Wallow wallow...
Yes, the ship is sunk.
Wallow wallow... — Wallows
Too busy wallowing...
Wallow wallow. :blush: — Wallows
How's that? Convinced yet? — Isaac
(and of course - hope it does not need to be said that IRL I know Hitler was an abominably immoral man) — Rank Amateur
I am not Moses, but I AM Noah, father of humankind. — Noah Te Stroete
How I wish I was still fourteen-and-a-half. But if anyone in this forum thinks they can move their case forward by quoting edicts from a dead philosopher rather than by advancing cogent arguments, they are in the wrong place. These are not the foothills of Mount Sinai, and no-one here is Moses. — Herg
Working on pithy.
Meaning is shared only insofar as the context demands. Even words that seemed to create shared meaning in one context may, when used in a different context, demonstrate that the meaning was never shared to begin with.
Yelling "slab" may get a house built, but it could just be that in the context of a construction site, it was sufficient for the yeller to mean "hand me what is next on the pile" and the receiver to have understood the word to mean "hand me the hard rock thing cut into a manageable shape."
I suck at pithy. — xzJoel
Meaning isn't a thing. So it's not shared.
— Banno
Well thanks for sharing that opinion, but why can we only share things? People talk about shared responsibility; is communion not shared? I think the thought police are over-stepping their remit here. — unenlightened
Each one is contradictory in its own right. — Metaphysician Undercover
They might be, or they might only be as different as two slices of a shared pizza. Some philosophers claim that a meal is only shared if the mouths connect to the same stomach, but I think they are mistaken. — unenlightened
Rwy'n rhannu rhai geiriau gyda chi, ond oni bai eich bod eisoes yn gyfarwydd â'r Gymraeg, ni fyddwch yn deall yr hyn sy'n cael ei ddweud.
As I'm sure you all agree. But perhaps you do not know that you agree? — unenlightened
So it seems safe enough to say that shared meaning requires a plurality of language users. — creativesoul
What is it, and what does it take? — creativesoul
Piss pot Toby jug! — Baden
And I think many who take up arms against political correctness probably feel the same way. Makes me wonder sometimes where the points of disagreement actually lie. Do we just define things differently? — Baden
You may have a point there. I still don't think the overall critique of political correctness is very powerful though. Attacks on it almost always tend to go for soft targets.
For example, I don't think it's appropriate to call children who have learning disabilities, 'mongoloids' or 'retards'. I, like most people, prefer PC terms. The children in question and their parents prefer it and I lose nothing by being PC. So, there's a harder target for you to attack. — Baden
ok - no worries - enjoy the rest of the day — Rank Amateur
goodness gracious of course i don't - you just couldn't resist one last ad hominem could you. Did that really add any philosophic significance? Just don't understand the motivation for such comments. — Rank Amateur
I don’t know S personally, but maybe he’s bad at sports and was always picked last in gym class. Philosophy is his forum for defeating others and winning. At least in his mind. — Noah Te Stroete
Ok, well, I have no sympathy for her considering her background whatever his motives were. But it doesn't seem a very good illustration of why political correctness is a bad thing. I would say the principle of etiquette that frowns upon people shouting "nigger" for fun is pretty sensible. — Baden
Where did I say I disapprove of the prank? — Baden
He embarrassed her for being a racist not for being politically correct. It makes zero sense otherwise. Don't you know the background? — Baden
The video has nothing to do with political correctness and everything to do with embarrassing a minor celebrity who has made past racist comments. — Baden
I will leave here subjectively believing what I darn well please and there is nothing subjectively you can say to change my mind :) — Rank Amateur
Well, but isn't it clear to you that no matter what we do, whatever we believe about meta-ethics, we're left with people with diametrically opposed moral stances? That's hardly a new situation, and it's hardly the result of there being a bunch of meta-ethical subjectivists or relativists.
If we're all objectivists we don't magically arrive at a scenario wherein we all have the same moral stances. We just believe that the folks with other stances are incorrect, that they're unreasonable, etc. That doesn't help change anyone's mind.
My meta-ethical views are not not supposed to be a solution to everyone having the same moral stances. It's just aiming to get right what's really going on ontologically when it comes to morality. — Terrapin Station
we are good - as soon as you acknowledged, as you did that there needs to be some degree of objective view in comparing moral judgments - i am fine - I have no need to find where exactly that line is. — Rank Amateur
and now we enter semantics - and ad hominem - seems the discussion is nearing an end — Rank Amateur
getting closer - my view is there is no such thing as either absolutely subjective or absolutely objective morality - it is a continuum and we place ourselves somewhere on that continuum. — Rank Amateur
that is a non answer to a direct question - — Rank Amateur
maybe this is a better way of me making my point.
My subjective moral judgment is that Hitler did nothing that is morally wrong.
Assume your subjective moral judgement is Hitler did lots of stuff that was morally wrong
Make an argument - absent of any objective moral standard to change my mind — Rank Amateur
no issue at all with that - that is my point - as long as the basis of every argument you make is your own subjective judgement. Any plea to anything else adds some degree of objectivity. — Rank Amateur
What is your argument than to person b who has a different subjective judgement that he is incorrect, other than - "in my opinion" any other argument you chose must be adding a degree of objectivity. — Rank Amateur
If all judgments are subjective - than all judgments are subjectively correct - I see no way around this — Rank Amateur
I don't understand what you're thinking here.
Say that my view is that it's not okay to rape others.
I run into someone who thinks that it's okay to rape others.
Per what you're saying above, I can't subjectively compare "not okay to rape others" and "okay to rape others," But I don't know why. It seems like it would be easy to compare them, especially since I already have a view about it, that view being "It's not okay to rape others." When I consider "It's okay to rape others" I reject that, because I don't agree with it. — Terrapin Station
subjectively you are both right — Rank Amateur
if you do not allow some level of objectivity into the judgment you can not compare them, other than saying they are different — Rank Amateur
Then your morals would be out of step with your community. That would put you 'in the wrong'.
— Pattern-chaser
People who think that "out of step with their community" amounts to "wrong" in any manner are the last people I want to be spending time around. — Terrapin Station
this is the issue i am struggling with - happy to be schooled on my errors -
If morality is completely subjective to the individual, than it is equally subjective for all other individuals as well.
for any action - X
person A - makes a subjective moral judgement that X is moral
person B - makes a subjective moral judgement that X is immoral
They are both subjectively right in their individual judgments.
So both must admit the others subjective judgement is correct or
give up the position that all moral judgments are subjective. — Rank Amateur
Then your morals would be out of step with your community. That would put you 'in the wrong'. Unless you think there's some kind of natural law that defines racism to be wrong? — Pattern-chaser
I may have been a smart ass before you were born. How old are you? — Bitter Crank
I got over it, like I did of your selfish, egotistical, and highly immature comments. Hah! :blush: — Wallows
I'd like to disagree. Soberness is the quality of not being drunk, so it's just a negation. — unforeseen
Before alcohol was invented nobody was drunk... — unforeseen
Just like you wouldn't say ancient Egyptians were anti-vaxxers, because vaccination was not even a thing back then let alone it's negation. — unforeseen
Oh, I thought we had reached a realisation that we had no significant disagreement here. :chin: — Pattern-chaser
Fair enough. That a tool is available doesn't mean you have to use it. Maybe you don't have the sort of questions that religion might answer? It doesn't matter. Like I said, religion isn't compulsory. :up: :smile: — Pattern-chaser
