This claim:
Reason asserts, requires, demands, bids, favours, values
is 'true'. — Bartricks
What makes it so? — creativesoul
See the thread on Truth! And our evidence that such claims are true is that our reason represents them to be.
For example, if you think the walls are talking to you, then you're nuts, right? Why? Because walls can't express desires and beliefs as they have none, because they're mindless. Now, that's self-evident. You can't investigate it empirically. But our reason assures us that those objects that lack minds, cannot do things such as assert, require, favour, demand, value.
That's the best possible evidence that mindless things cannot do those things.
Now, if you just insist they can, then although that's your prerogative, you're just ignoring the evidence and asserting rather than arguing.
Here's how you make a case for something. If the thing you're making a case for isn't already self-evident to reason, then you need to show how its truthis implied by propositions that are self-evident to reason.
Propositions that are self-evident to reason are the stopping points of justifications. There are exceptions - such as when we have reason to believe that our faculty of reason is malfunctioning.
Now, to make a case against me I claim that you are going to have to construct arguments that will have premises that are not - not - self-evident to reason.
Perhaps I am wrong about that, but so far you have provided no evidence that I am.
Insisting, apropos nothing whatsoever, that Reason does not represent, direct, assert, require, demand, is not to raise a reasonable doubt about anything I have argued. Like I say, just pick up a book about Reason - a book about ethics, a text book in philosophy - and see how far you get before some mention is made of directives of reason, or demands of reason, or requirements of reason, and so on. It won't be far.
'Reason' is just the name for the source of those directives, demands and so on.
If you think 'directives' of reason do not exist, then argue for that - and argue for it without appealing to any directives of reason (an impossible task).
Perhaps you think that directives do not need a source. Well, they do. A directive can't exist by itself anymore than the age of an object can exist absent the object.
Perhaps you think that directives can be issued by things that are not minds. Okay, like what? Give a clear example.
If you can't do those things, all you're doing is saying "no!" Anyone can do that. Einstein: E=mc2. Creativesoul: No!