It seems we are at an impasse. I believe my premises are true. You don’t. Oh well. — Noah Te Stroete
Why is it false? — Noah Te Stroete
If morality came from the individual, there would be no need for socialization.
There is a need for socialization.
Thus, morality doesn’t come from the individual. — Noah Te Stroete
Pain is bad. (a given) — Noah Te Stroete
Pain is instinctively avoided. (another given)
Causing pain in other people is bad. (from the first given, and the fact that we live in a society as social creatures)
Causing pain in other people should be avoided. (From the second given and the third premise) — Noah Te Stroete
He didn’t say that. He is saying that the action is MORALLY wrong. — Noah Te Stroete
This has to be a category error or something fallacious. He isn’t saying that “pain is immoral”. — Noah Te Stroete
He is saying that by our very nature, pain is something we instinctively avoid. — Noah Te Stroete
2. Pain is bad.
If you went to a doctor and said, 'doctor, this pain is bad', you would have good reason to be annoyed if his reply was, 'ah, so you have a personal dislike of pain, do you?' Everyone whose views have not been tainted by bad philosophy knows that pain is bad - this is a truth we learn by experiencing pain. If you wish to pretend that you aren't aware of this truth, then of course that is up to you. — Herg
3. Therefore the effect of boiling babies is bad.
Entailed by 1 and 2. — Herg
4. Intentionally performing an action whose effect is bad is morally wrong.
'Wrong' here is simply the equivalent of 'bad' when applied to actions: that we happen to say 'wrong' rather than 'bad' is an accident of linguistic history. The material point is that the badness of the intended result of an action necessarily infects the intention with which the action is performed. The two cannot be reasonably separated, and therefore if an action is intended to have bad consequences, the action itself must be a bad action. — Herg
5. Therefore boiling babies is morally wrong.
Entailed by 4 and 5. — Herg
And you have put no effort at all into making any. — Herg
It comes from a variety of sources. One is religious belief ('the gods have told us what to do, so we ought to do it'), another is social programming ('our leaders have told us what we should do, so we ought to do it'), and a third is the one I mentioned earlier, the recognition that pleasure is good and pain bad, and the entirely reasonable inference from this that we ought to promote pleasure and reduce pain. It's in this third area that the basis for a degree of objectivity in moral truths is to be found. For example:
Proof that intentionally boiling babies is morally wrong
1. Boiling babies causes them pain.
2. Pain is bad.
3. Therefore the effect of boiling babies is bad.
4. Intentionally performing an action whose effect is bad is morally wrong.
5. Therefore boiling babies is morally wrong.
If anyone wants to disagree with 1, 2 or 4, I'd be interested to know their reasons. I'd also be interested to know from moral relativists here how they would go about persuading someone else not to boil a baby.
Of course none of the above shows that every deontological principle is based on an objective truth, and I wouldn't want to claim that it was; my view of morality is that some of it is based on objective truth, and some of it is relative.
BTW, I'm quite a bit old than fourteen and three quarters, but it's nice to have it noted that I have a fresh and youthful approach. — Herg
Nothing to do with any teleological goals of society, unless you mean the survival of the community. Morality comes from society/socialization as we are inherently social creatures. Morality does NOT come from the individual. If it did, the world would look very much different. We probably wouldn’t even be having this discussion in such a world as the one you are claiming exists. — Noah Te Stroete
all due respect, and I mean that. None of that self description is close to an argument against the point I was making. — Rank Amateur
The difference is? — Rank Amateur
My issue is if you chose as best you can to place yourself close to subjective end, you are forgoing the right to evaluate the moral judgment of others. It can't just be subjective for you. Nietzsche has to assume the guy stabbing him in the back with a knife is just listening to his particular truth, and his personal morality based on that truth — Rank Amateur
How do you think socialization works? How do you think society works? If we were all lone wolves fighting for territory, this might make sense. As the human world is, it doesn’t make any sense. — Noah Te Stroete
Not important, I'm more interested in the general point, which is that we're all apt to overestimate our moral autonomy and when it comes to the crunch, fall mostly in line, often inventing some reason why we 'had' to. — Baden
It goes for almost all of us to a large degree except for true deviants like sociopaths where through some combination of environment (often abuse) and genetics, enculturation is seriously short-circuited. — Baden
Nothing you've come up with here is particularly dark compared to what goes on in the real world daily. — Baden
You're a fragment of the sociocultural awkwardly expressed through the mostly compliant body of an ape. Your perceived individualism and autonomy is largely formed of retroactive confabulations designed to make the marriage between the fragment and the ape less acrimonious. There's plenty you can't do but manage to convince yourself that you don't want to. — Baden
And where does the individual stem from? Hint: It begins with "S". You didn't choose your moral system so much as it chose you. — Baden
In practice, though, your morality is not going to differ form the vast majority unless you're one of the deviant few; so it is not uniquely yours, and you never would have had it in the first place if you were not enculturated into it.
Of course, on the hand, I am not saying that an individual's moral principles are not what matters most to them. — Janus
Yes, and I suspect that would be because you don't consider corporations to be morally justified in their practices, and therefore feel justified in taking whatever you can from them. But you declined to spell that out. — Janus
It's all but universal, and that's what matters. The anomalies of a deviant few are irrelevant. — Janus
Ah, the romantic fantasy of the individualist! You're not the first to indulge it, and you won't be the last; but it's a woefully simplistic view. — Janus
How would you justify that to yourself? — Janus
As I see it "the debate that's going on" is itself a litany of irrelevancies and category errors. — Janus
On the broader issues it is, for all intents and purposes, universal. — Janus
The fact that there might be some deviants who think that what most people consider to be heinous acts are actually good is what is morally and subjectively irrelevant. — Janus
That should be obvious; I am talking about the context of inter-subjectively shared values being the overarching context within which, perhaps even against which, individuals define their own sets of moral values. How do you think it is not significant? — Janus
You of course realize that relative to my point of view all of equally applies to you. Ironic — Rank Amateur
This is true if you are holding to a notion of individual subjectivity. If you hold to a notion of collective subjectivity or inter-subjectivity, then not so much. — Janus
Yes, that is my entire point - there is no meaningful value judgement that can be made about competing moral views if you hold to subjectivity - they can only be different - there is no meaningful subjectively better or worse. — Rank Amateur
Then please show me how it is possible, before you invoke the fallacy - show it applies please. — Rank Amateur
And they are welcome to their view, but it has no real meaning to anyone else. — Rank Amateur
It muddies the waters because it is a false, or at least weak, analogy. We don't tend to care much what others like to eat, provided it doesn't smell too bad. When it comes to morals almost everyone agrees about the basic principles, and those principles are based on what makes for a harmonious community.
Kant was basically right: there would be a contradiction in saying that you want to live harmoniously with others, but that you think it is OK to lie, cheat. steal, exploit, rape and murder. If you are honest and say that you don't really care about living harmoniously with others, but that it suits you to remain in society because you don't like being alone, you wouldn't be able to survive alone, you need others to exploit and torture lest you be bored, and so on; then there would be no contradiction. But would such a person be moral, immoral or amoral?
(What I don't like about Kant's CI is the notion of duty). — Janus
That is my position that I have been arguing - not theirs. — Rank Amateur
How can one subjective moral view be better than any other subjective moral view - if the basis for both is purely the subjective view of the person who holds it? Any judgment on either view that does not employ some degree of objective morality as a standard to measure against is just one more subjective view. — Rank Amateur
If all moral views are subjective, by definition none can be objectively better than any other. — Rank Amateur
The trivial point is that some people won't be convinced, no matter what. And the illogical connection is that moral objectivism somehow magically has the answer.
— S
Absolutely. — Isaac
To be honest I think subjectivism has the edge here and people are using it despite claiming to oppose it. Look at Tim's argument, or VS's. It's basically saying "I think x is wrong and I'm very clever, wouldn't you like to sound clever like me?" — Isaac
Isaac - I can help you with the right answer - here it is:
Rank - Me and a few million other relative morality believers all seem to hold 2 of the same subjective beliefs - the first one is we think Hitler is a monster, and the second one is we subjectively believe we are going to hang anyone who doesn't subjectively think he is a monster too.
Now I am convinced.
Wish there was kind of name we could use for such a widely and commonly held belief. — Rank Amateur
Oh, like setting the world on fire...
Wallow wallow... — Wallows
Go feed the cat.
Wallow wallow... — Wallows
Wallow wallow ...
Poor cat.
Wallow meow.... — Wallows
Wallow wallow.
Did you feed the cat?
Meow meow. — Wallows
