A bit of an afterthought -- I first wrote on this, but then thought it better just to mention instead -- If anyone can tell others what is right or wrong, it would be the ubermensch: breaker of tablets, master of the self, inspirer of slaves to write future tablets. But the ubermensch is not an ideal, nor is it something we even could aspire to -- she cannot even help but to be an ubermensch. — Moliere
So this is why I think that acts like changing one's mind, repentance, forgiveness, and redemption are strong indicators for moral intuitionism. Sure, we can be wrong. In fact in the face of our own evil we often acknowledge our error and try to make amends. In a similar way in the face of our own falsity we often acknowledge our error and try to amend our beliefs. If we can be wrong then there is something we can be wrong about, unlike our preference for ice cream of which it is silly to say you can be wrong about. — Moliere
But I'll use an example. I grew up watching Star Wars. I love watching Star Wars. I have good memories of it and a soft spot for the fantasy world that inspired me as a kid.
But as I grew older and developed a taste for film I could come back to Star Wars and see its flaws. — Moliere
Start with this. Do you believe that what you're referring to are flaws factually? Or are you just saying that they're flaws in your later opinion, given how your preferences have changed? — Terrapin Station
Don't you think things like forgiveness, redemption and repentance are applicable to particular actions that would be entirely ignored by other religions, cultures or relationships? — Judaka
Is the wrongness of those actions really innate if this were the case? — Judaka
how much can you twist and bend something until what it's based on changes? — Judaka
Neither. Values differ from facts, so they are not factual. But it is not just an opinion or preference either. — Moliere
What would you say it is that's different from facts or opinions/preferences? — Terrapin Station
Wouldn't there be many things that are different from those? — Moliere
The question is about the status of flaws in a film--wasn't that what I was asking you about? It's not a fact that there are flaws in a film, and it's not simply a result of preferences/opinions, but it's what? — Terrapin Station
Star Wars was primarily plot-driven, that the characters were two-dimensional, and the dialogue came out because of the storyteller had a plot they wanted to tell and it drove that plot.
In general -- engaging with the history of an artform, in its production and as audience, is how you discover aesthetic values. — Moliere
There is a difference between my saying "I like Star Wars" and my saying "Star Wars is a good movie" - — Moliere
There is a difference between my saying "I like Star Wars" and my saying "Star Wars is a good movie" — Moliere
Values ARE just ways that people feel about things. — Terrapin Station
There are extreme cases. — Moliere
But something is good because of such and such reasons which have to do with comparison between artworks, context, history, the elements of art, and the principles of art. — Moliere
We can value abstract principles, however, which can override our intuitions. — praxis
We can value abstract principles, however, which can override our intuitions.
— praxis
The only way to know if you value an abstract principle is via your intuition. — Terrapin Station
With enough conditioning an abstract principle can become intuitive, I'm sure, but initially they are learned or reasoned out and may have no personal value at all. People can adopt principles on faith. — praxis
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