what's the source of the state of affairs — AmadeusD
I can only imagine (as previously mentioned) a supernatural origin for such a brute claim. — AmadeusD
I'm not sure what you're asking. — Michael
What do you mean by "supernatural"? If you mean "non-physical" then yes, the moral realist will accept that moral facts are not physical facts; a moral statement being true has nothing to do with the existence of matter, energy, space, or time. — Michael
Obviously if you reject the premise that ordinary language philosophy is correct then the argument will fail, but then what better theory of meaning do you have?
I am not quite sure what you mean by "theory of meaning" — Bob Ross
nor why I would need it for this discussion. — Bob Ross
I see. So the problem I have is that promises are not normative statements which exist mind-independently, — Bob Ross
What do you mean by "supernatural"? If you mean "non-physical" then yes, the moral realist will accept that moral facts are not physical facts; a moral statement being true has nothing to do with the existence of matter, energy, space, or time. — Michael
The starting point of any metaethics is the question "what do moral statements mean?". — Michael
When we claim something like "one ought not murder" we are trying to describe an objective feature of the world. As such, if there are such features then realism is true and if there aren't such features then error theory is true. — Michael
And the true feature of the world in this case is that A society of murderers cannot exist. They die out. — unenlightened
One of the central debates within analytic metaethics concerns the semantics of what is actually going on when people make moral statements such as “Abortion is morally wrong” or “Going to war is never morally justified.” The metaethical question is not necessarily whether such statements themselves are true or false, but whether they are even the sort of sentences that are capable of being true or false in the first place (that is, whether such sentences are “truth-apt”) and, if they are, what it is that makes them “true.” On the surface, such sentences would appear to possess descriptive content—that is, they seem to have the syntactical structure of describing facts in the world—in the same form that the sentence “The cat is on the mat” seems to be making a descriptive claim about a cat on a mat; which, in turn, is true or false depending on whether or not there really is a cat on the mat. To put it differently, the sentence “The cat is on the mat” seems to be expressing a belief about the way the world actually is. The metaethical view that moral statements similarly express truth-apt beliefs about the world is known as cognitivism. Cognitivism would seem to be the default view of our moral discourse given the apparent structure that such discourse appears to have.
Nihilism doesn’t choose chaos and hardship, it merely accepts that there is no intrinsic meaning available to us. — Tom Storm
There’s a significant difference between 'there is no inherent meaning' and ‘nothing matters’. — Tom Storm
My example argument is that non-cognitivists and subjectivists misunderstand the meaning of moral statements: "you ought not murder" just doesn't mean either "don't murder" or "I disapprove of murder". When we claim something like "one ought not murder" we are trying to describe an objective feature of the world. As such, if there are such features then realism is true and if there aren't such features then error theory is true.
Just because it seems as though there are moral facts because we colloquially express our norms in a moral realist kind of manner does not entail they exist whatsoever: it's a non-sequitur. — Bob Ross
But this is the Kantian problem of universalization. I have to first accept that my actions can serve as a "maxim" for others, — J
My "have to" is innocuous. I only meant that one would have to agree to some form of the categorical imperative in order to have the kind of motive you described. — J
and civilisation is necessarily a cooperative affair and such mutual obligations are integral to every human society without exception. — unenlightened
mathematical facts are not moral facts. — AmadeusD
Moral truths are necessarily attendant to the world in which we live. They must refer. — AmadeusD
As I understand it, "moral realism" --I don't like and never use this term-- is basically about making a list of what things are right and what are wrong. — Alkis Piskas
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