That's not just a gripe. That's a conversation ender. If you have an ethical position that lacks a definition of "ethical," then why should it come as a surprise that the position makes morality irrelevant? — Hanover
Can there be success without the possibility of failure? — Leontiskos
I think most everyone recognizes that it is possible to act and choose in ways that are not in their best interest. Anyone who has experienced regret should recognize this. — Leontiskos
They're practical implications of having the belief. I'm asking about the practical implications of that belief being true.
If eating meat is immoral and I believe that eating meat is immoral then I won't eat meat.
If eating meat is not immoral but I believe that eating meat is immoral then I won't eat meat. — Michael
3. Those propositions are made true by objective features of the world, independent of human opinion. — Michael
non-moral features (e.g. pain, harm, suffering, etc.) — Michael
And I'm not necessarily saying that therefore ethical non-naturalism is false. I'm only saying that if it's true then I don't understand the motivation to be moral. — Michael
If success means accomplishing your aim, and your aim is to do what you think is best for yourself, then I don’t see how this isn’t an example of success in this case. But maybe I am missing something. — Beverley
I cannot think of a situation where someone would do something purposefully against their own best interests at the time as they see it. — Beverley
1. If a) it is the case that one ought not eat meat and b) I believe that it is the case that one ought not eat meat then c) I won't eat meat.
2. If a) it is not the case that one ought not eat meat but b) I believe that it is the case that one ought not eat meat then c) I won't eat meat.
The practical implication of each b) is each c), but I can't see what the practical implication of each a) is. — Michael
It's very odd to talk about the "practical implication" of truth — Leontiskos
When a human being makes a decision of any kind—moral or otherwise—they always do so for a reason. For example, "The Earth is X distance from the moon because of the parallax measurements I collected."
Now when one says they ought to do something, they have made a decision, and there is a reason for their decision. The reasoning process involves apprehended truth (i.e. that which is apprehended to be true — Leontiskos
It's almost as if we act on what we believe to be true, rather than on what is true independent of our beliefs. — Leontiskos
You beg the question by assuming that these are non-moral features. — Leontiskos
Very roughly, non-naturalism in meta-ethics is the idea that moral philosophy is fundamentally autonomous from the natural sciences.
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Most often, ‘non-naturalism’ denotes the metaphysical thesis that moral properties exist and are not identical with or reducible to any natural property or properties in some interesting sense of ‘natural’.
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Moore famously claimed that naturalists were guilty of what he called the “naturalistic fallacy.” In particular, Moore accused anyone who infers that X is good from any proposition about X’s natural properties of having committed the naturalistic fallacy. Assuming that being pleasant is a natural property, for example, someone who infers that drinking beer is good from the premise that drinking beer is pleasant is supposed to have committed the naturalistic fallacy. The intuitive idea is that evaluative conclusions require at least one evaluative premise—purely factual premises about the naturalistic features of things do not entail or even support evaluative conclusions. Moore himself focused on goodness, but if the argument works for goodness then it seems likely to generalize to other moral properties.
Perhaps this whole thread could be boiled down to a single question, "If you are an ethical non-naturalist, then what is the reason for your 'ought'?" "You say we ought to do such and such, but why ought we?" — Leontiskos
If CO2 emissions are causing a severe acceleration in global warming and I believe that CO2 emissions are causing a severe acceleration in global warming, then I will attempt to reduce CO2 emissions."
"If CO2 emissions are not causing a severe acceleration in global warming but I believe that CO2 emissions are causing a severe acceleration in global warming, then I will attempt to reduce CO2 emissions."
It's almost as if we act on what we believe to be true, rather than on what is true independent of our beliefs. Remarkable. :meh: — Leontiskos
unless Frank is arguing that since @Hanover's actions are sometimes dubious, we should not pay attention to his opinions concerning ethics — Banno
That's precisely my point. Moral beliefs matter. Moral facts don't. A moral belief being false has the same practical implications as that same moral belief being true (if ethical non-naturalism is correct). — Michael
Harm, suffering, and pain are natural properties. — Michael
I'm asking about the ethical non-naturalist's moral motivation. — Michael
But they aren't. The natural sciences do not study pain and pleasure in themselves, and they certainly do not study pain and pleasure as normative realities. For example, the claim that suffering should be avoided is not within the domain of the natural sciences. Your article hedges precisely where you are begging the question, "Assuming that being pleasant is a natural property..."
In all probability you will be as unwilling to define "natural" as you are unwilling to define "moral," but the notion that the natural sciences study the normative value of pain and pleasure seems highly unlikely. If this is right then the many counterarguments in this thread which you unaccountably label "naturalistic," are in fact not naturalistic. — Leontiskos
You seem to have skimmed some Wikipedia and SEP articles, constructed a position in your mind, and then constructed arguments against that position. But given that no one holds this constructed position, it seems that all you've done is erected a strawman. Do you know of any philosophers who hold this position you've constructed? — Leontiskos
Moore’s “Open Question Argument” for the conclusion that goodness is a non-natural property is closely related to his worries about the naturalistic fallacy. Consider any proposed naturalistic analysis N of a moral predicate M. The Open Question Argument maintains that it will always be possible for someone competent with moral discourse without conceptual confusion to grant that something is N but still wonder whether it is really M. Whether goodness is co-instantiated with any natural property or set of natural properties is in this sense always a conceptually open question. If, however, N really was an accurate analysis of M then the question, “I know it is N but is it M?” would not be open in this way for a conceptually competent judge any more than the question, “I know he is a bachelor but is he unmarried?” can be an open one.
Michael seems to think there is something more here. — Banno
How the world ought be is not somethign found by observation. — Banno
It should by now be clear that moral truths do not tell us about how the world is, but about how the world ought be. — Banno
That you ought not eat meat does have practical relevance. You are simply playing on the word "practical" by limiting it to what "is" the case, and excluding what "ought" be the case.That facts about how the world ought to be have no practical relevance... — Michael
It seems you can agree with Michael while not disagreeing with me.Do I? I thought I was agreeing with Michael — bert1
Notice that this is a quite different question to whether there are moral truths. Indeed, "apprehend" still carries the sense of perception over from the way the world is. I hope Michael is carrying over our previous discussion and still maintains that moral statements are truth apt; here he seems to be saying that they are all false. Yet in the main there is agreement that "One ought not kick puppies for fun" is true.What process (if not obeservation) do we come to apprehend moral truths? — bert1
Indeed, that appears to be a consequence of the path he is adopting in this thread: that we never make choices.The world is what it is and will be what it will be and that's that. — Michael
Indeed, that appears to be a consequence of the path he is adopting in this thread: that we never make choices. — Banno
I haven't said that. — Michael
Hmm. Then this might need clearing up.The world is what it is and will be what it will be and that's that. — Michael
You see, that we must make choices is what ethics is about. On your account, either we do not make choices, doing only what we would always have done, or the choice makes no difference to the world - has no practical significance. — Banno
Yes, they do. In the first one, eating meat is immoral. In the second, it isn't. What more practical difference could there be?(a)s have no practical relevance. — Michael
You are simply playing on the word "practical" by limiting it to what "is" the case, and excluding what "ought" be the case. — Banno
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