If you can't internalize the meaning of moral statements or moral behaviors, then how could you know they are statements with moral meaning, — Janus
I'm still curious to see how far we can take it, and what it will look like when we arrive to a reasonable conclusion. — Merkwurdichliebe
If morals/morality is only internal to individuals, then my morals/morality are internal to me, Joe's is internal to Joe, yours are internal to you, etc.
But you somehow took this to imply "So then, your morals, and praxis' morals are internal to me." So I'm asking you to explain how you're figuring this. — Terrapin Station
In addition to the ones we've already arrived at, I presume? — creativesoul
That's a bad analogy, because the existence of neutrinos is known via predictions and precise measurements of observed and quantifiable phenomena which confirm those predictions. Nothing like that is possible with the moral thought and behavior of others. — Janus
What would you claim are the bases of inferences that others have moral feelings, thoughts and dispositions, and that their behavior is morally motivated? — Janus
after the wave of interlopers that invaded earlier today, I would say that the methodology is solid, and will at least stand up to, more or less, weak contention. — Merkwurdichliebe
Morals require others. Others are external. Morals require external. Morals require brains. Brains are internal. Morals require internal.
Need we go on here? — creativesoul
What would you claim are the bases of inferences that others have moral feelings, thoughts and dispositions, and that their behavior is morally motivated? — Janus
The problem is that predicted and observed behaviors... ...tell us nothing necessary about motivation. — Janus
I woot'n be uh nuthins with mah head all full uh stuffins... — creativesoul
The dichotomy of internal/external has been rendered inherently inadequate for the task of setting out the origen of morals. — creativesoul
There's much to liked about many of the veins of thought herein. It would serve us well to find the common threads binding them all. — creativesoul
Look to how different people employ the term "moral". What do all those different people's uses have in common, if anything at all? If there is a central vein that is part and parcel to each regardless of that which is subject to particulars, then we bookmark it as a means for setting it aside. We must do that prior to establishing/determining the scope of it's relevancy and what can be garnered and/or gleaned from it. — creativesoul
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