Terrapin Station
You tell me — Bartricks
Bartricks
What I told you is that if you're just telling me your view then I wouldn't need a citation for anything — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Bartricks
Terrapin Station
Bartricks
I'm not trying to convince you of anything. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Bartricks
So good persuasive tactics from you. I'm sure folks are impressed. You'll have lots of followers soon. — Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station
Bartricks
If reason could value something other than what it values, or is valuing, per se, and not merely on account of differing circumstances, then what good could it be as a divine commander? — Janus
Janus
If reason could value something other than what it values, or is valuing, per se, and not merely on account of differing circumstances, then what good could it be as a divine commander? — Janus
I don't understand your question or its relevance to the OP. — Bartricks
Wayfarer
Terrapin Station
Still, you say it is a bad argument because moral values are the values of a subject, namely Reason. — Janus
Terrapin Station
The ancients assumed that reason would lead us all to the same understanding. But their criterion was not ‘objectivity’ in the modern sense - the ideas of objectivity and for that matter subjectivity have changed considerably in the transition to modernity. The Eclipse of Reason discusses this in detail. — Wayfarer
bert1
1. If moral values are the values of a subject, then they will be contingent, not necessary
2. Moral values are necessary, not contingent (that is, if something is valuable, it is valuable of necessity not contingently)
3. Therefore moral values are not the values of a subject — Bartricks
Possibility
1. If moral values are the values of a subject, then they will be contingent, not necessary
2. Moral values are necessary, not contingent (that is, if something is valuable, it is valuable of necessity not contingently)
3. Therefore moral values are not the values of a subject — Bartricks
Terrapin Station
2 seems clearly false to me — bert1
Terrapin Station
Moral values are relations between a subject and their experience of behaviour: theirs and/or others’. It is a property of the subject only in relation to behaviour, and a property of behaviour only in relation to the subject. This means that moral values are contingent upon both subject and behaviour. — Possibility
bert1
↪bert1 For what reason? — Shamshir
That is considered by most to constitute a decisive refutation of all subjectivist views about moral values and prescriptions. — Bartricks
Isaac
EDIT: Looks like Bartricks might be right. Seems the majority of philosophers are moral realists and moral cognitivists according to philpapers survey. — bert1
Terrapin Station
Looks like Bartricks might be right. Seems the majority of philosophers are moral realists and moral cognitivists according to philpapers survey. — bert1
Possibility
It's okay to say that it's a relation between the subject and what they're valuing, I suppose, but the valuing part of that equation only occurs in the subject's brain. — Terrapin Station
Fooloso4
The ancients assumed that reason would lead us all to the same understanding. But their criterion was not ‘objectivity’ in the modern sense - the ideas of objectivity and for that matter subjectivity have changed considerably in the transition to modernity. The Eclipse of Reason discusses this in detail. — Wayfarer
The Greek understanding of reason is significantly different from modern versions. — Fooloso4
Terrapin Station
The ‘valuing part’ you refer to is a set of measurable/observable events in the brain that can be related to the experience of valuing. That doesn’t amount to a value relation, — Possibility
Mww
you are skeptical of, and, in what way are you skeptical of it?specific claim about interpreting Euthyphro. — Terrapin Station
Possibility
Moral values are relations between a subject and their experience of behaviour: theirs and/or others’. — Possibility
Terrapin Station
What is the
specific claim about interpreting Euthyphro. — Terrapin Station
you are skeptical of, and, in what way are you skeptical of it? — Mww
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