if you measured morality with nothing but numbers, what numbers would correlate with actions seen as traditionally "moral", what is this quantifiable, measurable, and objecitve benefit that is gained from actions that are traditionally viewed as moral or good. — Marzipanmaddox
By my ken, morality is simple. It is a collective of people mutually sacrificing their natural freedoms in order to empower the collective. — Marzipanmaddox
I think that the facticity of Ontology is somewhat absurd. Ontology speculates upon what Being is like. You can only ever glean certain things. You don't really ever arrive at any truths concerning Being. — thewonder
Immorality, in this sense, is the individual doing something that is contrary to this qualification. — Marzipanmaddox
I'm not sure that's possible. Because I'm not sure that moral arguments have components that are capable of being reduced to numbers and/or raw measurements. Moral arguments comprise complex, interconnected, abstract concepts; these do not easily reduce in the way you suggest.
The only possible objective basis for morality, as far as we could ever determine, is the flourishing or languishing of the community. — Janus
By the way, I'm still waiting for you to give an example of ontology that isn't making a factual claim (re objective facts) in your opinion.
I had to look this word up, but I will explain with my limited understanding of this. Ontology, by my understanding, is separating things into groups and organizing them.
While this may be attributed to philosophy, while this may have roots in philosophy, this is not philosophy. It is just a system of organizing things. While you can have opinionated debates about ontology, this is truly just arguing in favor of which system of organization is most accurate and optimized. — Marzipanmaddox
The intention is to suggest that there is an unintelligable infinite variance of color which can never be adequately described. — thewonder
There is none. The notion of an objective benefit is a category error.
If there was no objective benefit to morality, than moral societies would not exist. They would be no more capable or powerful than amoral societies, — Marzipanmaddox
Wait, you're claiming that ontology isn't philosophy?
I'm saying that ontology is no more of a philosophy than math. — Marzipanmaddox
My point was that Ontology is not necessarily concerned with factual claims even though it can be. — thewonder
No, that's not morality. That's a description of something which you judge to be moral. If you want to know what morality is, then consult a dictionary or an encyclopaedia.
You understand that it's noncontroversially considered one of the main branches of philosophy, though?
The issue is that the common definition of morality relies explicitly upon entirely subjective and opinionated arguments. — Marzipanmaddox
My definition there, is what I would say that morality would be defined as if it were not convoluted with any arguments that are in any way dependent upon the subjective human experience and relied only on impartial, non-opinionated metrics to create that definition. — Marzipanmaddox
That's just immorality as defined by collectivism. The title of this discussion seems misleading. Is it a normative ethical discussion where you argue in favour of collectivism against individualism, or a meta-ethical discussion about objective morality vs. subjective morality?
I'm arguing that collectivism, by default, is the definition of morality. — Marzipanmaddox
Morality allows multiple humans to function as a collective, this collective is more powerful than the individual. This is why moral societies were able to overpower any individual who sought to contest them.
Objective here, meaning, impartial, subject to nothing but the data, nothing but the correlation between the data, having no influence of human opinion or human sentiment. That's what I mean by objective.
To bring up ethics seems out of place, ethics, in this sense, is defined by the same manner as morality. The objective benefit of an ethical society, the measurable and quantifiable result that is produced by an ethical society, is once again this increased production, increased power, increased survival, and increased yield from said society.
I'm just looking at the quantifiable results from quantifiable actions. I'm arguing that these things like morality, and now ethics, can be quantified in a manner that explains them in a way that is entirely free from the subjective human experience such as feelings, ideals, opinions, sentiments, and sensations.
I argue that ethical and moral arguments should not be in any way dependent upon any sort of opinionation. The trajectory of a rock that you throw into the air is not subject to opinionation. Hopefully we can agree upon that. — Marzipanmaddox
A human being, essentially a meat rock that throws itself, made of the same chemicals as any rock, as any breeze, as any river. How is it that this combination of elements is somehow now "beyond science", this is like reorganizing a large set of finite numbers, yet somehow arriving to the conclusion that the result of this organization is infinite, beyond quantification, beyond science.
When the original set of numbers you have, the raw chemicals that comprise the human body, are all known to be explicitly and invariably quantifiable and finite, how is it that you can rearrange these chemicals, doing nothing more than simple addition, yet argue the result is somehow infinite? The commutative property and the associative property of addition clearly disprove this argument. — Marzipanmaddox
Offhand I can't think of an ontological claim that wouldn't be a factual claim. Can you think of one?
Everything is made of consciousness — Marzipanmaddox
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