But you just said that neither ball is more objectively well-suited to rolling. So if the principles are the same . . . ? The goal here isn't to score points, it's to explain something to you. — Terrapin Station
there is still a matter of fact of how well suited a ball is or is not to “moving by turning over and over on an axis”. — DingoJones
We can judge painful life saving surgery as good and we can see the pleasure from drugs and alcohol or over eating as bad. — Andrew4Handel
Not stealing, not lying not causing harm. The problem is convincing other people not to do these actions as well. — Andrew4Handel
Okay, and that matter of fact hinges on? — Terrapin Station
I think a possible difference between preference and morality is that you could change someones moral ideas by argument but you are unlikely to change someones dislike of pork or their sexuality through argument. — Andrew4Handel
The way you have changed someones moral preferences is by giving a moral argument. Whether there preference changes is based on the success of the argument. — Andrew4Handel
I would ideally like to be able to show someone that their behaviors or beliefs were wrong. I would want to persuade them based on reason.
I am currently a moral nihilist because I think it is not possible to prove a behavior or attitude is wrong. — Andrew4Handel
I don't see how you can resolve a moral dispute by preferences — Andrew4Handel
But where are we getting the initial concept of morality from? — Andrew4Handel
This is "will lead to feeling good/will lead to feeling bad". — Hallucinogen
It wasn't because you think you can solve moral disputes via some other means. It's that you don't think that we can solve moral disputes period? — Terrapin Station
But it seems that if there is a moral good — Andrew4Handel
I think it seems that way, too, but what I'm saying by that is that there are things that I feel (sometimes very strongly) about interpersonal behavior being acceptable or not, recommendable or not, etc. — Terrapin Station
Re the doctor comment, by the way, the doctor can't tell you whether anything has an objectively positive or negative value — Terrapin Station
Thinking preceeds action; there is no action without thinking — Gilliatt
Can one justify trying to survive in the first place with pure reason? — macrosoft
You seem like a moral nihilist not convinced of the strength of your moral intuitions. — Andrew4Handel
However I find it implausible that someone would want to be unhealthy. — Andrew4Handel
I am not sure what your stance is and whether you want any moral system at all or if you want a purely subjective moral system based on individual feelings and subject to whim. — Andrew4Handel
I think that we have a purely subjective moral system despite what anyone wants or what anyone believes we have instead of that. — Terrapin Station
If a moral system is widely accepted and democratically endorsed then I don't think it can be purely subjective. — Andrew4Handel
I think a purely subjective moral scheme would not be a morality. — Andrew4Handel
In this scenario which would be egocentric and the individual would always be right. — Andrew4Handel
I don't see why morality should be about wallowing in your own preferences as opposed to trying to reveal some kind of empirical truth. — Andrew4Handel
The subjective/objective distinction has nothing to do with agreement or a lack of agreement — Terrapin Station
t's not at all the case that people are always sure how they feel. — Terrapin Station
I think an agreement is objective. You can't compare mental states. — Andrew4Handel
I do not see how that helps your case. If people cannot decide for instance whether abortion is right or wrong then the moral issue remains unresolved. — Andrew4Handel
However based on the subjective view they were right on both occasions because they are the final arbiter of morality. — Andrew4Handel
Personal I base my moral intuitions on external facts about harm and attitudes etc. — Andrew4Handel
I think you could argue that stealing from something very rich still does cause harm, and if you could prove it doesn't, people would have concerns that accepting theft in such a case sets a bad precedent that has net-negative entailments.such as stealing from a big company or stealing without detection, because of principle and character reasons. — Andrew4Handel
I'd explain this by saying that people can experience displeasure at things that aren't physically harmful to them due to our inherited social psychology. Understanding that your kin have been insulted damages your social status, so your brain imposes a "toll" which represents your diminished reproductive prospects.Likewise most people would oppose defiling a corpse even though the person is dead. I think the reason bad behavior causes pain is often because of the psychological judgement you make not because of the action. That is to say the pain is worst after you discover you have been wronged. Hence pain and pleasure could be caused by the act of making a moral judgement. — Andrew4Handel
I think the most important aspect of morality is enforcement. — Andrew4Handel
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.