Let's look again, shall we?
— creativesoul
Re "you're not reading what I'm writing, what happened to reading this:
"Did you read 'The nature of morality is that it's opinions of the relative permissibility. . . — Terrapin Station
Being right, or its complement, mistaken, is a rational judgement... — Mww
conscience... it is most certainly not always a reliable guide to good behaviour. — creativesoul
That is to conflate being mistaken with being called "mistaken" — creativesoul
I read it. That would be the third different thing with the exact same definition/criterion. Morality. Moral. Immoral.
Three very different things. — creativesoul
conscience... it is most certainly not always a reliable guide to good behaviour.
— creativesoul
Gotta go with what ya got, doncha know. — Mww
That is to conflate being mistaken with being called "mistaken"
— creativesoul
As...the promising and the making of a promise?... — Mww
Morality is codified rules — creativesoul
Rationalization comes easy to some. — creativesoul
It is humanly impossible to make a mistake on purpose. — creativesoul
Coming to terms with them involves common language use — creativesoul
counts as being moral by virtue of having it — creativesoul
I mostly just find it amusing that you present yourself as you do despite such fundamental and obvious reading and learning deficiencies... — Terrapin Station
Show me how my common language use facilitates me coming to terms with my codified moral rules. — Mww
Weaknesses: None noted.
That's the opinion of those reviewing the standardized intelligence testing that I've personal 'taken'... — creativesoul
You think, with a handful of exceptions, that this board is full of people with reading and learning deficiencies? — DingoJones
In a rational system, judgement is nothing more than the faculty of uniting the concepts of understanding to the intuitions of sense, from which an external object is cognized without contradiction, and is called experience.
In a moral system, which is rational but with different means and ends, employment of the faculty of judgement responsible for uniting a freely determined law with a willful volition, from which an act is cognized as good, and is called morality.
Need be no more complicated than that. — Mww
Oh great. Well if its that simple... Just the small matter of translating any of that into language that actually means anything and we're done.
So let's make a start.
"The faculty of uniting the concepts of understanding to the intuitions of sense". Care to explain what that actually means? Faculty (a capability or power of the mind), concepts of understanding (totally lost as to what they might be), intuitions of sense (I know what intuitions are, I know what senses are, but not sure why you've specified intuitions related to these), cognized without contradiction (lost again).
Have you tried writing in English, it really is a perfectly adequate language. — Isaac
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