But there's no other way. It's either that or nothing, and nothing isn't a real option. You can't just switch off your moral feelings.
The experience you've described in this discussion is of feeling and thinking about the stuff of ethics differently over time. That's not so unusual, and it's no reasonable basis for rejecting a position such as mine. — S
How would you provide justice for every person murdered? There's often no good evidence regarding just who perpetrated a murder. — Terrapin Station
I am not sure what you position is. — Andrew4Handel
However It does not follow that if you reject objective morality you have endorse a "feelings" approach. — Andrew4Handel
People have spent a lot of time and effort on and written a huge amount on morality wherein they have not simply been referring to their feelings. — Andrew4Handel
The equivalent is the notion of ether in physics. The ether was believed to exist and was a serious postulate that turned out not to exist. People have rigorously examined moral issues and that is what might lead them to moral nihilism. — Andrew4Handel
The role of emotion in morality has been one among different postulates. — Andrew4Handel
I don't see how feelings can resolve a moral dispute or how you can know which of your feelings is the appropriate one. — Andrew4Handel
1. Do what is positive for the well-being of yourself and others combined.
2. Morality is an evolving process and each situation must be assessed carefully according to point 1.
3. Assessing what is morally good needs to involve current knowledge about human psychology, sociology, and knowledge about human well-being for the individual and larger groups. — Christoffer
People have been killed in terrible ways or died in slavery and there has been no justice. It is rather futile moralizing about an event like this when there is no hope of justice. Religious moralities have offered an afterlife justice of some sort or karma. But if you don't believe in this or objective morality then lots have people have suffered with no recompense, recognition or hope. — Andrew4Handel
You just go with what you feel and think is right at the time — S
You just go with what you feel and think is right at the time. There's no other option. — S
No, you can deduce what is good for you. — Christoffer
When it's more dissimilar or not understood is when you get the "bad reasoning" judgment. — Terrapin Station
Re validity, there are different species of logic and different definitions of validity. For example, validity is different in relevance logics than in traditional logic. (And quirks with the traditional definition of validity was really the whole initial motivation for relevance logics.) — Terrapin Station
I think you can deduce what is good for your physical body but not necessarily what is a good action or purpose. I think physical health can be fairly uncontroversial but as to what we should do with our lives I don't see answers. — Andrew4Handel
So the problem is it actually wrong to murder someone or does it just feel wrong? — Andrew4Handel
That is highly problematic because people feel all manner of things at different stages in their life and different moods. — Andrew4Handel
My ethical intuitions lead me to moral nihilism based on the evidence from human behaviour, history and the innate lack of justice. I don't think the fact that I don't like a certain behaviour makes it wrong. — Andrew4Handel
It sounds like you are just selecting some things you like and calling that your morality. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think reason and empathy can resolve moral disputes and they certainly haven't resolved all the on-going moral disputes including meta-ethical disputes. I think you are putting too much faith in peoples moral discernment. — Andrew4Handel
I was badly bullied in school and in my local area until I was in my late teens and I did not realize it was inappropriate at the time. Now that I look back and think how terrible it was it is too late. People can have all sorts of confused emotions and a lack of intuition and cultural or peer group generated emotions. — Andrew4Handel
Look at the method above, isn't that an option? — Christoffer
Feelings can be corrupted and therefore, if you base morals on it, you essentially throw all moral values out the window. There's no point to define morals at all. — Christoffer
The method above is my attempt to define a moral scale that isn't connected to emotions but still generate what we would consider good morals by the common definition. — Christoffer
I think when someone says "Murder is wrong" they mean it is wrong to inflict serious harm on someone and rob them of life. — Andrew4Handel
namely that it's justified to reject a position just because it is fallible — S
I am not sure what position I'm supposed to be rejecting. — Andrew4Handel
I am not sure what position I'm supposed to be rejecting. — Andrew4Handel
My initial argument is that feelings is not a sufficient basis for morality.
The reason is that it is not sufficient to resolve moral disputes or to enforce morality or reflect the gravity of a harm. — Andrew4Handel
For example imagine your family (god forbid) were murdered. Would you put any significance on my feelings in this situation? — Andrew4Handel
You seem to be saying that because my intuitions don't match yours I am misguided and not you, when we are both apparently restricted to the same methodology. — Andrew4Handel
My bullying experience is troubling because I spent years being victimized without defending myself. Now that I have a more robust intuition paradoxically I am not facing that situation. I would like to have recognition of childhood abuse that happened to me but people claim it is unfeasible and to pull your socks up. Now that I judge my whole childhood to be abusive in various ways no one is interested in compensating me for that. What is the point of moral intuition at this stage? — Andrew4Handel
An option for who? Let's say for you. That depends. How do you feel about it? It would be lose-lose for you, I think. You either concede to the emotional foundation in ethical judgement, in which case yes, it's an option; or you implausibly deny any associated feelings of relevance, and at the same time tacitly admit that it is just an empty formula, which isn't what I consider to even fit the category of morality, meaning that no, it's not an option. — S
No, that doesn't follow. That's the same error that Andrew is making. Fallibility isn't sufficient reason for rejection. That argument is untenable. But feel free to try a different argument. — S
Again, the problem is twofold: 1) it's not plausible that it's disconnected from emotions, and 2) even if it is disconnected from emotions, then it doesn't come under morality in any way that makes sense — S
That only makes sense in the hidden context where they already feel that serious harm is wrong. Whatever you say, you can always go back a step until you can't go back any further, and that's where it ends in the emotional foundation. — S
I think what people are getting at is that you decide the basis for morality, for you its suffering/harm, for emotional reasons and not objective ones. — DingoJones
- Definitions on "harm" and on "well-being" are generally existing within all societies. — Christoffer
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