I feel this "Telos" is adding a subjective qualifier. You may define it one way, while I define it another. Then we are basing "better" or "worse" relative to our invented ideas of what completes (sorry if wrong word usage) that person. — ZhouBoTong
@darthbarracudaBut if we do actually define it, then presumably we have reasons for why we think this way.
@darthbarracudaBut this is getting into the heart of meta-ethics, specifically error theory and the anti-realist camps.
@Bitter CrankAnts are fine in their place as long as they don't get too big and move in with me.
@Bitter Crankbetter than, larger than, hotter than, faster than
@Bitter Crankwe can say that Gandhi is good, Hitler is bad
@Bitter CrankIt's possible to get all tied up in word games
@Bitter CrankFor my money, good food is better than bad food. Bigger is better. People who are honest, decent, kind, and loving are better than people who are liars, thieves, knaves, and scoundrels.
@Bitter Crankyes, people are better than ants
@TheMadFoolIf I understand you correctly, do you mean that moral theories and norms derived thereof are better or worse in a narrow sense, applying only to certain aspects and not as a whole?
@TheMadFoolDoes it mean, however, that morality is subjective? I don't know. Subjectivism seems a way out, the easy way out. Subjectivism explains the situation if we consider morality as static - like a photograph. Yet, when we follow the history of morality (video), it seems we're arriving at some kind of objectivity. For instance, there was a time when slavery wasn't immoral. Now it is, and is universally so, save for a few regions that haven't experienced the effects of globalization or the like.
This is the subjective-objective thing I mentioned above. And I am cool with that (in practice I feel I operate that way), but when I am dealing in theory or principles I have to acknowledge to myself that those things are "right" or "better" because I (and hopefully a much larger consensus) believe they are. If we establish goals, then we can be more objective...but how can the goals themselves be objective? — ZhouBoTong
"I think bigger is better" (I may disagree with that some portion of the time, but I just realized that I am speaking with someone who prefers the company of men and this may have a loaded meaning). — ZhouBoTong
"pizza is better than hamburgers" — ZhouBoTong
"Americans are better than everyone" — ZhouBoTong
Moral principles seem to converge with time. If I'm right to assume that moral ''progress'' is correlated with the progress of rationality, it would imply that the convergence of moral principles (all cultures agreeing on what is good or bad) is caused by heeding good arguments either for or against a given moral tenet. This is objective isn't it because rationality is, by definition, objective, right? — TheMadFool
I think the underlying foundation for it is the happiness-suffering paradigm that is universal. — TheMadFool
You emphasize the importance of modifiers and context. If two executives of a frozen food company are discussing products, they might agree that "Pizza is better than hamburgers" as a product that can be frozen, reheated, and still appeal to consumers. If, on the other hand, two people are in the food court, the one who likes Italian-type flavorings might say that "pizza is better than hamburgers". On the other hand, the lactose intolerant person is likely to think that "hamburgers are better than pizza". — Bitter Crank
The answer to whether something is "better" than something else is the result of interpretation which is necessarily subjective. A subjective framework can make coherent rules for defining what makes one better than another but ultimately it's subjective. We can only say that someone is better at performing a particular action or achieving a certain goal. — Judaka
You said we can say "I am better at soccer than you" but is that really an objective truth? I could say Messi is better than Ronaldo and give me reasoning but there are still many who would disagree with that. Just how much better does one need to be at soccer until we can say that person is better at soccer and it's no longer subjective? — Judaka
Can someone be better than someone else? Yes but this can only be asserted by something subjective and so how much the claim matters is entirely subjective also. — Judaka
So I was going to respond: "rational = good / irrational = bad is subjective" — ZhouBoTong
My feelings are that no one (no-thing) is "better" than anyone (anything), until a qualifier is added for "better". Yes you can be better than me at soccer, or differential equations, or stacking cups; but that does not make one entity "better" than another. I feel this is somewhat obvious, and anyone who is not a moral objectivist would agree, but it seems many people do view some people or things as better than others (not just a specific aspect of that thing - but the "whole" of one is better than the "whole" of the other). — ZhouBoTong
Is anyone "better" than anyone?
That rational is good and irrational is bad is not subjective. There are reasons for being rational and not irrational e.g. not getting killed by thinking that gravity doesn't apply to you or that cyanide is good for the bones. — TheMadFool
I've always had trouble distinguishing subjectivity from objectivity. After all objectivity seems to be just consensus of subjective observations. — TheMadFool
It seems that when an observation is consistent over time, space and person the probability of consensus of views increase. This perhaps is objectivity. — TheMadFool
So, my views and yours, alone, would be subjective but that of an entire community or people is probably not subjective but rather objective. — TheMadFool
Another view of objectivity is when it relates to being rational i.e. demanding evidence for a belief. We only believe in well-supported claims. This too is being objective, right? — TheMadFool
Objectivity, ergo, requires being rational about beliefs and consensus/consistency of observations. — TheMadFool
Certain subjective frameworks are less contentious than others. — Judaka
I think this characterisation is necessarily subjective because it's an interpretation of the facts. — Judaka
Has universal agreement on particular standards for measuring something made the characterisation less subjective or more valid? — Judaka
You've distinguished between "One can be better AT something than another but one can't be better than another at nothing ". — Judaka
I disagree with this distinction, you've selected non-contentious comparisons which can be easily tested and there is a lack of variety of interpretations. It's a spectrum, I'm sure you will agree. If I went around saying "I am better at philosophy than Mr X" you'd be approaching that with the same perspective as if I said "Mr X, I'm better than you". — Judaka
It's a spectrum, I'm sure you will agree. — Judaka
I think not valuing your subjective framework as a 100% subjectivist leads down the rabbit hole of dark nihilism, where a lack of objective meaning means no worthwhile meaning at all. — Judaka
It's not something anyone can be wrong or right about. We're just talking about persons' individual feelings/dispositions. — Terrapin Station
I am still a bit of an objective nihilist...basically amounts to "well nothing REALLY matters, but I decide that I like x, y, and z so I should work toward those ends, because I want to." — ZhouBoTong
To "win", or be "better than someone else" at something can lead to master/slave-situations — Christoffer
There are no winners and losers in the end — Christoffer
no one is better than anyone else because identity and performance always flow and change. — Christoffer
But striving for these axioms is pretty much guaranteed to make you a better person, ignoring them pretty much guarantees you to be a worse person. — Christoffer
I am trying to distinguish between facts and interpretations of facts. — Judaka
"We measure who's better at stacking cups by seeing how many cups they can stack in 30 seconds, whoever stacked the most is the best". We've created objectivity! — Judaka
First, once there are goals (your "reasons" above I think), then there can certainly be objective "best" methods of reaching that goal. But the goal itself is still subjective. Isn't this just the is/ought problem (any goal is suggesting what society ought to be)? — ZhouBoTong
While I agree with the difficulty of distinguishing between the two, in my mind, consensus just suggests that our subjective thoughts might be (the more consensus, the more likely) objective. I can even accept "objective enough for all intents and purposes", but objectivity would entail certainty (or at least the potential), and I don't see how that could happen. — ZhouBoTong
Now if we compare to 2 mediocre, two poor, and two genius chess player, my statement does not hold up (still subjective), but if we are comparing Bobby Fisher and an average 8 year old, I don't need any additional qualifiers to accept this as objectively true. Under what circumstances could it NOT be true? — ZhouBoTong
"at age 30, Hussein Bolt was a better runner than Stephen Hawking was at that same age", I can only be right. — ZhouBoTong
Suffering-happiness seems an objective fact. We could build our moral edifice on that. That's just my opinion. Yours may differ. — TheMadFool
Objectivity entails certainty? Well, I think it's the converse. Certainty entails objectivity. — TheMadFool
However, if one wants certainty, a 100% assurance on claims, we have to get rid of our biases i.e. be objective. — TheMadFool
No you can't. It entirely depends on what an individual counts as "better running" — Terrapin Station
Your main concern seems to be about the subjective/objective nature of morality. — TheMadFool
I proposed a paradigm for objective morality grounded on the universality of suffering/happiness. Do you think suffering and happiness are subjective? Why? — TheMadFool
So, tell us what you mean by ''subjective'' and ''objective''. — TheMadFool
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