TO value something, one discriminates against an infinitude of other things.
and,
Nihilism trumps value by asserting that everything has equal value, and thus makes the assignment of value a subjective assertion/judgment. — Question
Have you had any luck? — mcdoodle
Nihilism trumps value by asserting that everything has equal value, and thus makes the assignment of value a subjective assertion/judgment. — Question
And how does one go about making the distinction? — TheMadFool
Wat are your thoughts in general, not specifically in regards to mine? — Question
So, you're blurring the line here with what is subjective and objective, I'm assuming? — Question
So, what is it that you are disagreeing with here? — Question
As of recent, I started valuing 'nihilism' for being so elegant and exact. It's hard to value anything when you realize that truth is the only thing worth valuing, and there seems to be an abundance of truth in nihilism and its derivative absurdism. I guess I'm taking a sociological and Nietzschean turn as of recent. — Question
That's an interesting thing. There are many things to value in life. I suppose biologically we are indeed pre-programmed to like or otherwise have a predisposition to like or value certain things from an early age.
My idea is that the things valued non-materialistically are rather vague and well, metaphysical. Although great works of art presuppose certain things to be of value or to be held in esteem, they are otherwise quite useless as things that help us survive, or perhaps? — Question
At any rate, I'd clarify this: "Nihilism trumps value by asserting that everything has equal value" so that it reads "Nihilism trumps value by asserting that everything has equal objective value." — Terrapin Station
Subjective doesn't refer to anything like "not hard-wired." If it's something the brain is doing as mentality, it's subjective, whether that's "hard-wired" or only winds up being wired via development, including environmental influences, etc. — Terrapin Station
They [nihilists] not saying that there's no value, period, because they belive there is subjective value. — Terrapin Station
I'm the opposite, though. I like virtue ethics, because that seems to be how people are: we value clusters of attributes or characteristics - virtues - and we disvalue other clusters - vices. Ethical judgment involves weighing them in any given situation, in a shared society. The shared society has many shared values, or it wouldn't function as well as it does. — mcdoodle
People who believe in an 'ism' usually find it hard, in my experience, to laugh at mockery of their ism because they don't see the absurd side of it. — mcdoodle
I don't quite get the second quoted text. — Question
Hmm, that's interesting. Though, I am sure you see the paradox in taking that stance? — Question
Rawls, called Justice as Fairness — Question
How about truth/falsity. If something is true isn't that a value judgement, is it objective or subjective? — Cavacava
"Value judgments" usually denotes good/bad, right/wrong, worthwhile/waste-of-time, beautiful/ugly etc. etc. -type judgments, not true or false.
In other words, T Clark pointing out that something is hard-wired has no impact on whether it's subjective rather than objective. — Terrapin Station
I agree that value is subjective. And re T Clark's comment, for example, that doesn't make valuation not subjective. Subjective doesn't refer to anything like "not hard-wired." If it's something the brain is doing as mentality, it's subjective, whether that's "hard-wired" or only winds up being wired via development, including environmental influences, etc. — Terrapin Station
So are you saying that truth/falsity are not judgements but statements of fact (or not), that their content does not contain any value claims. — Cavacava
Objective/subjective has an ontological component (in fact I'd say it's only ontological). It's about where something occurs. Does it occur in minds (which I'd say are brains functioning in particular ways), or does it occur external to minds?
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