Why is subjective morality respected? — Marzipanmaddox
the objective metric of benefit/harm — Marzipanmaddox
They harm society, because the objective metric of benefit/harm I use is net yield over an indefinite period of time. — Marzipanmaddox
Traditional morality respected this to a very high degree, in that the suffering/death of the individual was and irrelevant when compared the well-being and success of society. — Marzipanmaddox
The subjective human experience has proven itself to be completely invalid in every hard science — Marzipanmaddox
Essentially, the subjective experience of humans is only significant in so far that it actually produces hard, objective, and quantifiable results. — Marzipanmaddox
A very common example would be Geocentrism, as by the human experience, it seems like the sun moves around the Earth, and people always thought this, but according to science, this is actually false. — Marzipanmaddox
Correctness by default is not subjective. That's the point I'm trying to make. If your argument is subjective, changes over time, influenced by opinion. There is not anything "correct" about it, it is just mutual consent upon a delusion. — Marzipanmaddox
Look at math, something like simple addition, you can say the statement 2+2=4 is correct, because this is not subject to debate. It is correct because it is 100% valid, 100% accurate, 100% of the time. — Marzipanmaddox
Correctness by default is not subjective. — Marzipanmaddox
There are people who are not willing to sacrifice themselves and others for the benefit of the collective. That's why they reject what you call objective morality.
What establishes value? It's cash — Marzipanmaddox
The market value is far less of a subjective metric than sentimental value. That's all I'm trying to say. Even if it is not perfect, it is far closer to a functional measurement than pure feelings alone. — Marzipanmaddox
Man is not made of fire despite the fact that he is warm, this is where humans draw a false conclusion based upon their subjective experience, and this is where we draw the conclusion "human suffering is always wrong" from. We don't like human suffering, thus we conclude it must be bad, and is always bad. This is not a particulary valid point, and it is the equivalent of "A child does not like broccoli, thus broccoli is bad for the child and an unhealthy food — Marzipanmaddox
An example of subjective vs objective yield. Four children are suffering, you have the ability to alleviate each of their suffering. Suffering causes the child not to funciton, it produces nothing. Each child always costs the same amount to keep alive, $10 a day. You are their boss/owner, they are your property. — Marzipanmaddox
As for proper usage of words, you could still define that in a mathematical algoryhymic sense. A computer can speak in proper grammar, and this just indicates that it is dictated by an objective and empirical model, even if it is a complex one. There is no amount of opinion or feeling involved in speeking with correct grammar, when there is with philosophy — Marzipanmaddox
As for the circular aspect. I don't really know what you're trying to say. That math is "circular"? Math isn't even based upon logic, math is just a depiction and description of quantity in the world around you. If math is somehow circular logic, then the existence of quantity is equally as much so circular logic. — Marzipanmaddox
Because you argue that philosophy is correct. Philosophy is entirely subjective. If philosophy is correct, that means correctness is somehow a subjective condition. — Marzipanmaddox
So philosophy can't make claims about (objective) facts in your view?
The point I'm trying to make is, why respect subjective morality? Why respect the way somebody feels, their pain, their suffering, more than objective morality? — Marzipanmaddox
This is a fair point? So you agree that human suffering is a completely invalid metric and cannot be used to justify any argument? I reference this because human suffering, ethics, morality, and these sorts of philosophies of compassion are incredibly prevalent in Western society. — Marzipanmaddox
Grammar functions despite the subjectivity because it doesn't need to be objectively optimized. Optimizing grammar and language would lead to increased yield, but it functions say at 80% capacity, earning 80% creating 80% of the potential revenue it could if it were optimized. — Marzipanmaddox
As for math describing quantity. You're somehow confusing quality and attributes with quantity, these are not the same thing. — Marzipanmaddox
Math still works perfectly. As for math creating information by itself, that's again unture. You can take pure math, existing without any relation to the real world, and then you can then in turn use this to create practical applications. The pure math still functions perfectly fine without reality, it's just that it can also be applied to reality. — Marzipanmaddox
No, it can't.
If a philosopher says "I philosophize that rocks fall to the ground when thrown into the air", it stops being philosophy and instead just becomes a fact. — Marzipanmaddox
The problem I have with your approach to value, in general, is that value is always value to somebody. There is no "object" involved here, no cosmic table of prices. It's not objective. — Echarmion
A critic knows the price of everything, and the value of nothing. — Aristotle
Recently I had a little discussion with somebody who claimed that morality comes from within and that it is (therefore) totally subjective. — Matias
If they were, it would be up to any individual either to create or to sample his or her own morality, j — Matias
a moral system - unlike a piece of pop-music - has to be coherent and consistent. — Matias
Therefore moral values and rules exist "out there", they are not objective like the moon, but they have a status that is beyond personal whims and predilections. — Matias
I am (more or less) "free" to choose or adopt among existing moral systems (i.e. values and rules), — Matias
Another point liberal Westerners tend to forget: That we are able to leave the moral world of our family in order go "shopping around" in the market of existing moral systems is a privilege and an exception; it is not typical for morality as such. My guess is that if the vast majority of all people of the present or the past abandoned the moral system of their group (family, caste, class, village...) they suffered severe consequences, from being just the village weirdo, to being ostracized or even killed ("honor killings"). Those who take the moral world of the USA or Germany (as they are today!) to be representative for humankind in general must be really blinkered. — Matias
Morality is a *social* phenomenon — Matias
here is no universally accepted morality or moral code that I know of
The only possible objective basis for morality, as far as we could ever determine, is the flourishing or languishing of the community.
...if we reduced all moral arguments to nothing but numbers, nothing but raw measurements that are completely independent from any subjective interpretation of these arguments... — Marzipanmaddox
You are correct in this. Just because we do not know of one, doesn't mean it doesn't exist. — Marzipanmaddox
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