We need some way of trying to answer moral questions. — Pfhorrest
Moral claims tell you what to do regardless of your personal goals. This is often referred to as "objective", but the term "objective" has some unfortunate baggage associated. Perhaps it's better to call it "apodictic". Moral claims are prescriptive claims that establish a general duty you should follow. — Echarmion
Hmmm who are these "most people?" — Anaxagoras
There's always someone poorer than you, but there's always someone less poor who should be doing more. — Isaac
I get what you're saying here, but what does that have to do with the crux of BLM's message of systemic racism and the lack of transparency when it comes to police misconduct? — Anaxagoras
Truth is vastly over-rated. the analysis of truth I've given here shows that. Belief is far more interesting. — Banno
The truth is massively overrated. — Isaac
Describing "the leaf is green" as a useful fiction is deceptive. The leaf is green. Sure, both '"the leaf is green" is true' and 'Fred believes that the leaf is green' have the similarity of being part of our language. That does not make them the same. — Banno
To your second point: you already know the difference between use and mention, so I'm puzzled that you haven't applied it here:
"the leaf is green" is true iff the leaf is green
On the left of the "iff" is a statement that is being mentioned. On the right is a statement that is being used. — Banno
that the sentence "the leaf is green" is used to say that the leaf is green is indeed a social convention. But that the leaf is green - not so much. The world is always, inescapably, already interpreted by our language; the world is all that is the case.
But, that does not mean that we can talk about our interpretation without also talking about the world. Remember Stove's gem; that we must interpret the world in order to talk about it does not imply that there is no world, only the interpretation. " The world is all that is the case" does not say that all there is, is statements; it does not replace the world with language. — Banno
I have taken responsibility for raising consciousness ever since I realize what happened — Athena
What have I said that you do not believe is true? — Athena
we are what we defended our democracy against. — Athena
that past education promoted independent thinking and literacy and a culture essential to our liberty. — Athena
Only when democracy is defended in the classroom is it defended — Athena
Since 1958 all those not going on to higher education have been cheated out of the education they need to self-actualization. — Athena
My generation is horrified by what has happened to our personal power — Athena
for sure that past education promoted independent thinking and literacy and a culture essential to our liberty. — Athena
I thought people who claim that they are lead by science are objective, open-minded, and ready to admit their failures. — Eugen
Do you (or some scientific consensus) not agree with Kohlberg's stages of moral development? That seems to confirm my own experiences. — Pfhorrest
My ideas of what is come from my empirical experiences: my first notion of reality is of the stuff that I can see rather than what I can’t, and every later notion of what is real is a refinement of that nature-given intuition about it. Likewise, my ideas of what ought to be come from my hedonic experiences: my first notion of morality is of stuff that feels pleasant rather than painful, and every later notion of what is moral is a refinement of that nature-given intuition about it. — Pfhorrest
I do question whether, when one's virtual social groups geographically encompass the world, one can actually maintain e.g. racist or nationalistic viewpoints without hypocrisy. — Kenosha Kid
American white-black relations have been like if more representative people, who had not inherited racist or slavery-affirming socialisations, had mediated them from the start? This starts off looking like a simple question that suggests that maybe if power wasn't so concentrated always among psychopathic opportunists, things might have been better. But of course slavery had been accepted as natural since the middle ages, in no small part thanks to religion, and in no small part thanks to its legal status, so its still likely that even normal people might have gone the same route. — Kenosha Kid
My feeling is that, whatever initial difficulties there might have been in encountering new out-groups, in the absence of socialisations that push us toward pre-social behaviours and suspend our social capacities, and in the absence of a credible existential threat from such out-groups, our natural altruism would tend toward inclusivity. — Kenosha Kid
You keep asking what justifies a belief, but putting it in terms of how to tell if something is true. — Banno
That is, sometimes our beliefs are wrong. — Banno
The statement does not go in the "true" bin if we think it true; it goes in if it is indeed true. — Banno
Green leaves are available for inspection. Boxed beetles, not. — Banno
I'm thinking that you put the statement in the "true" bin if and only if the leaf is green. — Banno
all they have in common is that they are true and nothing more. — Banno
Here's the leaf - I show it to you. Yes, that bit is perhaps ineffable in that there is no rule here, nothing to be said appart from my showing you the leaf and your using the word "green" for it. — Banno
part of this analysis would be to ensure that we can track when we are talking about a statement being a shared belief and when we are talking about it being true per se. — Banno
it's not a bad idea to set aside such uses in order to draw useful distinctions, — Banno
The statements that are true are the true ones. "p" is true iff p. That's pretty much all there is to say about them. — Banno
To talk about which things we think are conscious, for example. Also to wonder about the experiences of other things. Consider:
John "I wonder what it's like to be a snail."
Jack: "Don't be silly, there's nothing it is like to be a snail. They're not conscious. Their brains aren't big enough to generate experience." — bert1
Speaking does not entail consciousness — bert1
Consciousness is detectable to the person that has it. And they may want to refer to this using a word. — bert1
But we don't have to limit the use of 'consciousness' (even partly defined in terms of behaviour) to humans. We can wonder, for example, if the responsive behaviour of rocks is evidence of their subjective experience. — bert1
I’m getting tired of repeating myself, and looking forward to this conversation ending — Pfhorrest
I quoted what you agreed was prima facie too. You said "apparently normative statements" yourself; they appear normative to you too, but you think that appearance is deceiving. And you know, we could always ask the speakers themselves what it is they're trying to do. I strongly doubt a majority of them will say they're just expressing their feelings. If so, then we wouldn't have moral arguments. — Pfhorrest
I can likewise check if supposedly bad things actually seem bad as far as my experiences go:...
If I tell you that it's bad for people to get punched in the face, and you disagree, you can try getting punched in the face, and I expect you'll agree that that sure seems bad!...
you getting punched in the face is bad, but it doesn't matter whether anybody else gets punched in the face -- but then we're back to the moral equivalent of solipsism, and you presumably reject solipsism about reality, you continue believing in things you can't currently see, so this isn't asking anything more than that. — Pfhorrest
You haven't put forth any of their arguments here — Pfhorrest
My entire argument here is just asking what's the relevant difference that makes one deserving of different treatment than the other. — Pfhorrest
Prima facie they are attempts at asserting that something actually ought to be some way or other. — Pfhorrest
I say to just take that appearance at face value. — Pfhorrest
The burden of proof lies on the one who's saying that something is different than it seems, and that something or its negation is not possible. — Pfhorrest
You instead cynically want proof from the ground up that it is even possible at all for any normative claim to be right in what they appear to be saying. — Pfhorrest
If you subjected factual questions to this same degree of cynicism, you would be a nihilist about reality too. — Pfhorrest
But that's not a problem for your approach to facts, so why is it a problem for an approach to norms? — Pfhorrest
You are merely assuming that they are not, and on account of that refusing to address the contents of those normative opinions at all, focusing instead only on the facts about people having those opinions. — Pfhorrest
Conversely, scientism like yours responds to attempts to treat normative questions as completely separate from factual questions (as they are) by demanding absolute proof from the ground up that anything at all is objectively normative, or moral, and not just a factual claim in disguise or else baseless mere opinion. — Pfhorrest
it ends up falling to justificationism about normative questions, while failing to acknowledge that factual questions are equally vulnerable to that line of attack. — Pfhorrest
Such glosses talk about experience, qualia (which I dislike), something it is like to be it, subjectivity, having a point of view, and so on.
Your insistence that the medical definition is the only one is very annoying. — bert1
you rely on not doubting them, or in other words you treat them as certain.
Of course you might bring one or two into doubt; but in order to do so, you must hold firm to other beliefs. — Banno
You need a license to braid hair but not to bring a new human being into the world. Go figure. — fishfry
Why are some against BLM? — Anaxagoras
Usually in philosophy, one is not hemmed in by an either-or. People are frustratingly good at finding alternatives. There are many approaches to consciousness, so it's decidedly not a binary proposition. We don't have to accept or discard anything because it's not a settled matter. — Marchesk
I ask that you just substitute every instance of “moral” with whatever you would label something that is actually normative, because normativity is entirely what I’m talking about. — Pfhorrest
I suspect they will not find the solution they are after. — bert1
Some of them agree with RogueAI. His view does not stand in opposition of to the views of the overwhelming majority of academics studying consciousness. There is no settled position on this such that opposition to it is by default unreasonable. — bert1
