Nope, unless you alter the usual useage of the word "rule". At the moment premise 2 is ENTAILED by premise 1, even though you don't make this necessary connection clear - and thus it isn't separate from it. "Rule" presupposes a rule giver in the usual sense in which we use the word, ie something is a rule if and only if it has been given by a person. But a rule against action X does not necessarily mean that one ought not to do action X. For example, if I'm a Jewish slave in a Nazi concentration camp, and a Nazi guard instructs me not to eat anymore, then it does not follow that I ought not to eat (a statement of ethics). All that follows is that he doesn't want me to eat - it says nothing about what I ought to do.That one ought not X is that X is against the rules — Michael
This is inherent in our usage of rule.That X is against the rules is that some authority has commanded that one not X
Therefore that one ought not X is that some authority has commanded that one not X — Michael
This is begging the question. The conclusion is derived from a single premise, and thus inheres in it. Your argument begs the question here.That so-and-so is an authority and has commanded that one not X is a product of and dependent on human decision
Therefore that one ought not X is a product of and dependent on human decision — Michael
I agree.That X is immoral is that one ought not X — Michael
The way you have stated this argument, this does not even follow without error because you beg the question half-way in regards to your second, intermediary conclusion. If we were to state the argument in a different manner it would follow, granted the premises, but premise 1 would still be false under the meaning of rule used in premise 2. The only way to make premise 1 true while keeping premise 2 would be to equivocate on "rule" or change the meaning of authority and command. For example, it can be established as a rule (= something that follows with regularity) that if I develop friendships I will be happier than if I was entirely isolated. Given my nature, it would follow that I ought to develop friendships, and I ought not to be isolated. In a certain sense an authority has commanded me to do this - but it is the authority of my own nature - it is immanent and not transcendent, contrary to your unspoken of assumption that authority necessarily is external and contrary to your assumption that authority is always personal. That's why writers like Philippa Foot can develop entirely objective, although secular ethics.Therefore that X is immoral is a product of and dependent on human decision — Michael
This is begging the question. The conclusion is derived from a single premise, and thus inheres in it. Your argument begs the question here. — Agustino
Nope, unless you alter the usual useage of the word "rule". At the moment premise 2 is ENTAILED by premise 1, even though you don't make this necessary connection clear - and thus it isn't separate from it. "Rule" presupposes a rule giver in the usual sense in which we use the word, ie something is a rule if and only if it has been given by a person. But a rule against action X does not necessarily mean that one ought not to do action X. For example, if I'm a Jewish slave in a Nazi concentration camp, and a Nazi guard instructs me not to eat anymore, then it does not follow that I ought not to eat (a statement of ethics). All that follows is that he doesn't want me to eat - it says nothing about what I ought to do.
I don't need a correct account to see yours is wrong. — The Great Whatever
It's possible you ought not to do something, even if there's no rule against it.
It's also possible you ought to do something even though there is a rule against it.
Nope. The way you use ought here equivocates on the earlier usage. This is not an ETHICAL question regarding the pawn, unless you want to say that I am immoral if I move the pawn backwards ;) - which is just crass nonsense.We can either say "you ought not move a pawn backwards" or "it is against the rules to move a pawn backwards". The two claims are interchangeable. Therefore that one ought not X is that X is against the rules. — Michael
Right, so I am immoral if I start a sentence with a lower case letter? What kind of crass nonsense is this? I think Wittgenstein would be horrified if he saw this misuse of his philosophy...You ought not start a sentence with a lower case letter. It is against the rules to start a sentence with a lower case letter. — Michael
Epic!I don't need a correct account to see yours is wrong. — The Great Whatever
You ought not to kill animals for fun in the African jungle. There is no rule against killing animals in some places in Africa. There's your example.Could you give an example? I can't see how this would work. "One ought not X and there is no rule against X" appears to be a contradiction and so doesn't make any sense to me. — Michael
Ought not to refers to actions which are contrary to the flourishing of human nature or the nature of other living beings (I could have just said the first part, it would be the same thing, but just to avoid misunderstanding)Can you provide an alternative account of what "one ought not X" means? The above is the only meaningful account that I can find. — Michael
Nope. The way you use ought here equivocates on the earlier usage. This is not an ETHICAL question regarding the pawn, unless you want to say that I am immoral if I move the pawn backwards ;) - which is just crass nonsense. — Agustino
Right, so I am immoral if I start a sentence with a lower case letter? What kind of crass nonsense is this? I think Wittgenstein would be horrified if he saw this misuse of his philosophy...
You ought not to kill animals for fun in the African jungle. There is no rule against killing animals in some places in Africa. There's your example.
Ought not to refers to actions which are contrary to the flourishing of human nature.
I'm not saying that it's an ethical question. I'm saying that the claim "one ought not X" is the same as the claim "X is against the rules". — Michael
That X is immoral is that one ought not X — Michael
That one ought not X is that X is against the rules — Michael
I agree, but morality is a choice not an obligation in the sense you use it here. That's why morality depends on freedom.But it is still nonetheless the case that where there are obligations there are rules. — Michael
Agreed. What does this have to do with the morality of it though?If there is no rule against killing animals for fun in the African jungle then there is no obligation not to kill animals for fun in the African jungle. — Michael
No. Because you still ought not to kill the animals for fun even if there is no rule against it, even if you are not obliged/forced not to kill them.The only thing that can justify the claim "one ought not X" is if there is some rule which commands one to not X. — Michael
Yes - but keep in mind that human nature is transhuman as well as merely human.So "one ought not X" means "X is contrary to the flourishing of human nature"? — Michael
:-* — Agustino
I agree, but morality is a choice not an obligation in the sense you use it here. That's why morality depends on freedom.
Agreed. What does this have to do with the morality of it though?
No. Because you still ought not to kill the animals for fun even if there is no rule against it.
Yes - but keep in mind that human nature is transhuman as well as merely human.
That is impossible because they form one single argument. So it's a reductio ad absurdum if I can show that your argument entails nonsensical conclusions such that starting sentences with lower case letters is immoral.As I said, I didn't bring up morality until point 6. But you questioned point 1. Consider the first three points as a standalone argument. — Michael
This is an equivocation on previous usage. Obligation is something you are OBLIGED (ie FORCED in some way, or pressured to do) to do.Every obligation is a choice. Legal obligations, family obligations, work obligations... — Michael
In the sense of obligation I have illustrated above yes.So you agree that if there is no rule then there is no obligation. — Michael
Nope. I don't agree because "one ought not X" =/ "X is against the rules"And as you've accepted that "X is immoral" means "one ought not X" you agree that if there is no rule then "one ought not X" is false. — Michael
Yes there is. Your own nature.No. If there is no rule against it then nothing can make the claim "you ought not kill animals for fun" true. — Michael
Yes. It has to do with the transhuman part of man - since man is not a self-sustaining substance, he depends for his existence on the rest of the world, and even on the animals. Thus cruelty towards the world and towards the animals is against his own nature - it is like sitting on a branch and cutting that same branch - simply because the world is the cause of the man, who is merely the effect.So "one ought not kill animals for fun" means "killing animals for fun is contrary to the flourishing of human nature"? — Michael
That is impossible because they form one single argument. — Agustino
This is an equivocation on previous usage. Obligation is something you are OBLIGED (ie FORCED in some way, or pressured to do) to do.
Yes. It has to do with the transhuman part of man - since man is not a self-sustaining substance, he depends for his existence on the rest of the world, and even on the animals. Thus cruelty towards the world and towards the animals is against his own nature - it is like sitting on a branch and cutting that same branch - simply because the world is the cause of the man, who is merely the effect.
Yes, fine. But your big argument has still been reduced to absurdity, regardless of the veracity of this bit of it alone.No, it's a single argument on its own:
That one ought not X is that X is against the rules
That X is against the rules is that some authority has commanded that one not X
Therefore that one ought not X is that some authority has commanded that one not X — Michael
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/obligationob·li·ga·tion
ˌäbləˈɡāSH(ə)n/
noun
noun: obligation; plural noun: obligations
an act or course of action to which a person is morally or legally bound; a duty or commitment. — Michael
Yes, that is the consequence of it.So when you claim "murder is immoral" you're just claiming "murder is contrary to the flourishing of human nature". OK. So what? I accept that murder is contrary to the flourishing of human nature. What's the consequence/implication of this? That I ought not murder? — Michael
Yes, fine. But your big argument has still been reduced to absurdity, regardless of the veracity of this bit of it alone. — Agustino
Yes and this argument has absurd conclusions, namely that starting a sentence with lower case letters is immoral. Therefore it is false. — Agustino
"One ought not X and there is no rule against X" appears to be a contradiction — Michael
Where have I said it is sound? I have said that regardless of the veracity of the first small argument, the big one is necessarily false because of the conclusions it entails. This does not indicate that I thought the small argument is sound. Not at all, because the first premise, as I have said multiple times, is false.If it's sound then the conclusion can't be false. — Michael
I'm not saying that every obligation is a moral obligation. — Michael
That one ought not X is that X is against the rules — Michael
Thus: "one ought not X" (A) = "X is against the rules" (B) = "X is immoral" (C). If every A is a B, and every C is an A, it necessarily means that every C is also a B.That X is immoral is that one ought not X — Michael
I showed that your initial argument is false via a reductio ad absurdum
...
Thus: "one ought not X" (A) = "X is against the rules" (B) = "X is immoral" (C). If every A is a B, and every C is an A, it necessarily means that every C is also a B.
Equivocation of ought, as I said before.1. That one oughty not X is that X is against the rulesy
2. That X is against the rulesy is that some authorityy has commanded that one not X
3. Therefore that one oughty not X is that some authorityy has commanded that one not X
4. That X is immoral is that one oughtmoral not X
5. Therefore that X is immoral is that some authoritymoral has commanded that one not X — Michael
You're using ought in two different senses - in a moral sense, and in a non-moral one, without establishing the connection and interchangeability of the two. — Agustino
Furthermore, consider that your argument entails several additional difficulties. If not all obligations are moral obligations, by what are moral obligations distinguished from other obligations? And how would you draw the line between moral obligations and non-moral obligations?
Because if you loosen your argument as you must, and claim that not everything that is against the rules is immoral, you will collapse your position into the investigation of what is morality - because we will no longer be able to identify morality simply by it being against the rules.
I disagree with moral obligations in the sense of legal, or [placeholder] obligations. Obligation simply does not have the same sense in the case of morality as it does in the case of law, or work, etc. because morality necessitates freedom as a ground of its possibility, in a way that law, work, etc. don't (for example, you can't be moral if you are forced to behave morally, but you can be a law abiding citizen if you are forced to obey the law). Again, morality is not obligatory in the same sense that laws are - and for this reason there is equivocation, even though this is not apparent until the concrete terms of ought are analysed.The first premise is read as "that one is [placeholder] obligated to not X is that there is a [placeholder] rule against X".
So, where the obligation is a moral obligation, "that one is morally obligated to not X is that there is a moral rule against X".
This isn't equivocation. — Michael
What counts as a moral rule, as opposed to a legal rule?Moral obligations are thus those established by moral rules issued by moral authorities. — Michael
Yes - human nature, I've already clarified that.The question, then, is can there be an objective moral authority? — Michael
Rather man has the free will to move towards the flourishing of his own nature, or towards its own destruction.As stated in the original post, authority is a product of and dependent on human decision. — Michael
Morality does not necessarily have to function by transcendent rules coming from external authorities. At the highest level, the "rules" (if you can even call them that - they are not rules in-so-far as they are freely chosen), are immanent.I don't need to loosen it. If a thing breaks a legal rule then it's illegal. If it a thing breaks a moral rule then it's immoral. — Michael
If someone asks you to show that this is a contradiction, you will offer a syllogism. How shall we decide on the soundness of the syllogism? A syllogism cannot tell us how to decide on the veracity of the premises. But what we can say, is that your conception of morality is limited to rule-following. That is fine - but all that I am saying is that morality has other facets, many of which do not involve rule-following. You seem to be unable to see this fact."One ought not X and there is no rule against X" appears to be a contradiction and so doesn't make any sense to me. — Michael
What counts as a moral rule, as opposed to a legal rule? — Agustino
I disagree with moral obligations in the sense of legal, or [placeholder] obligations. Obligation simply does not have the same sense in the case of morality as it does in the case of law, or work, etc. because morality necessitates freedom as a ground of its possibility, in a way that law, work, etc. don't. Again, morality is not obligatory in the same sense that laws are.
Yes - human nature, I've already clarified that.
Morality does not necessarily have to function by transcendent rules coming from external authorities. At the highest level, the "rules" (if you can even call them that - they are not rules in-so-far as they are freely chosen), are immanent.
That is fine - but all that I am saying is that morality has other facets, many of which do not involve rule-following. You seem to be unable to see this fact. — Agustino
What counts as a moral authority? How do we identify moral authorities?It's issued by a moral authority rather than a legal authority. — Michael
It's not clear to me that the distinction is. We're as free to break the law as we to break moral rules. Breaking the law makes you a criminal and breaking moral rules makes you immoral. — Michael
(for example, you can't be moral if you are forced to behave morally, but you can be a law abiding citizen if you are forced to obey the law). Again, morality is not obligatory in the same sense that laws are - and for this reason there is equivocation, even though this is not apparent until the concrete terms of ought are analysed. — Agustino
I have offered no sense to it, I have merely illustrated that moral obligation simply cannot be similar to legal obligation.Furthermore, this sense of (moral) "obligation" that you're using isn't consistent with your account of "one ought not X" as "X is contrary to human flourishing". — Michael
Exactly! It can't, so we can speak of obligations only metaphorically, not literarily. That is exactly the problem that I'm pointing to. "Obligations" (and "commands") is a poor language to use in discussing morality. In a certain sense morality is obligatory and a command - but that will not be the same sense in which the law is obligatory and a command.How can human nature issue commands? This is a clear category error. — Michael
A narrow conception of rules. Rules is also used to refer to regularities, patterns, etc.Rules just are commands issued by someone who has the power to tell us what to do. — Michael
Laws of physics?Rules aren't the sort of things that come pre-packaged with the universe or which spontaneously pop into existence some time after. — Michael
Yes, fortunately it doesn't, that's been my whole point, this premise is wrong.If "X is immoral" just means "one ought not X" then there is no sense of morality that does not involve rule-following as obligation without rules is incoherent. — Michael
Why should morality have something to do with obligation, when we know that morality requires freedom for its possibility in a way that is incompatible with obligation in the hard sense of it (being forced to)? If someone is forced to, or even less, pressured to do something, then that action simply cannot be a moral achievement. Morality requires freely choosing the good - not under an obligation to choose it, which implies choosing it for a reason other than itself (ie because of the obligation), but rather for its own sake.If, however, you want to define "X is immoral" as "X is contrary to human flourishing" then, yes, it would involve more than rule-following. However, the consequence of this is that prima facie this account would have nothing to do with obligation. — Michael
What if, as I have said before, "one ought not to" simply MEANS "it is contrary to human flourishing"? I have claimed that this is a framework which isn't only better than the one you have offered (where "one ought not to" simply MEANS "it is against the rules"), but also includes it, although it isn't limited to it. Your criticism under my framework would simply be a step on the ladder to ascend higher, a moment of aufheben.One would have to make an additional case to argue that one ought not do that which is contrary to human flourishing. — Michael
What counts as a moral authority? How do we identify moral authorities? — Agustino
Exactly! It can't, so we can speak of obligations only metaphorically, not literarily. That is exactly the problem that I'm pointing to. "Obligations" (and "commands") is a poor language to use in discussing morality. In a certain sense morality is obligatory and a command - but that will not be the same sense in which the law is obligatory and a command.
A narrow conception of rules. Rules is also used to refer to regularities, patterns, etc.
Laws of physics?
Yes, fortunately it doesn't, that's been my whole point, this premise is wrong.
Why should morality have something to do with obligation, when we know that morality requires freedom for its possibility in a way that is incompatible with obligation in the hard sense of it (being forced to)? If someone is forced to, or even less, pressured to do something, then that action simply cannot be a moral achievement. Morality requires freely choosing the good - not under an obligation to choose it, which implies choosing it for a reason other than itself (ie because of the obligation), but rather for its own sake.
What if, as I have said before, "one ought not to" simply MEANS "it is contrary to human flourishing"? I have claimed that this is a framework which isn't only better than the one you have offered (where "one ought not to" simply MEANS "it is against the rules"), but also includes it, although it isn't limited to it. Your criticism under my framework would simply be a step on the ladder to ascend higher, a moment of aufheben.
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