Oh please. Literally every answer begs another question. All of them. How then is that a useful basis for your argument against — Benj96
"Why is life good? Because we are still here." — Benj96
there must be an actual system in place that determines actual morality, — Leftist
The only thing that should be done are things which are good. Good things should be done. — Leftist
If there are no moral truths, every moral claim is false. — Leftist
Discounting those that don't want to be here, or are indifferent to being here, the fact we are still here would at best mean we prefer to be here. Why would it be good for us to get what we prefer? — Down The Rabbit Hole
I am strongly opposed to causing suffering irrespective of whether it is morally wrong. — Down The Rabbit Hole
There are no correct moral claims. People only have incorrect opinions on what's good/bad, what should/shouldn't exist.
To say that torture is bad is to say that moral claims can be true. If moral facts could not ever be true, the torture would not be bad, there would be no reason to prevent torture. — Leftist
Value judgements have connection to truth in that value judgements can be correct or incorrect. [...] They must all always be incorrect claims, if it is true that no claims made of value can be true. Otherwise, there must be an actual system in place that determines actual morality, much more than just "x people think y should be done, therefore y should actually be done". — Leftist
Our feelings of what is morally right and wrong clash with other people's feelings of what is morally right and wrong. — Down The Rabbit Hole
Show me that someone (other than a masochist or someone otherwise deranged) actively seeks out torture and I will eat my words. — I like sushi
Who is right, the consequentialist or the deontologist, and why? — Down The Rabbit Hole
Why are you asking? — I like sushi
So am I. I don't wish to cause suffering. So what exactly are we arguing/discussing? — Benj96
I agree with the rest, with the note that all their views and claims regarding good/bad are false. — Leftist
Value judgements have connection to truth in that value judgements can be correct or incorrect. You can't just randomly decide something actually should be done, or shouldn't be done, and be correct. — Leftist
It is more academic than of practical consequence.
I don't know if you're a consequentialist or deontologist, but my position would be that whichever group you fall into, you are no more right than the other group is. You just have different preferences. — Down The Rabbit Hole
The most obvious example is the difference between consequentialists and deontologists. Which group is right, and why? — Down The Rabbit Hole
You mean ‘right’ or ‘correct’? Which is ‘right’? Both. Which is ‘correct’ neither. — I like sushi
That's fair enough, but I still wouldn't say two conflicting positions are both good. — Down The Rabbit Hole
The proponents of both consequentialism and deontology having good intentions is different to consequentialism and deontology being good. I'm going to say it - Hitler believed what it was doing was good, it doesn't make what he was doing good. Same for less extreme examples. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't understand that at all. If nothing can be good, or bad, how can anything ever be good, or bad? — Leftist
"The community creates moral truths."
I attribute this argument to Michael and Vera Mont.
It was not explicitly stated that the community creates moral truths, but that's the implication. — Leftist
Value judgements have connection to truth in that value judgements can be correct or incorrect. You can't just randomly decide something actually should be done, or shouldn't be done, and be correct. — Leftist
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