Don't quite understand what you mean, sorry. Care to elaborate? — ChatteringMonkey
It's a type of convention, which originate in dialogue and agreement between people roughly speaking. You can find it in the brains of people, but not in one particular person individually, which is why the label 'subjective' doesn't really apply. — ChatteringMonkey
For "intersubjective, not subjective or objective" to amount to anything substantial, you'd need to be locating the valuing part somewhere other than just persons' brains or in the world outside of their brains. (Whatever would be left.) — Terrapin Station
Not a result of reasoning? Let's start at square one. Terrapin: is murder wrong, yes or no?
— tim wood
Sure, I feel that it is wrong. That's not a result of reasoning. It's an emotional disposition that I have. — Terrapin Station
Yup I agree. I'm saying there is no stopping the fool by calling him a fool. He doesn't think he is, he thinks we're the fools. I'm not taking that stance, I'm pointing out that taking the stance of reason cannot stop someone from taking a stance of anti reason....
The only point I'm making is that reason is society bound which is why using it against those who don't want to use it will never work. Calling a fool a fool doesn't do anything.... I, personally, am a fan of reason but if someone isn't there is nothing I can do to convince him. Calling him a fool won't work (if he truly is anti reason) but I still WILL. That's all I'm saying — khaled
You were not asked how you felt. — tim wood
To elaborate a bit more, if you say morality is subjective because the valuing happens in the brain, you need some additional explanation to say that eventhough it is 'merely' subjective there are other mechanisms that make it a bad idea to act only one your individual subjective idea of what is moral. And unlike say preference in taste, there are definitely consequences to acting on you own subjective morals only... so it seems to me the distinction between things that are individual and collective is a usefull one here. — ChatteringMonkey
Yes, I was. You asked my moral stance on it. — Terrapin Station
Let's start at square one. Terrapin: is murder wrong, yes or no? — Terrapin Station
"Murder is wrong" is a moral stance.
You don't agree with that? — Terrapin Station
You're asked a fair - and basic - question. But you refuse to answer. — tim wood
Answer the question. — tim wood
Subjective shouldn't have a "merely" first off, as if it's simpler or inferior or whatever. — Terrapin Station
Whether something is a bad idea is also subjective, of course. — Terrapin Station
Morality is dispositions about interpersonal behavior. So that means that by definition, it's not just about one's own behavior. — Terrapin Station
And by definition, it's dispositions that people feel strong enough about that they'd take forcible action to prevent,and sometimes to obligate, some behavior (otherwise it would just be etiquette). So of course there's a social aspect to it, but moral stances, moral valuations themselves are individual and subjective. — Terrapin Station
It's a bad idea, — ChatteringMonkey
morality being about interpersonal behaviour doesn't make the disposition itself interpersonal. — ChatteringMonkey
If it's only an individual disposition, then you are missing something. — ChatteringMonkey
she will still have to act according to the dominant mores... — ChatteringMonkey
then you merely have a view on morality, but that does not constitute an actual morality that is enforced socially. — ChatteringMonkey
If he does wrong, do we say, "Oh, that's all right, for after all he's just a fool; let him go to do it again"? — tim wood
But reason itself is reason bound, or it's not reason - sez I. — tim wood
My point is that there are moral rights and wrongs. And there must be. — tim wood
If Terrapin murders someone because he feels like it, do the rest of us put him in prison because we feel like it? — tim wood
And if Terrapin doesn't feel like going to prison, what then? — tim wood
morality being about interpersonal behaviour doesn't make the disposition itself interpersonal.
— ChatteringMonkey
I don't know if that's what you meant to type, but I couldn't agree more. — Terrapin Station
If she wants particular consequences, etc., sure. But that in itself isn't actually morality. Morality is value assessments of interpersonal behavior. — Terrapin Station
Sure, there's no law or no mores etc. backing up your personal view. That's often the case, isn't it? — Terrapin Station
The mores are the morality. — ChatteringMonkey
But you can't make any sense out of the mores without adding in meaning, value judgments, etc. — Terrapin Station
But I think it would be wrong to dismiss the different role the justification plays for moral stances as opposed to emotions.
— Echarmion
I'm not sure what this is saying. — Terrapin Station
I don't see why that is a problem, that's part of it sure. Money also doesn't make sense without humans giving it meaning and valuing it, though there's an aspect to it that's more then that... more than an individual valuation that is. — ChatteringMonkey
This also means we can evaluate different moral stances, including our own, in a way we cannot do with "simple" emotions. — Echarmion
It's not a problem. Morality is just something different than the social enforcement of morality. — Terrapin Station
"Bad"/"good" are ALWAYS subjective assessments, — Terrapin Station
I did. You don't agree that I did. — Terrapin Station
Really? How about, "Bad is bad." Or, "Good is good." — tim wood
Whether you did or not is a matter of fact, — tim wood
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