So the moral philosophy you're advocating is one which seems right to you? Yet if other people advocate a different moral philosophy they're not merely of a different opinion, but they are wrong? — Isaac
"Acceptable/unacceptable" is just another kind of judgement/assessment, so I don't see the difference here. — Pfhorrest
You highlighted a need for some systems to arbitrate in the latter case, but no similar need for arbitration in the former? — Isaac
We share our reasons and then together try to come up with something that takes into account all of those reasons. — Pfhorrest
they all have some good reasons some bad reasons and arguments against each other highlighting each other’s bad reasons and their own good reasons, and I try to listen to all of those good arguments — Pfhorrest
How? What does 'taking into account' a reason actually consist in? Perhaps you could give me an example of someone else's reason (maybe presented in your recent discussions of meta-ethics) and explain what you did to 'take account of it', how has doing so contributed to the 'something' we come up with together? — Isaac
How are you deciding what is a 'good' argument? — Isaac
The OP of this very thread is full of them. A chain of reasons to abandon one position and then a new position adopted to account for those reasons and then more reasons that rule that out so some other position adopted to account for those etc. The main point of that OP is “look how there are reasons against all of these conventional meta-ethical views. Let’s discuss what a view that accounts for all of those could be like.” — Pfhorrest
All things moral directly involve that which counts as acceptable/unacceptable thought, belief, and/or behaviour. — creativesoul
The OP is an account of my journey of changing my views in response to new reasons that challenged those views. — Pfhorrest
What I'm asking is why you distinguish moral rights for this treatment. It's clearly not the way you handle philosophical rights (the right answer to a philosophical question). — Isaac
If I am unpersuaded by a philosophical argument, it’s because I think I have already accounted for all the reasons they give in support of their conclusion, and either there is just some apparent invalidity to the argument (while I account for their reasons I don’t see how those reasons entail the conclusion), or I am also taking into account other reasons that they aren’t and coming to a conclusion that accounts for all of them. I never just say “that reason doesn’t matter”; I say how I have already accounted for it, and what else I’m accounting for that they’re not. — Pfhorrest
I try to account for all of their concerns, all of the suffering or enjoyment they’re aiming for or avoiding, but of course I can’t agree with either of their conclusions because to do so I would have to disregard the concerns of the other party like they do. — Pfhorrest
This is what distinguishes ideas about reality from ideas about 'oughts' or metaphysics. I can't believe the wall is not solid, or that I can fly, because it will have such beliefs tested by conflict with reality. — Isaac
The strength of this disagreement has not swayed you in the slightest bit from your position, nor has the strength of the disagreement of literally hundreds of educated and experienced moral philosophers who all disagree with you — Isaac
With all moral choices one is weighing some harms against some benefits. Taking account of them in this way only gives you the full measure of all the harms and benefits involved. How does it then give you any objective answer to which harms outweigh which benefits? We don't all assign them equal value. — Isaac
You're still the final arbiter, not any external test. This is what distinguishes ideas about reality from ideas about 'oughts' or metaphysics. — Isaac
It never matters who or how many people agree or disagree with a position, all that matters is the strength of their reasons. — Pfhorrest
you’re asking is about how to sort out which particulars things are most likely to be moral given those criteria for what counts as moral. The full answer is long, but the short version is it’s the moral analogue of falsificationism. — Pfhorrest
The idea that experience is the final arbiter for what is real is not itself real. It's an idea that cannot be tested against reality. — Echarmion
So ultimately, all such testing requires prior reasoning to establish what does and does not count as evidence. — Echarmion
Indeed. I'm not sure how you think that impacts on what I said. Normative propositions are always dependent on agreement (otherwise they're commands "you will", not "you should"). There is widespread agreement that experience arbitrates reality, at least so far as negation is concerned (that which is contrary to all experience is not the case). So universal statements from empiricism work - "letting go of that ball will cause it to drop".
Some people disagree with experience as an arbitrator. The extremely religious might, in some circumstances, believe God will hold the ball up and their past experiences are irrelevant compared to their faith. Statements based on empiricism will be useless to these people. But they are extremely rare, so it matters very little. — Isaac
With hedonism being the arbiter of morality, there's no such widespread agreement, not even close. So universal statements based on such a meta-ethic are useless, they only have any normative force for the group who already agree with the meta-ethical position. — Isaac
Yes, but we're not new to this. The human race has been at this for millenia. We've already very strongly landed on some form of empiricism to arbitrate everyday reality, we don't have any cause to doubt that. — Isaac
The widespread agreement about the principle of taking phenomenal experiences to be evidence of physical reality actually matters, it's the reason we can just take it as read. There being no such existing agreement about the relationship between hedonic experience and moral value is what means we cannot make the same presumption. — Isaac
So all you're saying here is "I don't care about what other people think, all that matters is what I think", which is relativism. — Isaac
There is also widespread agreement that killing babies for fun is wrong. — Echarmion
On a meta-ethical level, variations on the "golden rule" are also very widespread. — Echarmion
I don't think it's very convincing in the first place to argue that "as long as less than X% of people disagree with an idea, it can be considered true" — Echarmion
But of course, the goal of a moral philosophy is to convince, much like the goal of a scientific paper on some subject. — Echarmion
it did take us thousands of years - until the 18th century - to really figure out how to ask the right questions. — Echarmion
Consider the negation of that. “I care about what other people think, that matters, not just what I think.” That’s basically majoritarianism. — Pfhorrest
I don’t expect anyone to take anything just at my word. I only expect them to honestly consider the reasons I share with them, like I do others’. Then in light of all those shared reasons we’ve all got to make up our own minds. Because the alternative would just be to think what someone says to think just because they say so. — Pfhorrest
Indeed, but this has any bearing on what I'm saying. I was talking about the lack of widespread agreement over the method of reaching moral judgements, not the conclusions. — Isaac
I disagree, but even if that were so, it doesn't even approach basic empiricism. — Isaac
Neither do I, I never even mentioned 'truth'. — Isaac
What scientific papers are you reading? The goal of scientific papers is to present the degree to whicha model fits the experimental data. It should have zero to do with convincing (even if it sometimes does). Morality, on the other hand, is all about convincing, it's built in. — Isaac
I'm not talking about the scientific method (the detail of it) I'm talking about devising theories of reality based on the degree to which they conflict with experience. 6 month old babies do it. I didn't take us thousands of years, it's built into our DNA. — Isaac
No it's not, it's humility. It's recognising that others might see things you don't, or in a way you don't understand. — Isaac
So back to my original question. If this is a satisfactory approach to determining the right approach to moral judgement, why isn't it equally satisfactory for determining correct behaviour? Simply consider all the reasons for behaving that way which seem to you to be sound. Why suggest some alternative system? — Isaac
Most people reach moral conclusions intuitively, the same way that most people use something related to the empiricism intuitively. Otherwise, it'd be hard to explain how humans can live together in societies. — Echarmion
But if we're talking about degrees, we're not establishing some fundamental difference between the two kinds of making judgements. — Echarmion
No, that’s what listening to others’ reasons is, which I advocated and do. — Pfhorrest
consider the possibility of anything that might be an answer (otherwise you’ll have no choice but to give up), except those that can’t be tested against our experiences (otherwise you’ll have no choice but to take someone’s word for it). — Pfhorrest
I'm saying that your personal assessment of the reason has no bearing on the objective 'rightness' of some meta-ethic when there is widespread disagreement among your epistemic peers. If they disagree, and they have no less intellectual capacity and no less data than you, then it is only reasonable to assume that your position is tentative at the very least. The more widespread the disagreement, the more fragile any position within that scope becomes. — Isaac
I think intersection of ethics and language is a really effective way to frame the issue — Enrique
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