country, rape of a coma patient or infant) happens to the victim only when it is observed by the victim? :chin:Conclusion, moral facts are mind-dependent, moral realism is false — Sirius
Sirius
So harm (e.g. theft via hacking micro-transactions, betrayal of a country, rape of a coma patient or infant) happens to the victim only when it is observed by the victim? :chin:
180 Proof
Changing recognition of facts (e.g. "cultural / historical lineages") do not change facts as facts. Ignorance afflicts both "religious people" and "progressives" alike so the cognitive faculty is neither "defective" (as you suggest) nor "mysterious and undetectable". The difference is that "religious people" (i.e. supernaturalists) tend to eschew techniques of rational self-correction (i.e. learning) – relying on fallacious appeals to tradition, authority, popularity, incredulity, etc – much more than "progessives" (i.e. naturalists) do.l will wait till eternity for you to explain which defective cognitive faculty in religious people or progressives makes them make the wrong judgment. Is this cognitive faculty mysterious and undetectable ? — Sirius
... rather than address the questions I put to what you said earlier. How tedious. :roll:I will repeat what l said earlier ...
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