(1) The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice. — Samuel Lacrampe
(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men. — Samuel Lacrampe
(4) If the criteria to evaluate the moral value of an act is justice, and justice is objective, then morality is objective. — Samuel Lacrampe
(4) If the criteria to evaluate the moral value of an act is justice, and justice is objective, then morality is objective. — Samuel Lacrampe
The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice. — Samuel Lacrampe
(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men. — Samuel Lacrampe
Under such a definition, justice is objectively evaluated. — Samuel Lacrampe
morality is objective — Samuel Lacrampe
(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men. — Samuel Lacrampe
(1) The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice.
— Samuel Lacrampe
That's your opinion. — BlueBanana
Can you give a concrete example of merciful act? I cannot think of one where the morality is contrary to justice.Example: mercy isn't always just, but it could be argued to be morally right. — BlueBanana
I think you agree with me that killing everyone for no reason is unjust. And it is unjust precisely because there is an unequal treatment. In this case, because you treat the victims as what pleases you; not them.(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men.
— Samuel Lacrampe
No, that's just equality. Is killing everyone for no reason just? Justice is defined through morality, not the other way around. — BlueBanana
Are you saying the definition of justice is subjective? Definitions of concepts are always objective. If not the case, then the Socratic Method of finding correct definitions would be in vain. At worst, you could say that my definition is wrong and then proceed to explain why.Subjective. — charleton
'Objectivity' might be spoken of as a criterion for judgement with respect to disciplines such as history, jurisprudence and so on. In such cases, one might criticize subjective bias if it appeared in a historical work or a legal judgement. And historians and judges are expected to avoid subjective judgements, and open to criticism if they don't. But perhaps in these cases, the desired ideal is 'impartiality', which is not quite the same as 'objectivity'. I think the idea of 'impartiality' or 'detachment' has a somewhat broader scope than 'objectivity'. An impartial witness, or impartial judge, is thought to arrive at his or her opinion without self-interest; which is similar to objectivity but not quite the same.
I think the difficulty I have with 'objectivity' is that it embodies a kind of implicit normative epistemology. It presumes that the criterion of what is real, is that it can be assessed as an object. So implicitly it accepts that the judgement must be grounded in respect of some truly existing object, or a matter of fact which is amenable to precise quantitative analysis. I suppose it seems a rather positivist attitude, which nevertheless presents itself as impartial or disinterested. — Wayfarer
(4) If the criteria to evaluate the moral value of an act is justice, and justice is objective, then morality is objective. — Samuel Lacrampe
Can you give a concrete example of merciful act? I cannot think of one where the morality is contrary to justice. — Samuel Lacrampe
I think you agree with me that killing everyone for no reason is unjust. And it is unjust precisely because there is an unequal treatment. In this case, because you treat the victims as what pleases you; not them. — Samuel Lacrampe
(1) The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice. I.e., if the act is just, then it is morally good, and if unjust, then morally bad. It is nonsense to speak of an act which is morally good yet unjust, or morally bad yet just.
(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men.
(3) Under such a definition, justice is objectively evaluated. — Samuel Lacrampe
Are you saying the definition of justice is subjective? Definitions of concepts are always objective. If not the case, then the Socratic Method of finding correct definitions would be in vain. At worst, you could say that my definition is wrong and then proceed to explain why. — Samuel Lacrampe
I agree that what is quantitative is objective, but a thing does not need to be quantitative to be objective. The proposition "what is not quantitative is not objective" is itself not quantitative, which would make it not objectively true; thus making it a self-contradiction.So I'm arguing that objectivity as a criterion tends to imply a quantitative, rather than qualitative, judgement. — Wayfarer
Your example points to a moral problem that is challenging, but not subjective. Any judgement which has an objective criterion implies a 'better' or 'worse', depending on how close it gets to meet that criterion. Judgements with subjective criteria don't enter the realm of 'better' or 'worse'. In your example, while the ideal solution may be challenging to attain, there are nevertheless solutions which are clearly better or worse. E.g., siding with one of the two parties is clearly better than kicking both parties off to build your own private mansion. Therefore the problem remains objective.Say you're adjudicating a dispute between claimants to native title of some lands against an industrial interest that wants to develop them for commercial reasons. [...] — Wayfarer
If by 'revenge' you mean "a desire for justice (and nothing beyond it)", then it is not immoral. But if you mean "a desire that goes beyond justice (i.e. swinging the pendulum the other way)", then it is immoral, but also unjust because you are now treating the victim differently than how you would want to be treated.Killing someone as a revenge might be just, but not moral. — BlueBanana
To impose your desires on others against their will results in unequal treatment.I don't see how that is unequal just because there's someone deciding about the nature of that equal treatment. — BlueBanana
This case is similar to example 2 in the OP. The justice is relative to the predicted net gain, and this does not entail unequal treatment, because if the predicted gain was equal in both options, then I would help everyone equally.Another example, what if you can choose to help one person or multiple people, but if you only help the one person, their gain from the help is greater than the combined gain of the multiple people? — BlueBanana
In this case, because you treat the victims as what pleases you; not them. — Samuel Lacrampe
Justice should also be offered to children you know; why are you omitting children? :joke:The first thing that strikes is the word "men". These days in most civilised societies justice is also offered to women. Odd that you you should hold such an outdated notion. — charleton
You may be right, but that would merely suggest that no society is completely just; not that justice is subjective.Secondly, you strangely use the word "all". I suggest that there is not a single society that has offered justice to all men and women, let alone 'all men'. — charleton
Are you saying that just people are not necessarily treated justly? Once again, you may be right, but that only speaks of the injustice in the world; it does not entail that justice is subjective. Since morality is about 'what-ought-to-be' and not about 'what-is', you cannot defend or attack a morality based on historical facts.Third, I think you have a big task ahead if you think that people who the society deeds as worthy of justice, shall receive that justice equally. — charleton
To preserve equality in treatment, if you treat others and yourself as you please only, then you would be forced to accept others to treat you, others, and themselves as they please only. — Samuel Lacrampe
But the two behaviours cannot co-exist mutually because what pleases you does not necessarily coincide with what pleases others. — Samuel Lacrampe
I don't say morality is subjective. I say that moral feelings, impulses, attitudes, judgments, values, ends.... vary from one person and from one cultural context to another, though it seems there are common biological bases to all that variety, rooted in our nature as human animals.Why do you believe morality is subjective?" — Samuel Lacrampe
I'm inclined to suspect this is an oversimplification, but let's see where it leads.(1) The criteria or standard to evaluate the moral value (goodness or badness) of an act is justice. I.e., if the act is just, then it is morally good, and if unjust, then morally bad. It is nonsense to speak of an act which is morally good yet unjust, or morally bad yet just. — Samuel Lacrampe
This oversimplification I can't accept. I might allow that equality or proportionateness in treatment is required of any conception of justice, but it seems to me this is only one condition of a conception of justice, not by itself an adequate conception of justice.(2) Justice is defined as: equality in treatment among all men. — Samuel Lacrampe
According to my above argument, the definition has yet to be specified. All we know is, a concept of equality or proportionality must factor into the characterization somehow. But how? And what else can or must factor into our characterization of justice?(3) Under such a definition, justice is objectively evaluated.
Equality is a mathematical concept that is objective. Equality in treatment is observable, qualifiable, and even quantifiable when measurable goods are involved. — Samuel Lacrampe
Not so.Example 1: Six persons share a cake. All else being equal, it is just to divide the cake into six equal pieces. Anything else would be unjust. — Samuel Lacrampe
As I've argued above: Even if we grant that the morality or "goodness" of an act can be evaluated purely in terms of a conception of justice, and even if we grant that equality or proportionality is essential to any conception of justice, it has not been shown that there is an objective standard by which to arrive at a single noncontroversial definition of justice adequate to this purpose.(4) If the criteria to evaluate the moral value of an act is justice, and justice is objective, then morality is objective. — Samuel Lacrampe
Let's use an example. Person A wants to live. Person B wants person A to die. How do either person A or B can act so that the equality in treatment is preserved at all times?The principle of the matter can co-exist, though. If I and everyone treated everyone and themselves exactly as they pleased there is nothing contradictory in that. It's completely equitable in that everyone is treating people in the same manner. Whether we succeed is another matter altogether. — Moliere
You may be right, but that would merely suggest that no society is completely just; not that justice is subjective. — Samuel Lacrampe
Justice should also be offered to children you know; why are you omitting children? :joke:
By 'men', I mean mankind. A minor misunderstanding. — Samuel Lacrampe
Person A wants to live. Person B wants person A to die. How do either person A or B can act so that the equality in treatment is preserved at all times? — Samuel Lacrampe
I agree. Inasmuch as if the human eye sees an object, it is likely that the object seen is real, so it can be that if humans have a moral feeling, it is likely that it points to a real morality. That said, I do not use this argument in the OP.I don't say morality is subjective. I say that moral feelings, impulses, attitudes, judgments, values, ends.... vary from one person and from one cultural context to another, though it seems there are common biological bases to all that variety, rooted in our nature as human animals. — Cabbage Farmer
You omit that equality in treatment in all men includes the very man treating others too. If the man wouldn't want others to treat him the way he treats others, then he is not just, because he treats himself differently than he treats others.For instance, if a man assaults anyone who looks at him crooked, I don't call his action "just" and "good" in light of the fact that he treats all his victims the same. — Cabbage Farmer
See example 2 in the OP. Justice can be relative to the factors that determine the act. Those factors are found rationally. As long as for a given rational factor, everyone is treated equally, then justice is done.All we know is, a concept of equality or proportionality must factor into the characterization somehow. But how? And what else can or must factor into our characterization of justice? — Cabbage Farmer
In example 1, you omitted the phrase "all else being equal". This example was intentionally over-simplified to introduce the concept. Example 2 gets more complex and introduces the factors you mention. If you have a valid argument to introduce a factor that makes justice relative to it, then the acts remain just as long as everyone involved is treated equally relative to those factors.One of us says the pieces should be the same size. Another says the size of the cake should be proportionate to the weight of the consumers. [...] — Cabbage Farmer
Justice: equality in treatment in all men, even when it is relative to some factors which were arrived at rationally. The factors are determined through objective reasoning; the persons are compared against those factors objectively; therefore justice is determined objectively.As I've argued above: Even if we grant that the morality or "goodness" of an act can be evaluated purely in terms of a conception of justice, and even if we grant that equality or proportionality is essential to any conception of justice, it has not been shown that there is an objective standard by which to arrive at a single noncontroversial definition of justice adequate to this purpose. — Cabbage Farmer
Haters gonna hate, but not philosophize. :groan: — Samuel Lacrampe
This is merely an opinion or position. An argument is a position backed up by reason.This is question begging nonsense. — charleton
I was aware. As previously stated, by 'men', I mean mankind. This is a conventional term in traditional philosophy. Thus I am not omitting children or women. But what is the point to linger on this? Do you want me to apologize? I can if you want. My intent was not to offend anyone.A MASSIVE error. You omitted children and women. Did you realise that it was international women's day this week? — charleton
Justice: equality in treatment in all men, even when it is relative to some factors which were arrived at rationally. The factors are determined through objective reasoning; the persons are compared against those factors objectively; therefore justice is determined objectively. — Samuel Lacrampe
I was aware. As previously stated, by 'men', I mean mankind. This is a conventional term in traditional philosophy. Thus I am not omitting children or women. But what is the point to linger on this? Do you want me to apologize? I can if you want. My intent was not to offend anyone. — Samuel Lacrampe
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