Stop there and you are pretty much right.Just any old thing that is designated so... — schopenhauer1
They wouldn't be p-zombies if they acted differently. — Michael
I wasn't going to get involved in this thread, because of the many ways modality is misconstrued.. Why would a kind be different than an individual in terms of substance that it is identified with? — schopenhauer1
What does it mean for an obligation to be moral? Are moral obligations discovered or socially constructed (or other)? How does one verify or falsify a supposed moral obligation? — Michael
This captures neatly the problem with @Michael's writing."That's not moral and I refuse to say what I mean by 'moral'" — Leontiskos
what you do with them is type them out. — NOS4A2
Where is this meaning across, between, and external to minds? — NOS4A2
I suggest however, that the prediction that there will be an eclipse in March 2025 is neither correct not incorrect, neither fulfilled or unfulfilled until April 2025. Will that do? — Ludwig V
Thereby hangs a PhD - or a career.But seriously, who invented this idea, and is it proof against Humean scepticism? If not, why not? — Ludwig V
Because of the lack of volition?But I can't work out a similar tactic for the lunar eclipse. — Ludwig V
Since Kripke, It ain't necessarily so.If the link is causal, it is empirical. Which means it is not necessary. — Ludwig V
Yep. Michael's direction is absent. We still have the problem of What To Do.I'm going to step off the merry-go-round — Leontiskos
You do not have to call our talk of "what might be done, what ought be done, what's the best thing to do, and so on" moral, if you do not wish to. That's neither here no there. But there are such sentences, and some of them are true. QED.We can do all of this without introducing moral language. — Michael
That's not what was suggested at all, of course. We talk about what might be done, what ought be done, what's the best thing to do, and so on. Whatever word you choose for this behaviour, it would be absurd to deny that you engage in it.anyone who doesn’t accept your “common sense” realism is being disingenuous is itself disingenuous — Michael
It's very unclear what "word-form" is.word-form — NOS4A2
An apparent dig at Austin...?I mention this point because some people have got the idea from some of the professions though not, I think, the practices of philosophers, that doing philosophy consists or should consist of untying logical knots one at a time-as if, to burlesque the idea, it would have been quite proper and feasible for Hume on Monday to analyse the use of the term 'cause', and then on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday to move on to analyse seriatim the uses of the terms 'causeway', 'cautery' and ,caution', in alphabetical order. — p 31
Roughly, statements in the future tense cannot convey singular, but only general propositions, where statements in the present and past tense can convey both. More strictly, a statement to the effect that something will exist or happen is, in so far, a general statement. When I predict the next eclipse of the moon, I have indeed got the moon to make statements about, but I have not got her next eclipse to make statements about. — p.27
Yes, but I see no reason to take such a view seriously. The sentence "Ludwig may reply to this post later" is about you.Doesn't Ryle's argument about the future mean that rigid designators cannot be rigid in the future tense? — Ludwig V
Doesn’t seem like a moral obligation though... — Michael
Yes. That's because, of course, there are, ex hypothesi no individual (actual) accidents to be averted. I don't see that Ryle is at all confused here. — Ludwig V
Ayer would be proud.I don't know what this word "moral" means. — Michael
That leaves me somewhat nonplused. We've found why we are talking past each other?What does choosing not to volunteer to fight in Ukraine have to do with ethics? — Michael
Of course it is. In choosing to play a game you are choosing not to volunteer to fight in Ukraine. Ethics pervades everything you do.Not every action is ethical. Not every choice requires ethical deliberation. My decision to play, or not play, baseball has nothing to do with ethics at all. — Michael
yep.Kant's epistemology was as impossible as his moral theory — Leontiskos
If that were so, your presence in this forum seems inexplicable.I don't need to posit something like "moral obligations" to decide how to act. Wants and pragmatic concerns are more than sufficient. — Michael
You don't see the incongruity here?As a pragmatic matter, yes. But I'm asking about morality. — Michael
Beyond words, perhaps, but perhaps not beyond acts....completely beyond human grasp... — Peter L. P. Simpson, Autonomous Morality and the Idea of the Noble, p. 16
So when do we get to the part where you actually explain morality? — Michael
