Morality is made of norms and values. A moral norm is a prescription or proscription. If an action is right then its being so is its being prescribed; if an action is wrong then it's being so is it's being proscribed. And if something is morally valuable, then it is morally good - these are equivalent statuses - and if something is morally devalued then it is morally bad. These are conceptual truths about morality and cannot seriously be disputed. — Bartricks
Can rules of law be immoral?
Yes.
Therefore rules of law are not moral laws. — Bartricks
But unless a law says no more than 'do what is right and do not do what is wrong — Bartricks
The central questions of philosophy do not change, you are simply intellectually unadventurous. — Bartricks
But the fact remains morality is demonstrably not made of it. And that applies to human laws too, I think. — Bartricks
Can rules of law be immoral?
Yes.
Therefore rules of law are not moral laws. — Bartricks
However, it is manifest to reason that only subjects of experience - minds - can issue prescriptions or proscribe anything. And similarly only a mind can value anything. Prescribing, proscribing, valuing and disvaluing, are the sole preserve of minds, as much as thinking and intending are.
From this simple rational truth we get to the subjectivist conclusion: morality is made of a subject's prescriptions, proscriptions, and values. — Bartricks
Minds aren't 'really' individual though. — T H E
You seem to be appealing to a transpersonal rationality (a sort of morality of judgment-making) to deny the possibility of what you are doing as you are doing it. — T H E
They surely are: my mind is mine, yours is yours. I am not part you and you part me. I am entirely me and not in any way you, and vice versa. — Bartricks
I do not understand what you are saying here. I am simply noting that morality is composed of prescriptions and values and that prescriptions and values require a prescriber and valuer respectively. — Bartricks
Thus, though morality is subjective - which means 'made of a subject's subjective states' - it is also external to us. Moral norms and values are norms and values we are aware of, but not creating. Morality is subjective, but also external to our own subjectivity.
Thus, moral norms and values are composed of the prescribing and proscribing and valuing activity of an external mind. And for reasons that I will leave for later discussion, that mind will be the mind of God. — Bartricks
If you are claiming - and you seem to be suggesting this - that the externality of moral prescriptions and values is illusory and that they are in fact prescriptions and values that we ourselves are issuing, then you are denying the reality of morality, not its need of a god. — Bartricks
Thus, moral norms and values are composed of the prescribing and proscribing and valuing activity of an external mind. — Bartricks
One ought to transcend one's biases. One ought to acknowledge (reasonable) criticism and adapt one's judgments accordingly. — T H E
You don't seem to have an objection to the argument, but just an unfounded psychological thesis about my motives. — Bartricks
So, what it would take for morality really to exist, is for there to exist external norms and values. And what it would take for those to exist, is for there to exist an external prescriber and valuer. Not us or some group of us - the former are not external and the latter is not itself a mind. And furthermore, it is clear that any groups 'norms' are themselves subject to moral evaluation and are therefore not constitutive of moral norms. — Bartricks
That was not aimed as a criticism toward you but just a point that rationality has a moral component. — T H E
I don't think you've made a strong case against us being the source of our own norms. The individual mind is secondary to the community mind inasmuch as we think with shared, inherited 'software' (language and other conventional practices.) — T H E
So the individual mind is primary. You can have a mind without a community, — Bartricks
But anyway, you're just making wild and incoherent assertions, not showing how anything you say is implied by self-evident truths of reason. — Bartricks
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Social_Construction_of_RealityTheir central concept is that people and groups interacting in a social system create, over time, concepts or mental representations of each other's actions, and that these concepts eventually become habituated into reciprocal roles played by the actors in relation to each other. When these roles are made available to other members of society to enter into and play out, the reciprocal interactions are said to be institutionalized. In the process, meaning is embedded in society.
from the actual book:
…a social world [is] a comprehensive and given reality confronting the individual in a manner analogous to the reality of the natural world… In early phases of socialization the child is quite incapable of distinguishing between the objectivity of natural phenomena and the objectivity of the social formations… The objective reality of institutions is not diminished if the individual does not understand their purpose or their mode of operation… He must ‘go out’ and learn about them, just as he must learn about nature… — link
Once more: the norms of any community are themselves subject to moral assessment. Therefore, they are not constitutive of moral norms. — Bartricks
I think it's false that you can have a reasoning mind without community. — T H E
It's obviously true. Just imagine that everyone apart from you has just fallen down dead. Okay - are you still a mind and can you still reason? Yes and yes. — Bartricks
But again, you don't even offer any support for your clearly false claim. What argument do you have in support of the apparently false claim that minds can't exist outside of communities? — Bartricks
I mentioned Crusoe already. I think you are missing the point. — T H E
There are human laws, and there are moral norms, and they are not equivalent. We can and do make moral judgements about human laws - "this law is just" and so on - but when we do so we are not judging that human laws are human laws, but rather that some conform to and others flout moral norms. — Bartricks
You don't show something to 'be' part of a community by showing that it was 'created' by a community. But anyway, our minds are not created by, or dependent upon, a community. I mean, how could any community of minds ever arise if minds themselves have to be created by communities? — Bartricks
Are you denying that prescriptions require prescribers? — Bartricks
Are you denying that the prescriber whose prescriptions constitute moral prescriptions is external to all of us? Which one? — Bartricks
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