I very much doubt that. Think through the implications of 'correspondence' and you will see that it must have profound problems: in what sense does an idea or a proposition correspond to a state of affairs? To even ask that question immediately opens up the whole subject of semiotics and theory of meaning - what 'correspondence' entails, and how it relates to facts. The expression that such-and-such a proposition 'corresponds to the facts' is really just a vernacular expression. It is common-sense realism as an epistemological stance. — Wayfarer
I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about the nature of psychological/psychiatric intervention and treatment as such.But yes, hospital work can be cursory and bad and some shrinks are patronising and medication without psychosocial support is not great and the hospitals and medical services can treat people like numbers. — Tom Storm
Can you sketch out your brand of virtue ethics?
What is your virtue ethics based on?
In your virtue ethics, what are other people? — baker
I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about the nature of psychological/psychiatric intervention and treatment as such. — baker
Psychological/psychiatric intervention and treatment are inherently of a moral dimension. Psychologists/psychiatrists intervene because they believe there is something wrong with the person, that the person is acting wrongly and shouldn't act that way.
There are strict laws on this and generally mental health services get involved if there is demonstrable risk to self and others. behaving wrongly is out of scope.
— baker
How do psychologists/psychiatrists define morality, what do they base it on?
Do they believe in moral facts? — baker
I have read and thought about metaethics for several months now and I have constructed a bit of a theoretical framework to try and understand morality. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
So, perhaps it is similar to the case when we state, “Onions taste awful,” that the syntax is configured in such a way to be making a general statement, when in actuality, we are making a particular subjective statement. It could be the case that we are egotistical enough to hold the notion—at least subconsciously—that our perspective of right and wrong should not only matter to everyone else, but that it is applicable to them as well. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What are the implications of saying beliefs are subjective?Beliefs are subjective and can potentially require cognition — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I do not believe that moral facts (values, duties, behavioral standards, etc,) exist in the objective sense. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
This would mean that moral facts are simply declarative sentences expressing a descriptive statement conveying information about the subjective states of the individual who is making an evaluative observation. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
......myself as well as to you. — Banno
What is gained by describing it as subjective? — Banno
Oh? You'd tell Plato to go seek the help of a psychiatrist?So was I. It can work and treatment has probably (for all the mistakes) provided more happiness to people than philosophy or pondering moral facts ever did. — Tom Storm
I'm not asking about the moral beliefs they profess to have, I'm asking about those they actually have (which they may or may not speak of openly).Like any group they are not monolithic and hold diverse beliefs. But I am not all that interested in the moral beliefs people hold. People's actions are more significant.
Sounds like a good slogan. But it's quite useless, given that one gets to see only a small fraction of another's actions, and that those one does see are still up to interpretation.But I am not all that interested in the moral beliefs people hold. People's actions are more significant.
Perspective, contextual placement, relativization, optionality, ownership, responsibility.We might usefully analyse a belief as a relation between an individual and a statement, such that the individual takes the statement to be true. What is gained by describing it as subjective? — Banno
The problem is, what makes for "comparable circumstances"?Let's contrast taste with morality. That you do not eat onions is perhaps a preference you would not insist applies to everyone. That folk should not lie is presumably a preference that you and I would insist applies to everyone. That is, one of the characteristics of moral statements is that they are not only about how the speaker should act, but how everyone, in comparable circumstances, should act. — Banno
Oh? You'd tell Plato to go seek the help of a psychiatrist? — baker
Sounds like a good slogan. But it's quite useless, given that one gets to see only a small fraction of another's actions, and that those one does see are still up to interpretation. — baker
Yet only psychologists/psychiatrists have the legal right to interfere with the lives of others. There's a clear power imbalance. — baker
To be honest, I am not familiar with TAK. Is it a theory in epistemology? What it is that I'm trying to say is not so much that moral declarations are facts of the world but rather that moral declarations are representations of our moral beliefs and it is a fact that we hold such beliefs. For example, let's say I have a friend named Lindsay who believes that Earth is flat. I'm not saying that her believing that the earth is flat makes her statements that the earth is flat true or factual, but that it is (at least it seems to be) a fact that she holds a belief that the Earth is flat. Does that not get me anywhere? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I think of facts such as mathematical facts, logical facts, aesthetic facts, etc, and I think that some facts must represent abstract entities as well as entities that exist in physical reality. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I guess it really depends on which theory of truth we are considering, too. A correspondence theory would impose the sort of existence conditions to truth that you are extending to facts as well. I have read much less about facts than I have about truth, which has not been enough to really grasp what it is and what it can be applied to. I'd like to hear your thoughts on both. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Is there empirical evidence that we ought not lie? Can we derive from first principles that we ought not kill? — Michael
[Psychiatry] can work and treatment has probably (for all the mistakes) provided more happiness to people than philosophy or pondering moral facts ever did. — Tom Storm
Platonism, philosopher kings, ubermensch, and so on. — Banno
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