The hypothetical stated that they cannot both co-exist; but I understand what you are saying: it just doesn’t address the issue. — Bob Ross
How? I don't understand. Please give an example of the issue in another way so I can understand then. You can use the grandfather, the grandson, and the explosion to demonstrate if you wish.
In order for there to be a standard, there must exist already something that is morally good. If this is true, then existence cannot be that standard; because that would be circular. — Bob Ross
A logically necessary requirement for something is not a circular fallacy
The problem is, if I reject that morality is objective, you might conclude that I must therefore be a moral subjectivist, and if I am a moral subjectivist I must believe whatever Wiki says I do.
The mistake you are making is believing that I think there are moral propositions, when I think I have made it quite clear that I don't think there are.
If torturing babies is wrong because normal people think it is wrong then it is true that it is wrong for most people, I have not claimed anything beyond that
If a proposition expresses how something ought to be for some individual, then it is the fact that the individual believes that proposition that "supports the ought", so to speak.
There is nothing about any moral proposition that obligates anyone to adhere to it. If torturing babies is morally repugnant to me, I am unlikely to torture babies,
If I say, "I believe torturing babies is wrong" then that amounts to saying, "I believe no one should torture babies".
Unfortunately for your argument you are depending on something which either doesn't exist or is unknowable. It is nothing more than an empty tautology to say that what is morally good is a truth maker for what is morally good.
How would we know if it corresponded to reality? What kind of reality? Certainly not an empirical reality
You're really not paying attention. I've already said I don't think anything is "morally binding"
The only truth of moral beliefs, the only normative force they could possess, the only bindingness, lies in the fact that most normal people believe them, think and/or feel them to be true.
Now you're starting to get it.
I said that what people believe, morally speaking, makes it true for themselves, in the sense of being "true to themselves"
Rereading this argument -- your P1 doesn't match 1 from above it:
"Cognitive" doesn't necessitate truth-independence
The Liar's sentence, for instance: we can think "This sentence is false", meaning we can cognize it, but the truth, or falsity, of the Liar's sentence is wholly dependent upon how we interpret the sentence.
What if the MS was a coherentist on truth? In that case beliefs fit within an inferential web, and that web just is what truth is, so they'd claim to be a cognitivist while stating that they do believe that beliefs depend upon one another for their truth or falsity.
The problem is you are treating moral "propositions" as though they are empirical, logical or mathematical propositions.
You can't or won't say what kind of imaginable truth makers apart from people believing them there could be for the former
You just keep claiming this. You need to give an argument for why moral propositions, if they could be known to be true, would be binding.
What part of the following do you not understand?:
If “I should not torture babies” is true, then I should not torture babies.
If I should not torture babies, then I am obligated not to torture babies.
“I should not torture babies” is true.
Therefore, I should not torture babies.
Therefore, I am obligated not to torture babies.
The other point is that you apparently cannot explain how a moral proposition could ever be known to be true.
The only truth of moral beliefs, the only normative force they could possess, the only bindingness, lies in the fact that most normal people believe them,
Because moral statements are not truth-apt
I don't see how they qualify as propositions in the sense that empirical, logical or mathematical do
coherence of your reference to moral beliefs, feelings, thoughts or statements as "propositions" hinges on it.
What I am denying is that thinking constricted by select definition of terms leads to what is true at best. Rather than appeal to a definition we should determine what someone means when they use a term. It is foolish and wrongheaded to insist that what someone means is not what they say they mean but rather what you found in a definition.
My suffering does not begin with the concept of suffering. I do not need to form a concept to know that it is bad. Most of us are capable of empathy and do not first develop or appeal to a concept of empathy in order to be able to empathize. We do not need a concept of care in order to care. We do not need a concept of something mattering in order for something to matter to us.
I don't think so. Make your argument and we'll see how it stands up.
No, most people hold to finding murder, rape, etc., morally wrong because they feel compassion for the victim, and that is normal.
You keep talking about truth being binding, but it's not.
…
What other imaginable criterion could there be?
There is no reason other than a love for truth that would bind someone to accepting a true claim
I have nowhere spoken about forcing anyone to do or not to do anything. In any case the most significant moral prescriptions, those regarding what are considered to be serious crimes, are codified in law, and those laws would not hold if most people didn't agree with them.
This is classic! People can propose whatever they like, valid or not. It's the soundness, not the validity of moral "propositions: which cannot be established
I think you need to ask yourself whether you can imagine any kind of truth maker for such "propositions".
Within the context in which both can co-exist, it is good for both to co-exist
. In the context in which only one can exist, it will be a greater good for one of them to exist over the other.
That's not coherent to my claim. I already mentioned if both could co-exist then both should as that's more existence. The only case in which we decide one over the other is if both cannot co-exist, or we only have the capacity to choose one over the other.
I'm still scratching my head at this Bob. If good is "What should be", then that's what good is. If "X is good" then I am ascribing X as good. Can you give me an example of your terminology division?
…
Right. Good = "What should be". If "X is good" then "X should be".
…
is this the division you're looking for between good and what is ascribed as good?
Its not a question, there's no question mark! :D If I used the phrase, "This is what is", you understand that's not a question. Same here.
‘to ought to be’ — Bob Ross
That's just an odd phrase. You can just drop the 'to' and leave it as 'ought to be' if the 'what' part of the phrasing is causing issues.
They are binding socially (normatively) only insofar as most normal people hold to them.
but when it comes to significant moral issues like murder, rape, child abuse, theft, and so on I think it works well enough.
Moral judgments can be stated in propositional form, but this does not mean that they are propositions.
We do not regard something as right or wrong or good or bad as the result of propositional acceptance or analysis.
You are looking through the wrong end of the telescope. Moral philosophy should not begin with some set of contested definitions.
Moral subjectivism holds that moral propositions have no objective truth values independent of individual belief.
You see you're stuck in this objective "True" or "False" mode. There isn't a "True" or "False" to a subjective moralist.
They're all the same argument, or it seems that way to me, and that's why I was getting at your bias definition for belief and truth.
If I came to you and said your belief is false because it's not my truth, then I'm being objective.
Can you drill into that more?
For example, the title is " In any objective morality existence is inherently good". If "good" is "ought to exist", then "inherently good" is "inherently ought to exist": there is no such distinction between intrinsic (inherent) and extrinsic 'ought to exist". Either something ought to exist, or it shouldn't.
…
Also, you define "good", as a concept, in a moral sense when it should be being defined in its generic sense: otherwise, you have invalidly omitted goodness simpliciter.
…
I don't think this is internally coherent for your position: you use the term 'good' to denote things which you do not thereby concede should exist. Let's take it by example.
Imagine you could combine two elements (in the periodic table) to formulate another element and, let's stipulate, this would produce "more existence" than if the combination were not done. This combination would be, then, "good".
Imagine, though, that you could combine those two elements with two other elements to formulate another element and, let's stipulate, that would produce "more existence" than if the combination were not done. This combination, likewise, would be, then, "good".
However, imagine that the first combination doesn't produce as much existence as the second combination: they are both "good", when considered in themselves, but the second one is more "good".
Let's say you can only perform one of the combinations (as performing one eliminates the possibility of performing the other): obviously, you would choose the second one (because it is more "good"). However, if you what you mean by "good" is merely "what should exist" then both combinations should exist; but it seems perfectly coherent for you to say "the first combination is good, but it should not exist because the second combination is better (i.e., 'more good')".
…
As an external critique, the other issue is that defining goodness in this manner eliminates many commonly accepted usages of the concept; e.g., by saying that this clock is good for telling the time, one is not at all implying that the clock should exist.
Considering good is "What should be"
I'm not seeing what you're stating. Should "X" be? Then it is good.
the nature of a proposition: they are always objective and absolute — Bob Ross
I see no meaning in this phrase.
I'm saying that for me to say torturing babies is wrong is equivalent to me saying I believe torturing babies is wrong.
It's like if I say to you "Your wife is having an affair" when I don't have hard evidence for it but I believe it very strongly for whatever reason; what I'm really saying is I beleive your wife is having an affair if I am honest,
I can't make sense of the claim "torturing babies is wrong" if I take that to be saying it is wrong tout court, because I can't imagine anything that could make that true, apart from what most people would feel and believe.
Which means that the proposition is inextricably tied to belief, mine, someone else's, even most peoples'.
As I explained in the absence of any other truthmaker belief is all we've got.
You are talking about committing a semantic contradiction
Really nothing is morally binding: people can believe something is wrong, even feel terrible shame in doing it, and yet do it, nonetheless
This is true. Again, it seems I need to go into the second part where we actually measure what existence is and how we calculate it. For now as an intro, I'm not bothered by these issues. We'll see if they remain pertinent on the next drill down.
On the strength of what would I be obligated?
And what would it mean for such a claim to be true beyond my feeling or thinking it to be so?
Would there need to be a lawgiver who would punish me if I transgressed.
…
Are you invoking God?
If a proposition expresses how something ought to be for some individual, then it is the fact that the individual believes that proposition that "supports the ought", so to speak
If you want to go beyond that you need to discover what "supports the ought"—you need to address that question.
a proposition cannot be made true or false relative to a belief, and this is why they have to rewrite it as "I believe <...>" as they can't evaluate coherently "<...>" relative to a belief — Bob Ross
The first part of the above quoted is what you are setting out to prove, the second part I can't figure out what it means. What is the part that can't be coherently evaluated? "One ought not to kill"? All the parts of the phrase are well-defined and refer to outside things, even "ought", which is that a course of action is preferrable over another. Janus expressed the same feeling above. The MS evaluates the proposition according to whether he believes it or not. Yes, the belief includes the proposition, is your argument that this goes in a circle?
unless you are referring to MSs that do explicitly convert moral propositions X to «I believe X»,
There is nothing about any moral proposition that obligates anyone to adhere to it. If torturing babies is morally repugnant to me, I am unlikely to torture babies,
It follows that I believe it to be a normative claim.
How do moral propositions become normative under your view?
Truth isn't a truth-maker, though. In the same way that states of affairs make statements true (but the state of affairs isn't truth) so goes it that the sentiments make moral propositions true.
The moral proposition is still true, but truth is not an emotion, and so it's perfectly fine to claim that emotions are the truth-makers of moral propositions.
Good - what should be
I think the easier rejoinder might be to let go of one or the other belief, if they agree with the argument, but redefine Moral Subjectivism in a palatable way -- for instance, a Moral Subjectivist will often say that it's not beliefs about the Moral Proposition which make it true, but our sentiments which make it true -- there's not a cognitive justification so much as a cognitive expression of feeling. What makes "One ought not murder the innocent" true is that when a person says
(1) "One ought not murder the innocent",
that statements means
(2) "I feel like murdering the innocent is abhorrent"
I don't understand what you mean by saying:
but then moral propositions do not exist, which seems pretty absurd. — Bob Ross
Can you explain?
If torturing babies is morally repugnant to me, then why can I not say that it is truly morally wrong for me?
C1: Therefore, a belief about a proposition cannot make that proposition true or false.
In other words the truth of the proposition is clearly dependent on an actual belief - something you appeared to deny when you wrote.
A claim that "john "believes X" is not dependent on any belief about John' s beliefs (your point) but it is dependent on whether John'shas that beliefsabout X (Michael's point)
P: "I believe that aliens exist"
P2: "I believe that I believe that aliens exist"
I would say that the truth of P is relative to a belief
Being that "I believe one ought not torture babies" is "one ought not torture babies"
"I believe one ought not torture babies" is a moral proposition