I have always viewed these types of arguments as, "Too hard for me to solve, so I guess they can't be objective or real." — Philosophim
In fact, there is no set of contingent conditions imaginable that undo or even mitigate the ethical value, the "badness" of the one child's torture. — Constance
Usually it’s not “too hard” it’s “outright impossible”. Because we can’t fix a starting point. — khaled
But until it has been irrevocably proven that such things are impossible — Philosophim
And when and how will this happen? What would you take as “irrevocative proof”? — khaled
When it is logically shown that it must be the case that it is impossible. Proof by contradiction for example. — Philosophim
Any application of logic requires premises. I’m saying we cannot fix these premises. You’re saying we can. What I am saying is supported by observation that people find different things wrong. What do you say to support your position? — khaled
That moral premises are not fixed. There is no universal moral premises. That moral realism is bullshit. Same thing. — khaled
That moral premises are fixed. There are universal moral premises. That moral realism is sound. Same thing. — Philosophim
Ok. How do we come to access these fixed moral premises? Are there moral irrefutable commandments written on a rock somewhere or? — khaled
How do we come to access these fixed moral premises? Are there moral irrefutable commandments written on a rock somewhere or? — khaled
I assumed you were taking the opposite position so I was questioning that. What is your position then? — khaled
I have always viewed these types of arguments as, "Too hard for me to solve, so I guess they can't be objective or real. — Philosophim
Usually it’s not “too hard” it’s “outright impossible”. Because we can’t fix a starting point. — khaled
it is not necessary to reject every opinion until you can find reasons to justify it; it is only necessary to reject an opinion if you find reasons to reject it, and it is acceptable to hold any opinion, for no reason at all, until such reasons to reject it are found.
Like with coherentism, contradictions between different opinions are good reasons to reject some or all of them — Pfhorrest
Justificationism, if true, would make it impossible to ever rationally hold an opinio — Pfhorrest
Thinking you need a starting point is what makes it seem impossible. — Pfhorrest
there is something real and something moral – as there certainly inevitably seems to be, since even if you deny their universality some things will still look true or false to you and feel good or bad to you – — Pfhorrest
You may have done the right thing, but the value in play is not at all effected by the conditions vis a vis the other children. In fact, there is no set of contingent conditions imaginable that undo or even mitigate the ethical value, the "badness" of the one child's torture. It is impossible to conceive of such a mitigation. — Constance
you have to answer for why you believe there is no good reason to reject the thing — khaled
I don’t think so. As I understand it, it would only make it impossible to insist on any opinion or other. It makes knowledge and certainty impossible. But most of us hold opinions we are not certain about anyways.
I don’t think your position is any different from justificationalism, it just sounds different. It’s hiding the uncertainty behind an extra layer that makes us not think about it all the time. That’s all. — khaled
That there is no good reason to reject anything is the default state of affairs. — Pfhorrest
The onus is on those who want to change your mind to show that there is good reason to reject your current opinion. — Pfhorrest
Back to the topic: People are commonly of the opinion that this or that is morally right or wrong. It’s justificationism to say “nothing is objectively right or wrong because you can’t prove that anything is”.
“Show me moral certainty or reject all morality as baseless opinion” is bad philosophy: it’s just giving up, or worse, insisting that everyone else do so. — Pfhorrest
This could be taken as a justificationalist’s dogma is my point. — khaled
You need to believe that there is no reason for you to reject your opinion that you’re not considering right now — khaled
You haven’t actually answered what constitutes a reason for rejecting an opinion — khaled
The first statement is not the second. I never said “reject all morality”. And it doesn’t even follow hat we should from that it’s baseless. — khaled
"Could be" isn't "has to be".
I arrived at critical rationalism (the rejection of justificationism) not via justificationist means, not by appealing to some deeper principle that entails it, but rather via critical rationalist means themselves, by finding a reason to reject justificationism and so being left with its negation the remaining possibility, adhering to that remaining possibility requiring no justification in itself. — Pfhorrest
I don't have to actively believe that there are no such reasons in order to be warranted to hold those beliefs. I just need to be unaware of them. — Pfhorrest
If you committed to rejecting every belief against which there might be... — Pfhorrest
If you're saying there is no objective morality, you're saying that all moral claims are mere baseless opinion and so none are binding on anyone ("binding" in the sense that it'd be as wrong to deny them as they would be to deny an objectively correct claim about reality). That nothing is actually right or wrong, people just have opinions about it and none of those opinions are any better or worse than anyone else's. — Pfhorrest
The best you can do is show that a factual claim is the most comprehensive and efficien) — Pfhorrest
Just saying it is not doing much new. — khaled
There is no difference between what you're proposing and dogma-justificationalism. — khaled
I'm not. But I am committed to not elevating any belief to the status of being undoubtable. — khaled
Not sure what you mean by "better or worse" though. — khaled
But if you mean that there is some objective metric by which to measure them then no, since we don't share these goals. — khaled
What constitutes "most comprehensive and efficient" is just as subjective as what constitutes "moral". — khaled
Where does objectivity come into this? As opposed to just inter-subjectivity mind you (where everyone happens to share the same starting premises) — khaled
compared to how real people normally think no. — Pfhorrest
there is a very important difference. the dogmatic justificationist (foundationalist) says that the premises they find self-evident constitute a reason why someone shouldn’t believe differently than they do. the critical rationalist admits of multiple unfalsified possibilites, and will say only that particular sets of possibilities have been eliminated, not which of the remaining set is definitely the right answer. — Pfhorrest
Then you are not a justificationist — Pfhorrest
The same thing I mean for claims about reality, just involving a different facet of experience: hedonic rather than empirical. — Pfhorrest
what is objectively moral is whatever feels good and not bad to everyone in every circumstance (but regardless of who does or doesn’t want it). — Pfhorrest
There is nothing more to objectivity than the limit of ever more comprehensive intersubjectivity, unless you want to appeal to things entirely beyond the realm of phenomenal experience, but there’s pragmatic reasons not to do that either. — Pfhorrest
"...actually account for" and "...requires the least effort" are no less subjective than the terms you started with. — Isaac
I’ve never stolen anything. Hear it feels good though. — khaled
Do you ever plan on replying on the other thread btw? — khaled
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