When I put youth in the previous text, It wasn't a premise but just an example of what I do consider as ignorant. — javi2541997
I was originally curious about your initial statement (which was a conclusion in terms of argument) that it is bad to expose our bodies on the internet (or more precisely, that a girl showing her body on the internet is a bad thing)
I think showing our body through internet is bad from an ethical point of view — javi2541997
Premise 1: Show our bodies in internet is unethical and it provokes some consequences.
Premise 2: The youngest do not see the consequences of the future so, they show their bodies on internet.
Conclusion: Youth tend to be ignorant showing so much data about them and whenever they want to care it is too late to do so — javi2541997
This is just cleaned up. I could condense it further or omit some unnecessary information. Something like this:
P1) If people regret showing their bodies on the internet when they were young, then people showing their bodies on the internet is unethical.
P2) People regret showing their bodies on the internet.
C) Therefore, people showing their bodies on the internet is unethical. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Is that the conclusion or would you like to change it? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Check into ethical realism / anti-realism, cognitivism /non-cognitivism, etc… — Cartesian trigger-puppets
whether or not ethical values are objective or subjective, are real or constructed, and even if they can even be true or false in any meaningful sense at all. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I understand that using generic examples as youth (as overall) could be weak. But aren't the youth being limited by general restrictions? For example: alcohol, tobacco, drive licence, getting married, etc... all of those example are sent to general citizens with a specific age (thus, teenagers). — javi2541997
The error here is in your terms. In premise 1: “Showing our bodies” (“our” is general, it implies us (people) as a whole set). Then in premise 2: “The youngest do not see the consequences of the future” (“youngest” is a proper subset of people as a general whole). This means that the two premises do not follow from one another (they are invalid). What has to do with the youngest subset of people is not the same as what happens to all people. If the argument is invalid then it doesn’t matter if the premises are true or not. No inference can be made between the two. Its like arguing that all fruit is red because there are red apples. Apples are a proper subset of fruit. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
If you say I should not treat (in general terms) the youth with such limitations. Should you be able to make an enterprise or agreements with them? In this examples we can see if they are mature enough. — javi2541997
They are both objective and subjective. We make objective laws trying to reinforce the ethical behaviour in a society. Nevertheless, it is also upon the subjectivity of each person on applying and respecting such laws — javi2541997
That young people have restrictions is consistent with my view. It certainly doesn’t mean that all members of a whole set must share a characteristic of the members of its subset. That was my point. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
If some people have regrets about showing their bodies on the internet, does that then mean all people have regrets? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
How is law objective? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
whether you like it or not, we as members are treated by general terms. You believe that there could be some teenagers with maturity enough to take and understand their own responsibilities and it is unfair being treated as a whole just to being in a specific set. — javi2541997
how can we know if they will regret it or not in the future? — javi2541997
(I know this sounds again so general and there would be someone who wouldn’t care at all. I don’t know what say in this context. Good for him or her) — javi2541997
And I don’t think you do either. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Why not just be like me and say that you don’t know one way or another and instead try to work out probabilities one way or another while admitting that each have probability? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Law is objective because it tends to rule all the possible circumstances and actions of the citizens on the state. It doesn’t matter (most of the cases) what was the purpose or thoughts of the citizen not respecting the law.
You cannot plead ignorance for not understanding or knowing the law… this is why is objective.
And yes I am agree that is not necessarily related to ethics — javi2541997
If I do so, this debate ends because it would means we reached an agreement in our controversial discussion — javi2541997
That is the aim, my friend — Cartesian trigger-puppets
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