It was your second post that made your point clear. — Magnus Anderson
Maybe you'd like to go back and read my initial response to him: — Magnus Anderson
Let's say I expressed myself in a way that wasn't the best. — Magnus Anderson
He assumed.... — Magnus Anderson
Nowadays, when people use the word "chair" what they mean is "a separate seat for one person, typically with a back and four legs". In the future, the definition might change, but when I say that this is the correct definition of the word, what I mean is that this is how people use the word nowadays. — Magnus Anderson
For example, the correct meaning of the word "chair" is "a separate seat for one person, typically with a back and four legs". Hardly disputable. — Magnus Anderson
And what if what people want to convey are certain "truths" about how interactions in a society should function? — Echarmion
The question that comes to mind here is, if moral stances are expressions of emotional attitudes to some degree then what else are they? — Echarmion
My beef with emotivism is that it claims that moral judgments are based solely on one's personal preferences.
That's not true. — Magnus Anderson
My question to Terrapin is an attempt to find a starting point in a discussion, which you may have noticed he flees from. — tim wood
You don't seem to have grasped the fact that you're arguing with someone who believes that things are only morally right/wrong from an individual subjective perspective.Because murder,in itself, does not allow of degrees, , and cannot be partly wrong and not wrong, then it must be right. — tim wood
One last try: murder is wrong, yes or no? — tim wood
They're certainly not based on something that's not one's preferences. — Terrapin Station
What else would it be based on? — Terrapin Station
His personal feeling/taste is a mental phenomenon, right? — Terrapin Station
It's a synonym for mental phenomena, yes. — Terrapin Station
The way I use the terms, which is a common way to use them in philosophy contexts, is that "subjective" refers to mental phenomena (which on my view is a subset of brain function) and "objective" refers to the complement--everything other than mental phenomena, or the mind-independent world. — Terrapin Station
Taking what you believe to be a "literal" meaning of a dictionary definition, and approaching philosophy as if everyone must be using the dictionary definition you looked at, in what you took to be its "literal" sense, will leave you perpetually confused. — Terrapin Station
Yes. — Terrapin Station
Rising global temperatures are different than beliefs about rising global temperatures. — Terrapin Station
The distinction is that the preference for Darjeeling only occurs in brains, whereas the temperatures occur elsewhere. — Terrapin Station
It makes sense to talk of my preference for Darjeeling as being subjective, and it makes sense to talk of rising global average temperatures as being objective. — Banno
I dont see the distinction. — Harry Hindu
I'm not sure what we're referring to re "some of them are not conscious." — Terrapin Station
Some of the most successful creatures on the planet, in terms of survival, are not conscious. — Unseen
Do you think it's possible you are actually on the surface of the Moon? — Unseen
It's one thing to say your belief that some creatures are not conscious is a reasonable assumption (debatable but not particularly controversial) but quite another to say you know it with certainty as you did earlier:Based on everything we know, it's a reasonable a justifiable assumption that amoeba can't have experience. — Unseen
I know it with about the same certainty as I know that I'm not writing from the surface of the moon. — Unseen
But I just told you the evidence we have. What's the objection to it? (And the evidence had better not amount to it not being certain.) — Terrapin Station
If "assumptions" can be things we believe on plenty of good evidence, though that seems like an unusual way to use that term. — Terrapin Station
I'm telling you what i meant. Nobody else can do that. Not even you. LOL — Unseen
I know it with about the same certainty as I know that I'm not writing from the surface of the moon. — Unseen
Assumptions can be justified. — Unseen
There's plenty of evidence--behavioral, structural, etc. It just doesn't support a conclusion that's certain (or proved--but that's a truism with empirical evidence period) and people fall back on that completely ignorant "either certainty or it's a stab-in-the-dark guess" dichotomy. — Terrapin Station
You're making a category error. I don't assume that I am conscious. I know that directly. I assume others are conscious, but admit that I may be wrong. — Unseen
Assumptions can be quite logical and rational. — Unseen
Of course, maybe we're not. — Unseen
I know it [that some creatures are not conscious] with about the same certainty as I know that I'm not writing from the surface of the moon. — Unseen
Some of the most successful creatures on the planet, in terms of survival, are not conscious. — Unseen
I don't take or issue reading assignments, but it sounds like you might be interested in aScientific American article titled There Is No Such Thing As conscious Thought by philosopher Peter Carruthers.. — Unseen
since we could operate automatically on the pre-conscious mind without having experiences at all. — Unseen
Yes. I don't think your use reflects how the term is commonly used.You are here using "objective" in a way that differs from the one set out in the OP. — Banno
"I prefer vanilla ice" is a subjective statement in accord with the use set out in the OP. It is true only if the speaker does have a certain preference.
But it is also a statement of fact. — Banno
. If they actually do mean "Shakespeare is a brilliant writer" without any caveats, then they are just plain wrong, not subjectively right. — Isaac
But I'm not sure myself how commonly it is used outside of philosophy, — Isaac
So I'm still not seeing why we need a special category of truth for any of this. — Isaac