But I don't think it objectively true. That does not stop me from thinking it true. — Banno
You seem concerned that I don't use the term "moral objectivism". Is it that you think that moral statements being subjective renders them somehow less important? — Banno
Moral statements have a direction of fit such that we change how things are to make the statement so.
Suppose I think that one ought keep holy the Sabbath ( I don't).
If Fred comes along and says that we should open up shops on the Sabbath, I might simply say that he is wrong. That does not make my beliefs about the Sabbath any less subjective.
That is, keeping the Sabbath Holy, while not objective, can still determine my attitude towards Fred.
Yeah, that's not as clear as I would like it to be. We are in a culture that has valued objective truths because it seems easier to reach agreement on them. This has led to a devaluation of subjective truths.
Yet it is our attitude towards things that is most important.
What cannot be said is of far greater import than what can be said. — Banno
I'm happy you agree. — Merkwurdichliebe
Just out of curiousity and ignorance on my part, if you'll breifly explain, what is the more common use of the term? — Merkwurdichliebe
By what metric? What is philosophy... hmmm? and define true! — Mr Phil O'Sophy
Too strong. Forget meaning -- look instead at what we do with words. — Banno
The mere fact that it is possible to hold the opinion in common makes it objective. — Merkwurdichliebe
A bit out of left field, but OK.
I also claim to prefer vanilla ice over chocolate ice. Do you expect me to provide a warrant for that, too?
Perhaps it is wrong to insist that every true statement demands justification. — Banno
It's narcissistic to assume we're all like you :P — NKBJ
Philosophy, as I see it, is a bunch of brains thinking about their brains.
— YuZhonglu
Maybe a bunch of brains thinking about other brains? — Bitter Crank
Can the planet Jupiter exist without you yourself being alive? If so, can it exist without any humans being alive? If so, why would the fact of it's existence need a statement generated by the neural circuitry in our brains? — ssu
If folk keep adding comments at a greater rate than I can reply, this will be my longest ever thread. — Banno
Is it not a fact that Banno prefers vanilla ice to chocolate, regardless how anyone feels about that, including Banno? Is that not an attribute of Banno?
— Harry Hindu
Someone else said something similar. I don't think so. I think my preference is rather central to the issue, and hence the statement is subjective. — Banno
We are of the same mind regarding the first belief. As to the second, no. You are, of course, allowed to hold contradictory beliefs, but I prefer not to. — Fooloso4
What I find of value in considering such things is the difference between a proposition and the belief in a proposition. In logicians parlance, belief ranges over propositions.
SO "The cat is on the mat" and "It is true that the cat is on the mat" are each only true if the other is true.
In contrast, "The cat is on the mat" and "I believe that the cat is on the mat" are quite autonomous. Each can be true or false, independently of the other.
This point seems lost in so much of what is said in these forums. — Banno
Apologies for lowering the tone, but on the subject of subjective truth, I was reminded of a John finnemore joke.
"I see you've brought your ridiculous dog with you".
"My dog is not ridiculous"
"Well then whose dog have you brought?" — Isaac
Words are used all sorts of ways, by all sorts of people. There might be an individual who uses "cat" to only refer to what most of us call "dogs," for example. Saying that the most common way to use a term is somehow "true" (or correct, etc.) by virtue of that fact is the argumentum ad populum fallacy. — Terrapin Station
That this text is written in English is not dependent on my own taste or feelings. Hence it is an objective truth.
— Banno
Truth there can't have the property of being objective because the relation in question only obtains via an evaluation that an individual makes, based on how they assign meanings to the words/sentence in question, relative to what they're making the judgment with respect to--that is, a judgment about that meaning and its relationship to something else. Those are mental events, and hence on the definition of subjective as mental phenomena, we're talking about a subjective property, not an objective property. — Terrapin Station
I think this is a classic example of a philosophical problem which dissolves when one looks closely at the language. If one say "anchovies are disgusting" I don't think they are making a claim about anchovies at all, they're making a claim about their state of mind, it just sounds like they're making a claim about anchovies because the words are arranged in a similar manner to "anchovies are fish". But look closely at the role such claims actually play in life, they play the role of a claim about preference, and since we have no external cause of meaning other than the role expressions play, we have no cause to think it means anything other.
So "anchovies are disgusting" is just as much an objective claim as "anchovies are fish" because "anchovies are disgusting" means "I don't like anchovies".
"abortion is immoral" is more complicated because there may be implicit in that the proposition that there are external moral codes, but even so, if you look at the job the expression does, it's still really saying "according to my moral code, abortion is immoral", which is an objective claim. — Isaac
It is not a fact of the world that 'cat' means what it does, it is merely a fact of collective belief. — Isaac
But it is only the case because it is believed to be so by a sufficiently large number of people to form a language community.
— Isaac
No; it is only so because the cat is on the mat. — Banno
Wouldn't these be factors in addition to logical possibility? — Terrapin Station
Okay. Is something other than the logical possibility of a necessarily detectable god required to justify the claim that you are justified in claiming that you know that god, unspecified, doesn't exist? — Terrapin Station
Philosophy, as I see it, is a bunch of brains thinking about their brains. — YuZhonglu
Either logical possibility is sufficient to justify a claim or it isn't. If something else is required--so that there are some cases where it's justified and other cases where it's not, then logical possibility isn't actually sufficient. Something else is required. "Sufficient" means that nothing else is required. — Terrapin Station
Anytime you use a concept, you're referring to that concept. — YuZhonglu
Yes, you can point at things other than your finger. How does that relate to this debate? — YuZhonglu
I feel my previous posts clarified what YuZhonglu was trying to get across. I could be wrong. — christian2017
I think YuZhonglu is making the notion that in a historical, crime scene, and scientific perspective that over time new conclusions are made about old results. If i have video footage that Bob robbed my house and 10 years later i discover Bob died in 1990 and infact it was hologram of Bob. The actual person who robbed my house was Frank and he did it with out being caught on camera. — christian2017
My definition makes sense, unlike yours. — YuZhonglu
I've reviewed it. I still don't understand.
Facts are generated by the human brain. If there's no brain, then there are no facts.
That's one of my positions. Why do you disagree? — YuZhonglu
What logic? I'm not being silly (or at least I'm not trying to). But you are. — YuZhonglu
Now you're just being purposefully confusing. — YuZhonglu
Without human brains, there can also be no human facts. — YuZhonglu
I don't define "fact" like the way a lot of other people do. As I see it, a "fact" is just a strongly held opinion that a person's brain [edit] is really certain about. — YuZhonglu