I don't say that you can't reason once you've stated your preferences. — Terrapin Station
In most cases, "Lying is wrong" is equivalent to "If I lie I won't attain my goals". (This means that moral statements do have a truth value.) — Magnus Anderson
Are you trying to learn there? Or is this you wanting to be a teacher and being offended that you're not accepted as such? — Terrapin Station
Whenever you ask someone a question such as "Is X Y?" you are asking for their opinion. — Magnus Anderson
Congratulation! You have earned a spot on the mere-S troll list. You''re only the second enlistee. That means I hold that you have removed all doubt as to your being a troll, and you earn thereby the epithet all trolls deserve. Fuck off! I shall waste no more time on you, but I will, when and as seems appropriate to me, warn others of your troll-like qualities. — tim wood
Really? Always? Is two plus two four? Are those nice folks over there your parents? Do you live on planet earth? Your answers to these and all other questions are just your expressions of your opinion? Is there anything that you know? — tim wood
I have a question for you. Is murder wrong? — tim wood
. I would reject that such truths exist, but do not think that the parties who put forth such an argument are necessarily making an emotional appeal.
It is possible that most non cognitivists support a hybrid theory with various ethical irealist ideas overlapping.Since non-cognitivism is a species of irrealism about ethics, it should be unsurprising that many of its main motivations overlap with those for other versions of ethical irrealism
Prescriptivists suggest that moral judgments are a species of prescriptive judgement and that moral sentences in the indicative mood are semantically more akin to imperatives than indicatives.
Hence they fail tests for meaningful discourse proposed by logical positivists.
While the emotivist may fall under two broad different categories such as behaviourism or expressivism. It is also interesting to note that mental states are not always emotions. They can have imperatives, indicative moods and much more. This theory is different from the ones that l have mentioned above in the sense that it describes them all by placing mental states of the brain as a foundation to determine the meaning of ethical statements.In recent years, however, the term ‘expressivist’ has come to be used in a narrower way, to refer to views which attempt to construct a systematic semantics for moral sentences by pairing them with the states of mind that the sentences are said to express. Such expressivists hold that the meanings of all sentences containing moral terms are determined by the mental states that they serve to express.
Shared in what sense? The show and tell sense? Do you mean literally having the same reason somehow? — Terrapin Station
My beef with emotivism is that it claims that moral judgments are based solely on one's personal preferences.
That's not true. — Magnus Anderson
I mean being able to re-create the relevant brain-states in their own mind with sufficient accuracy. — Echarmion
But there are also things that are reason-able, like "murder is wrong", because these kinds of brain-states, whatever we want to call them, contain in them a connection to other subjects. — Echarmion
If "Murder is wrong" isn't "reason-able" as you put it because of the connection to other subjects (in other words, you explained that that's not actually what you are referring to with the term "reason-able"), then what makes it reason-able? — Terrapin Station
It's reason-able because the statement is processed by a part of the brain that operates on a reason-ruleset, so to speak. A part that we use for things that concern interpersonal relations. — Echarmion
Since non-cognitivism is a species of irrealism about ethics, it should be unsurprising that many of its main motivations overlap with those for other versions of ethical irrealism
My understanding of emotivism (and what I think is the case) is that it is the recognition that personal preferences are necessary components of all sincerely held moral stances. All (sincere) moral judgements are therefore, to some degree or other, expressions of emotional attitudes. — ChrisH
So any phenomena in that part of the brain, and/or any phenomena focused on interpersonal relations is reason-able? (I don't know if it's also reasonable without the hyphen in your view.) — Terrapin Station
Yes. Anything else implies murder is not wrong. Any takers on that? That is, that can make the case? Mere unsupported claims and rants not appropriate for this forum.I believe you would assert that the statement "Murder is wrong" is a true statement. — EricH
The question that comes to mind here is, if moral stances are expressions of emotional attitudes to some degree then what else are they? — Echarmion
It seems like you keep telling me info that's not what it is for "murder is wrong" to be reason-able then.
I'm wanting you to describe how it can be reason-able. — Terrapin Station
Whatever else the people making moral claims intend to convey. At the very least, moral judgements (in contrast to non-moral preferences) signify disapproval/approval for the actions of others. — ChrisH
I am not certain it's possible to describe how reason works. There are arguments to be made about whether murder should be wrong. Those arguments must be logically valid and proceed from acceptable premises. — Echarmion
Yes. Anything else implies murder is not wrong. — tim wood
To say that murder is, in some sense, not in-itself wrong, especially based on "feeling" or "opinion" is like saying that murder is a liverwurst sandwich. Hey, just my opinion, and therefore and thereby I must be right! I have it written down right here in front of me! — tim wood
F-off Terrapin. If you've an argument to make, I'll read it. - You obviously have either not read, or not understood, or both, my post. — tim wood
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