In all the theorising in this thread we may lose track of the purpose of ethical thinking: to decide what to do. Ethics has to be about the relation between belief and action.What does any of this have to do with morality and moral obligation? — Michael
Because at some stage one must act.But why must it end there? — goremand
...as if, upon coming across a puppy-kicker, you would be able to convince them of the error of their ways by your brilliant philosophical argumentation. No, you get the bugger arrested. — Banno
One demonstrates the reality of the world by interacting with it, hence the reality of ethical statements by enacting them....appeals to the stone... — Michael
if there's no practical difference between being morally obligated to harm and being morally obligated to not harm — Michael
What relevance is that? Is liking or not liking to be around folk the measure of obligation? — Michael
That's the very thing being discussed.
1. A categorical imperative is just "one ought not X".
2. A hypothetical imperative is "according to Y, one ought not X" or "one ought not X or Z will happen."
I cannot rationally justify the truth of any (1), and yet many seem to be true. It's something of a cognitive dissonance. — Michael
Needs must. It's a response to my interlocutors.↪Banno You're too obsessed with "isms". — Michael
What the various versions of moral realism have in common, in opposition to other views, is that there are true moral statements. — Banno
I haven't said this. — Michael
There's an article on moral realism in SEP as well (as on moral anti-realism), the one from which my quote came. It does not use "objective" in the definition, but notes
" ...although some accounts of moral realism see it as involving additional commitments, say to the independence of the moral facts from human thought and practice, or to those facts being objective in some specified way."
I've said before I don't really care what you call it. the interesting bit is that moral statements have a truth value. — Banno
Human psychology isn't a slave to some supposed duty. — Michael
X is immoral for us. The challenge to moral realism is in asking about what's moral for homo habilis, or homo erectus. They're human. Are they us? Or not? The answer is going to be somewhat artificial, which means morality is artificial. — frank
:smile: You are asking for a friend?So if Neanderthals engaged in cannibalism, you would say that was immoral? — frank
with which I was agreeing.If it could be proved that I ought eat babies I still wouldn't. — Michael
With each other as well as the Papists.Protestants would be likely to disagree. — Leontiskos
This is the reason for my discomfort with the idea of moral truth. — AmadeusD
Then you would go along with the modus tollens reading...?
(1) If religiously based ethics is false, then virtue ethics is the way moral philosophy ought to be developed.
(2b) It is not the case that virtue ethics is the way to develop moral philosophy
(3b) Therefore, it is not the case that religiously based ethics is false. — Banno
We ought to obey the law — Michael
Sure. We do cooperate. Yet it remains open as to whether we ought cooperate. There are moral issues unaddressed by naturalism.See my second paragraph above. — Michael
The naturalistic fallacy is a response to ethical naturalism, how does it even apply to moral anti-realism, or subjective realism? — hypericin
Cheers. You'll be sending me the hemlock, then?I think you're a rude troll that isn't a fraction as clever or knowledgeable as you pretend. Kindly "piss off". — hypericin
