So most people think these systems are morally correct, and not just someone's opinion? That means most people are moral objectivists. — Pfhorrest
Was democracy the only item on my list? — Isaac
That was an example. — Pfhorrest
Whether they see these as objectively 'right' or just pragmatically something it is in their best interests to follow is irrelevant. — Isaac
I have pointed out that it is impossible to weight widely different values against one another in an objective manner. Or can you tell me how much money is a human life worth? — Olivier5
If someone else thinks dollars are of intrinsic value, then they’re just objectively wrong. — Pfhorrest
My point was just that it’s one of these or the other. Either people accept the outcomes of these processes because they think they’re objectively right (or reject them because they’re wrong), or they accept them because someone will do something they don’t like to them it they don’t (or reject them because they can get away with it and escape those consequences). Either we act like there is some objective answer to be found and try to reach agreement on what it is, or it’s just down to who has the scariest threat of force. — Pfhorrest
I have pointed out that it is impossible to weight widely different values against one another in an objective manner. Or can you tell me how much money is a human life worth? — Olivier5
Dollars create and save lives every day. So that gives them inherent value, just like food — JC Dollar-Bruh
Having the scariest threat of force ~makes~ it objective that they will do something you don't like. — JC Dollar-Bruh
That’s instrumental value, exactly what I was contrasting intrinsic value with. — Pfhorrest
We’re taking about either agreeing that something or another is objectively GOOD and trying to figure out together what that is, or else it coming down to someone just making someone else do things their way whether they like it or not. — Pfhorrest
If something exists at one point in time to us, then it exists in all points in time to an omnipresent observer. Which means that it's existed since the beginning, which means it's intrinsic. — JC Dollar-Bruh
The person making the other person do the thing they like is creating the objective good. — JC Dollar-Bruh
A human life is worth the money that it takes to sustain the people they touch, or hurt. — JC Dollar-Bruh
Either people accept the outcomes of these processes because they think they’re objectively right (or reject them because they’re wrong), or they accept them because someone will do something they don’t like to them it they don’t — Pfhorrest
That is only necessary if both of those values are objectively important in and of themselves — Pfhorrest
And this happens all the time — Olivier5
Why do you persist in pretending this false dichotomy when it has been made clear a dozen times by several different people that these are not the only options? — Isaac
Because each of these "dozens of times" the supposed dissolution of the dichotomy has been refutable. — Pfhorrest
This is philosophy, not neuroscience. — Pfhorrest
we're not talking about why people do anything at all, but how to resolve disagreements about what to do. — Pfhorrest
Either people accept the outcomes of these processes because they think they’re objectively right (or reject them because they’re wrong), or they accept them because someone will do something they don’t like to them it they don’t — Pfhorrest
If someone thinks (whatever caused them to think it) that something is right and someone else thinks (from whatever cause) otherwise, do they discuss it and exchange reasons to try to convince each other to agree — Pfhorrest
acting like there is something they are investigating together, for which there are reasons to think one way or another — Pfhorrest
It's a simple boolean choice, no wiggle room here: do we exchange reasons and try to reach agreement, or not? — Pfhorrest
What is it exactly that makes either of them good or bad, to whatever degree they each are, that their goodness or badness might measure the same against that scale? What would we need to know to know which was preferable, even if we can't in practice know that? Either there is an answer to those kinds of questions, in which case you have (value monist) moral objectivism, or there isn't. I think we can't know either way, but also can't help but assume one way or another, and that assuming that we can make progress on figuring out these questions is a pragmatically better assumption than assuming we can't. — Pfhorrest
That is not at all what "intrinsic" means in the field of moral philosophy... or even in physics, for that matter. — Pfhorrest
I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a statement. — Pfhorrest
When someone makes someone else do something that they believe is right, that creates subjective GOOD for them. — JC Dollar-Bruh
To get the right picture, we have to stop thinking of time from just a human perspective. — JC Dollar-Bruh
Please help me identify this belief system. — Avery
but you’re claiming that whatever you’re forced to do actually becomes good because you’re forced to do it, which it patent nonsense. — Pfhorrest
It worked! Thank you for finally stopping the non-OP fuffing about in this thread (it's ok by me if you want to leave a parting shot post here).
In parting, I'll leave you with: A Woman who went to Alaska, the journaled account of May Kellogg Sullivan, and her 1902 expedition into the great North State:
CHAPTER I.
UNDER WAY.
MY first trip from California to Alaska was made in the summer of 1899... — JC Dollar-Bruh
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