Large scale agreements occur in totalitarianism as well and yes, they're not pure coincidence but how are they morally valuable? — Noblosh
Morality requires more than moral agents, it requires the right kind of environment and the right kind of activity. — Sapientia
I'm not sure I know what you're getting at there, but I agree that it requires what the agents are making moral judgments about--certain types of interpersonal behavior, etc., which of course require environments to take place in (people aren't floating in a vacuum). But that doesn't make that stuff literally the moral judgments. — Terrapin Station
Not just that. I'm talking about the bigger picture, and whether it would or would not make sense if certain elements were removed. Morality requires more than moral agents, it requires the right kind of environment and the right kind of activity. — Sapientia
You're the one who keeps trying to reduce what we're talking about to moral judgements, — Sapientia
Well, that's what morality is. It's judgments that we make. — Terrapin Station
It's not identical to what the judgments are in response to. — Terrapin Station
It's similar to painting, say. Painting is applying pigmented mediums to surfaces like canvas. Painting isnt' identical to what the painting is in response to--say if you're painting a still life, a vase of flowers or something. You need the vase of flowers to do that, but the vase of flowers isn't itself painting. It's important to not get confused between the two, not to start to think that the vase of flowers literally is painting. — Terrapin Station
Art, like morality, involves subject and subject matter. — Sapientia
...all cocaine users are addicted on the first hit — Noble Dust
You're talking about art in a different sense, so that's equivocation. I was talking about what art must involve in order to make sense, and you can't make sense of art with just a subject and no subject matter. — Sapientia
That's fine, but it's different than what art is. — Terrapin Station
You could just as well say that for anything to make sense, we need a planet that could have supported creatures that are able to make sense of things. Pretty soon you get to everything being necessary, and then everything is everything rather than art being art,and water being water, and east being east and west west, and then if you take cranberries and stew them like applesauce they taste much more like prunes than rhubarb does. — Terrapin Station
Why not? — Terrapin Station
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