Mind you, you can obviously disagree with the distinction but l think it's useful ( at least for me ) ., it seems obvious to me that people don't just express an emotion when they make moral statements.
With certain assumptions/rules yes. So if something like "Lying is wrong" is a starting assumtion then
Would you lie to a murderer knocking at your door inquiring about your family members — Wittgenstein
Do you think we can assign truth values to basic moral assumptions ? — Wittgenstein
With certain assumptions/rules yes. So if something like "Lying is wrong" is a starting assumtion then "Lying to your frined is wrong" is true. — khaled
That's really interesting and l agree with placing truth values on metaethic statements but I think that they belong to realm of logic and language — Wittgenstein
I think that response is classical Utilitarianism. That maxim can also have problems in certain cases like the following one. Should a judge sentence an innocent person to death to avoid mass rioting that can cause 100s of death ? Most people would not justify that. There is also another problem with maximizing happiness and reducing suffering because the consequences may not be achieved and yet the deeds may still be noble and good. Consider a firefighter who tries to save a baby but fails in the end. He hasn't reduced any suffering in the end but the act was clearly moral and good.If "Lying is wrong" is the only moral assumption I'm making then it would bo wrong to lie to a murderer. To make it ok in that scenario you'd need something more detailed like: "Taking a course of action that can be reasonably inferred to incur a lot more suffering than other available options is wrong" for example would permit lying to said murderer.
I want to clarify my point on what turns a statement into a proposition. Non cognitivism asserts that moral statements are incapable of having truth values, and that means assigning truth values i.e true or false is meaningless. Non--cognitivism doesn't imply that all moral statements have to be accepted as either true or false and it also doesn't imply that people cannot disagree with each other. It is an issue of logic and language and not that of ethics .No. I don't think you can assign absolute truth values to anything. Moral assumptions (as well as other assumptions) are statements you proclaim to be true which allow for further reasoning but that leaves them open to someone coming along and saying "But actually I don't agree with the statement lying is wrong and I personally prefer the statement lying is right" and there is nothing you can do about that. There is no assumption you can assign a truth value to in such a way that makes it immune to someone coming along and disagreeing with it.
There is also another problem with maximizing happiness and reducing suffering because the consequences may not be achieved and yet the deeds may still be noble and good. Consider a firefighter who tries to save a baby but fails in the end. He hasn't reduced any suffering in the end but the act was clearly moral and good. — Wittgenstein
If someone doesn't feel that x is morally right/permissible, etc., or that y is morally wrong/impermissible, etc., then I wouldn't say that "x is morally right..."/"y is morally wrong..." is a moral stance that they have. — Terrapin Station
No. I don't think you can assign absolute truth values to anything. — khaled
If someone were to say both "Lying is wrong" and "Lying to your friend is okay," then they're probably just not expressing their view very clearly or in enough detail or with enough qualifications — Terrapin Station
No? 2+2=4? Triangles have three sides and squares four? — tim wood
If M is true, and I think it is, then it is fair to ask what makes it true — tim wood
I think that response is classical Utilitarianism — Wittgenstein
that means assigning truth values i.e true or false is meaningless — Wittgenstein
The problem is, I think you can ask this "what makes it true" question forever.
Murder is wrong
Why
Because it harms someone else which is bad
Why
Because harming other people is not respecting their free will which is bad
Why
etc etc — khaled
Are you prepared to let everything be hostage to the infant who just says why? — tim wood
Are you prepared to deny the possibility of such a system of thinking? — tim wood
Not a result of reasoning? Let's start at square one. Terrapin: is murder wrong, yes or no?"Murder is wrong" isn't a result of reasoning. It's just a strong emotion. — Terrapin Station
But where that infant begins and where a serious skeptic ends is completely subjective. — khaled
and I have no grounds on which to criticize them other than pragmatic ones. — khaled
Not a result of reasoning? Let's start at square one. Terrapin: is murder wrong, yes or no? — tim wood
And don't you rather mean where the infant ends...? — tim wood
Assuming a serious skeptic is not an infant, can you tell the difference between the two? — tim wood
Maybe it's just a game to take a stance of anti-reason, to deny reason, but all that is, is a self-proclamation of being a fool. — tim wood
Two points. Pragmatic grounds are either reasoned or they are not, and that aside, you still have reason. — tim wood
Oh! Wait! You can't call them bad people; you have no reason to! — tim wood
Ethics or morality is neither subjective nor objective, but collective or intersubjective if you will — ChatteringMonkey
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.