Count Timothy von Icarus         
         
Leontiskos         
         This is all just meaningless word games... — Michael
I can only take the unwillingness of anyone to actually make sense of obligations as evidence that Anscombe was right. — Michael
Any attempts so far to show otherwise have amounted to nothing more than the bare assertion that "obligations exist". — Michael
Michael         
         The thread is filled obvious refutations of all of these bizarre ideas. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         No there isn't. — Michael
Well, no. She also committed to marrying you. She did not just intend to do so... — Banno
Your girlfriend may well have intended to marry you, and this may have been so were it expressed or not. But she went further, making a promise, and thereby she also committed to marrying you... — Banno
To promise and to intend are two different things. We intend to do things in the future all the time, but it does not follow from this that we are making promises. — Leontiskos
"I intend to marry that woman over there." "Do you believe it will happen?" "Yes, I believe it with all my heart."
On your account he has just promised to marry the woman, which is obviously false. It is false because it has no relation to another (i.e. it does not regard something that he is to do for another). It is also false because he has not bound himself. — Leontiskos
"Honey, do you think we will ever get married?" "I fully intend to eventually." "So that's to say that you're not ready to propose?"
A man can tell a woman that he intends to marry her, and he can affirm his belief in this future act to the maximal degree, and yet not propose (promise) to marry her.* On your view this would not be possible.
* Technically a proposal is a mutual promise. — Leontiskos
Michael         
         
Count Timothy von Icarus         
         
Michael         
         
frank         
         I feel like the right word for things like laws, recessions, culture, etc. would be "incorporeal" as in "lacking a specific body." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Likewise laws continue to exist regardless of whether anyone is thinking of them at any particular moment. It would seem weird to say they flit in and out of existence as they enter someone's mental awareness. "Japanese culture," would be the same way. It exists in mental awareness, in synapses, in artifacts of all sorts, etc. — Count Timothy von Icarus
javra         
         In a context where you detect that "exist" is being used to talk about corporeal entities, would you agree that they don't exist? — frank
javra         
         
Leontiskos         
         And they all just baselessly assert "promises are more than just intentions". There's no justification for this assertion... — Michael
Count Timothy von Icarus         
         
Michael         
         I am not sure what the relevance of the question is. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Michael         
         You seem to be clueless as to what a promise is. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         People use the phrase "I promise to do so-and-so". That's all a promise is; the use of those words with honest intentions. — Michael
Michael         
         Honest intentions to do what!? — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         
Leontiskos         
         Speak to a lawyer. — Michael
Michael         
         Whenever your position falls apart you bury your head in the sand. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         I don't understand what kind of answer you want to a question like that. — Michael
Michael         
         I am wondering if I have recourse. What would you do in that situation? — Leontiskos
Would you invoke the promise he made? Why? — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         Perhaps, and to convince him not to ask me for more money? — Michael
Banno         
         1. You ought do this
2. Do this
The first appears to be a truth-apt proposition, whereas the second isn’t. But beyond this appearance I cannot make sense of a meaningful difference between them. The use of the term “ought” seems to do nothing more than make a command seem like a truth-apt proposition. — Michael
The first appears to be a truth-apt proposition, whereas the second isn’t. Beyond this appearance is there a meaningful difference between them? Will you say that the use of the term "asked" seems to do nothing more then make a question seem like a truth-apt proposition?1. You were asked to give an answer to what we get when we add six and five.
2. What is six and five?
1. She greeted you
2. "Hello"
There follows a passionate defence of the justice. Your girlfriend did you an injustice when she reneged on the promise she made. It was an injustice because she undertook an obligation to you, which she did not fulfil. One ought fulfil one's obligations, since that is what an obligation is.I will end by describing the advantages of using the word "ought" in a non-emphatic fashion, and not in a special "moral" sense; of discarding the term "wrong" in a "moral" sense, and using such notions as 'unjust'. — MMP, p.13
I will maintain that questions, greetings and obligations are examples of things that exist "beyond the act", along with property, currency, marriage, incorporation, institutionalisation, legality... and a few other things.There is nothing that exists beyond the act. — AmadeusD
Michael         
         So you would invoke his promise in order to convince him that he should not require an additional $25? — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         Yes, if I thought it would work. — Michael
frank         
         Maybe I shouldn't have used "incorporeal," due to its past associations. I really just wanted to get at how these things exist in a way that is substrate independent and without any definite/discrete "body." A recession has existence within time, it begins and ends. I think cultures, along with their laws, do as well. "Minoan culture," doesn't exist anymore, although we can certainly point to it (same with material artefacts that no longer exist, e.g. the Twin Towers). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Michael         
         You conclude that there are no such thing as obligations. — Banno
Compare:
1. You were asked to give an answer to what we get when we add six and five.
2. What is six and five?
...
Or this:
1. She greeted you
2. "Hello" — Banno
Michael         
         And why is it plausible that it might work? Why would this move plausibly convince him to do as you wish? — Leontiskos
Leontiskos         
         Because, like you, he might believe in obligations. — Michael
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