some atheists are really pushing for life to be pointless and meaningless — Andrew4Handel
The sense of morality is based on reason. For example, rape is wrong because it causes pain and deprives the victim of basic human dignity. — TheMadFool
And it's up to you to assign a point or meaning to your life. — Terrapin Station
And why is pain a negative thing? That's a subjective opinion. — BlueBanana
I think making an individual find their own meaning is an existential burden. It is a task for scientists and philosophers to explore life not something everyone should have foisted on them. — Andrew4Handel
Your position is just a tiny step away from chaos. If there are no rules, mayhem is inevitable. Besides that... — TheMadFool
For example, rape is wrong because it causes pain and deprives the victim of basic human dignity. — TheMadFool
I don't see how that, the application of logic and reason, is not objective? — TheMadFool
Logic, by definition, is about following rules of correct thinking, which is the hallmark of objectivity. — TheMadFool
Your own arguments, based on logic, evidence to the fact that application of reason implies objectivity. — TheMadFool
If morality is completely subjective, why do our moral compasses point in one direction on some issues? — TheMadFool
And why is pain a negative thing? That's a subjective opinion — BlueBanana
I think, like Terrapin Station, you're confused between mental and subjective. If it is subjective, you wouldn't need to argue. For example people have varying preferences regarding ice cream flavors they like. Nobody argues about my/your flavor being better. That would be purely subjective. There's no logic in flavor choices. By that reasoning infamous serial killers would be, shockingly, moral! This you won't concede. — TheMadFool
Religious people believe there's intrinsic meaning and have children for that reason. I think making meaning gets unstable and chaotic with all these conflicting meanings. The reason our parents had children can emanate from all kinds of ideologies (many false) — Andrew4Handel
Ok. What would be your first choice between consent and no consent re a relationship with another person? — TheMadFool
I agree parents think keeping the best interest of their children, born and unborn, in mind. It's also true that an unborn simply can't give consent. So, the practice of thinking for your children is essentially a contingency measure. It's not moral but we can't help. A necessary evil, so to speak. — TheMadFool
There's enough suffering on earth to see why people might not consent to come here. — Andrew4Handel
He's asking you why pain is a negative thing objectively. He's stressing that there's no extramental fact that makes pain negative. It's rather a mental state that finds it negative. — Terrapin Station
We see morality as an inherently subjective thing, so there's no reason to defer to objectivity. We can and do impose our own morality, because we don't want to tolerate a world where we allow people to do certain things unchecked. — Terrapin Station
Mine is grounded in reality — Sapientia
Well, to look for extramental qualities in mental states would be like looking for edges of an egg. I think you're mistakenly lumping ALL that is mental into the category of subjective. Why? Because poking a finger with a needle is painful for everyone. I've never seen an insult evoke laughter. Nor have I seen a happy murder victim. Of course, there are exceptions - the odd masochist. However, to give weightage to such rare cases on the scale of morality would be like thinking one or two passive lions upsets the objective true belief that lions are dangerous. Statistically speaking, you're focussing on the irrelevant. You seem to demand 100% objectivity which is asking the impossible. Not even science has that level of objectivity and I'm sure you have no problems with science. Why then do you single out morality for such overly rigorous treatment?
We see morality as an inherently subjective thing, so there's no reason to defer to objectivity. We can and do impose our own morality, because we don't want to tolerate a world where we allow people to do certain things unchecked. — Terrapin Station
Like I said above, the claim that morality is subjective rests on the few outliers who have a different, what shall I call it, disposition. Your whole argument rests on a handful of oddballs. This is clearly irrational.
So, if you want to continue insisting that morality is subjective, you'll also have to forfeit your rationality. — TheMadFool
Or, looking at it evolutionarily, natural-selection makes it so that people who are born have an inclination toward life. Part of what made you was natural selection's influence that made you inclined toward life.
And that was encoded in the genes from which yours were going to be chosen,, even before your own genes were finally determined by your conception.
But that's the naturalistic fallacy. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. — schopenhauer1
Potentially all future suffering can be prevented if no one procreated.
If you ground morality on reality then stealing, lying, rape, murder, everything would be moral. Afterall all of the above are real.
Morality is, at least in part, an ideal shaped by the human ability for empathy, to suffer, to feel joy, etc., under the guidance of reason. — TheMadFool
Hypothetically (even if not realistically), if everyone who is on the wrong end of barbarism made that refusal — Michael Ossipoff
It seems in this comment that you're understanding "subjective" to imply something like "there is little agreement on x." Is that right? — Terrapin Station
Attainability matters, and is a criterion for determining what is and is not nonsense — Sapientia
So Utopia is nonsense to you? Isn't it the ultimate goal of all nations? It's not attainable at present but this is due to prevailing circumstances but circumstances change and what seems impossible may be achievable in the future.
I agree that we have to be realistic but that shouldn't obstruct the ideal situation, condition, world, etc. Morality, an ideal, serves as a beacon to guide our decisions. Without ideals progress isn't possible. — TheMadFool
Bring it close enough, and we can talk sensibly — Sapientia
But yes, after you posted, I clarified that I agree that any caring person who lives on this planet wouldn't want to reproduce. — Michael Ossipoff
So, better that I just say, "Living on a barbaric planet, it's better to not reproduce.", and leave it at that. — Michael Ossipoff
You're right. I'm being unrealistic. We can't ask an unborn child whether it'd want life or not. But, you will agree that nonconsensual relationships are immoral? — TheMadFool
I think people have ignored most of what I said. — Andrew4Handel
So once again you've not provided a logical refutation. — Andrew4Handel
I gave the example of my preference for Bach and baroque. No one has said to me that because I derive pleasurable or profound experiences from Baroque music I should be allowed to force it on others.
There is no justification for imposing something on someone else based on your own preferences.
And as I said with the groping on a bus scenario most brief acts of unwanted contact or imposition are frowned upon.
I do like exposing people to Bach and Handel but I haven't a made any major converts. You can only have a child based on your own preferences so you can't claim to have done it in their interests. — Andrew4Handel
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