What makes something bad morally is that an individual has the disposition that it's bad morally. That's what making something bad morally is. Things are morally good or bad to someone. — Terrapin Station
Both ↪tim wood
and myself have pointed to near universal moral judgments, and at least my underlying question on these is, as above, does it not show that there can be objectively moral views that individual thoughts can be in error of. — Rank Amateur
So I would say there is evidence that I can think things that are in conflict with objective and verifiable reality. — Rank Amateur
Is there some support for: all moral judgments are individual mental phenomena
and therefor subjective. ? — Rank Amateur
there's a complete lack of evidence of moral judgments occurring outside of minds. — Terrapin Station
"Therefore subjective" is just a stipulation of definition. We're using "subjective" to refer to "occurs only in minds." That doesn't need any support. It's just a stipulation about how we're going to use a term — Terrapin Station
Near universal moral judgments on some issues is evidence that the source of some moral judgments could have a source outside individual mental phenomena. — Rank Amateur
Question: we know that you think he did bad things. But did he do bad things? The question seems absurd, but it matters because it amounts to the question of what the ground of any standards will be. — tim wood
I don't want to write anything else for a moment, because I want the only response to be asking you HOW that would be evidence of objectivity — Terrapin Station
firstly, this is your flying teapot, not mine. It should not be my job to prove your point is false. I — Rank Amateur
I find 2 a more logical explanation than 1. — Rank Amateur
billions upon billions of individual mental phenomena all independently reach the same moral judgment. — Rank Amateur
The ground of any standards, for anything, is always persons' preferences. — Terrapin Station
Well said. I think you're correct, and in under twenty-five words. Had I been able of your thought,, it'd saved me hours. Thank you! Please try to make your rescues of clarity sooner, for all our sakes!This view that moral judgments are individual metal phenomena - and therefore by definition subjective - is, i think at the core of the disagreement. — Rank Amateur
"Therefore subjective" is just a stipulation of definition. We're using "subjective" to refer to "occurs only in minds." That doesn't need any support. It's just a stipulation about how we're going to use a term. — Terrapin Station
Near universal moral judgments on some issues is evidence that the source of some moral judgments could have a source outside individual mental phenomena.
— Rank Amateur
Again, how would that be evidence of that? You're not explaining this idea. You're just stating it, but it seems completely arbitrary to me. — Terrapin Station
But I fail to understand how in that case you can move out of your personal preference mode to register any sort of complaint or argument that anyone should find cause to pay attention to, except as they prefer to. — tim wood
I argue that the monstrousness of these bad actors is bad in itself — tim wood
Question: do you suppose reason and its products to be universalizable? — tim wood
2+2=4 is an expression of a certain kind of reason. Is it true, or is it true-for-you but not true, or maybe not true at all, but you just go with it? Which, please? — tim wood
Quite a while ago I distinguished between murder and killing; you must have missed that. — tim wood
Your remarks about Kant and generalization simply make clear you have no understanding of his ideas. — tim wood
In this you're akin to a pre-Kantian idealist. To the idealist it all occurs only in minds. The question, then, is that if it really is all a matter of mind, then how do you know anything at all of the world? How do you know anything at all, period? How even do you get to the question of knowledge? — tim wood
Answer: collective community wisdom. — tim wood
I understand what you are saying, and if I have missed it mea culpa ahead of time. But has this point actually been supported here. — Rank Amateur
I don't understand what you mean by supported. — Isaac
So the relativists, not believing that to be the case, have nothing to support — Isaac
I meant what is the basis of TS's and I think your core belief that all mental phenomena is by definition subjective. — Rank Amateur
I do think it is very possible as I have said a few times, that it is very possible that there is an outside source to some moral judgments. Call it human nature, instinct, evolution or God.
And I find this a better explanation of the near universal moral judgments on some issues than your explanation. — Rank Amateur
Again, I'm just saying that moral sentiments are contained within minds, and everyone already agrees with that so I feel no need to support it. — Isaac
that could actually be the worst philosophic argument I have ever heard. — Rank Amateur
Anscombe MMP, 1958)
Kant's Categorical Imperetive (sic) “...is useless without stipulations as to what shall count as a relevant description of an action with a view to constructing a maxim about it.”. — Isaac
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