God and one's own nature, and ultimately, sub specie aeternitatis, the two aren't any different.I don't know what the objectivist would say. There doesn't seem to be any sensible answer, which is why moral objectivism doesn't – and can't – work. — Michael
In a different meaning of obligation and command than was used. My nature, metaphorically, commands me and orients me towards its own fulfilment. But I have the freedom to go against it if I so desire. So in that regard, and in this sense, it commands me, even though, strictly speaking, it is not a person.In what sense is morality obligatory and a command if talk of obligation and commands in this context is a category error? Your position seems to be affirming its own incoherency. — Michael
Okay noted.Perhaps, but I'm talking about the sort of rules that relate to obligations. — Michael
Why?No, I'd say that the premise is right, and that your premise that there are obligations sans-rules that is wrong. — Michael
No, ought is not obligation.The claim "one ought not X" has everything to do with obligation. It's the second word. — Michael
Something is human nature only if it has a certain effect on what you do (dictates/influences what you do), and what you are oriented towards. Thus it is human nature that decides what you ought to do - that's precisely why it is one's NATURE. That murder is contrary to human flourishing means that human nature is not oriented towards murdering, and thus, when we speak of the immorality of murder, we simply mean to point out this fact. Someone who is immoral thus does something that is against their nature, and saying that they ought not to is just an affirmation that they indeed share that human nature.Moral philosophers might agree that X is contrary to human flourishing but not agree that one ought not X. — Michael
No, ought is not obligation. — Agustino
My nature, metaphorically, commands me and orients me towards its own fulfilment.
Why?
Fine, then your definition of ought simply does not cover all the uses of the word ought in a moral context.Yes it is. That one ought not X is that one is obligated to not X.
And before we go 'round in circles arguing over definitions, I'll simply say that this is the definition of "ought" that I'm using in my argument. — Michael
To be metaphorically commanded to eat when you are hungry for example, is that command which does not come from a person, but rather from one's own being/nature. Moral obligation is such a command from one's own being/nature. This has nothing to do with poetry :)What does it mean to be metaphorically commanded to behave a certain way? And is that all moral obligation is? Poetry? — Michael
According to your limited definition yes, I'm just saying that there are other uses of one ought not X in moral discourse.Because that one ought not X just is that X is against some specified set of rules. — Michael
These are just your definitions.If it's a legal obligation then it's a set of legal rules. If it's a moral obligation then it's a set of moral rules. Therefore rule-free obligation makes no sense. — Michael
:sAnd note that I'm talking about actual obligations, not your proposed metaphorical obligations (whatever they're supposed to be). — Michael
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. So your account can't be right. — The Great Whatever
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.