You are under no obligation to participate.I would be more interested in this conversation if you actually stated a clear argument rather than smirkly saying "I am getting it" by my obviously comedic statement of throwing out philosophy. — Lionino
Good. So, contrary to what you said before, there are things that it makes no sense to doubt.I cannot doubt that it appears to me that I am reading the question. — Lionino
Oh, my bad. That should have read "physical", not "moral".Not the case. — AmadeusD
I know. But I'm attempting to have you do so, so as to show that the distinction cannot be made do the work you set for it.My intention was never to give a distinct account of subjective vs objective — AmadeusD
Ok, why is "This is a table" not objective? Seems to me that its being a table is at least as clear as its being made of wood.I concede the 'table' element is not at all objective... — AmadeusD
Have you ever wondered why it is so intractable?It is quite the recurrent question in the history of philosophy. — Lionino
I don't want moral statements to "escape from being subjective", any more than I want them to escape from being green. I'm saying that the framing of the issue in terms of "objective" and "subjective" is misleading.I don't understand how that description provides an escape from being subjective? Wide-spread acceptance of a custom doesn't make it an objective fact about the state of affairs underlying it, does it? — AmadeusD
What do you mean? I feel like you just sidestepped the questions I asked. It still stands: how do we "discover", "figure out", "decipher", etc. which moral propositions are true (under your view)? — Bob Ross
We don't discover them.So, for your view, how do we discover the moral facts? — Bob Ross
There can be no algorithmic process here, that sets out which moral propositions are true and which are not....how do we evaluate which moral propositions are actually true? — Bob Ross
It's subjective in the sense that it's people who are talking about its existence. — baker
Just to be sure, the concern here is not "table", the type, but "That table", with the definite pronoun. It's an individual table.London is a piece of naming, not a piece of land. As is table viz. Table is what we call certain bits of wood, used via custom for certain purposes. — AmadeusD
If you flick back through my comments in this thread, I hope it will be clear that I've argued for there being true "ought" statements, and that I would count these as "facts of the matter".I assume on this front you accept there are no 'facts of the matter' beyond impression? — AmadeusD
That presumes a word-to-world direction of fit....discover... — Bob Ross
If, theoretically, there were facts embedded into God's will such that "one ought not torture puppies for fun", then it would be a moral fact and meet your criteria — Bob Ross
Why is London analogous to table, but wood isn't? London is also what it is - and that can also be boiled down to atoms, quarks etc... And the high-level organisation of those things is London.London is analogous to table. — AmadeusD
Often the conversation degenerates into arguments about the "true" nature of this or that "ism". Better to keep to the basics. So in this thread, the interesting bit is not who is or is not an antirealist, but whether there are moral truths....standard... — Bob Ross
In this second case, I would say yes. 'wood' is merely a symbol for a state of affairs (that being liganous plant matter existing). The table part, could certainly be considered subjective - but that's a known issue (what makes a table, such as it is?). So, the statement (taking the identity of a table for granted) is objectively true. — AmadeusD
But isn't the table also a subjective demarcation?It represents teh subjective demarcation of certain of that land, — AmadeusD
Is there a difference between reality, dreams, and hallucinations? — Patterner
The first answer:why "subjective"? What does that word add? — Banno
London does't work.It strikes me that the claim could not be made, but for a subject perceiving it's value. — AmadeusD
Check out the SEP article.Does the project of "logical positivism" or "empiricism" in general rest solely on Ayer's idea of sense data? — schopenhauer1
Those are subjective terms for subjective demarcations within actual states of affairs — AmadeusD
Well, the claim that London is in England could not be made without a subject to make the claim. Is it subjective, too?It strikes me that the claim could not be made, but for a subject perceiving it's value. — AmadeusD
I'd say that it means the speaker believes it ought to be true, in the case of moral propositions. So "One ought not kick puppies for fun" is true means that I believe one ought not kick puppies for fun. — Moliere
A judgement, perhaps, but why "subjective"? What does that word add?I don't understand this to be a 'feature' of anything, but a subjective judgement. — AmadeusD
Do we have to choose? Why not both, or either depending on what you are doing?Is there supposed to be come correspondence between the so called true statement and the world? Or does truth just have a social function, as a deflationist might say? — frank
There seems to be an advantage in keeping our ought statements small. Burying children under buildings is wrong, even if it helps one meet the Grand Strategy.It seems right, though. — Moliere
Well, why not. There's more than one way to use the word, sometimes folk use it to refer to any truth, sometimes, and especially sometimes when doing philosophy, only to those truths that have a direction of fit of word-to-world; the speaker is attempting to match there words to the way things are.I recently finished reading some Kripke and he used "fact" to refer to some detectable feature of the world. — frank
Please do.I have a feeling that there's no reason not to proceed to lecture XI, — Ludwig V
So one could have a linguistic pluralism in which one person spoke of rabbits being leporidae, and another a system in which gavagai are, maybe gavaidea... and the two schemes would in the end say much the same thing. For Carnap the touchstone was consistency, not correspondence. Ayer and Austin on the other hand opted for correspondence.principle of tolerance: we are not in the business of setting up prohibitions but of arriving at conventions… In logic there are no morals. — SEP:Carnap
But object-language is not derived from sense-data language. It's the other way round. (I'm hedging about "entailment", of course.) — Ludwig V
Moral cognitivism: Ethical statements may have a truth value. They may be true, they may be false. Moral cognitivism does not rule out assigning some third or even no, truth value to some Ethical statements. Hence a moral cognitivist may adopt, say, Kripke's theory of truth and assign no truth value to some ethical statements. Such a one would be a non-cognitive antirealist. But keep in mind that this term only has standing in contrast to moral non-cognitivism; we would not use "non-cognitivism" if it were not for "cognitivism"Banno’s biggest problem is that we thinks moral cognitivism is equivalent to moral realism; which makes no sense, especially since I happen to be a moral cognitivist that is a moral anti-realist. — Bob Ross
The point here is to show how an ought statement follows from an is statement. That's what Searle does.That doesn't mean that language entails behaviour. It doesn't. — Pantagruel
On Searle, I wrote:Tomasello himself was very influenced by philosophers such as John Searle with their idea of "social facts". But he did not stop at just going off on a mind-journey. He actually experimented and observed. — schopenhauer1
Collective intentionality
You can't play football on your own.
And if you send 36 players onto a field, with each trying to kick the ball between the goal posts, but that does not amount to a game of football.
But 18 people trying together to kick the ball between the posts, with another 18 trying together to stop them - there's the makings of a game.
So it is clear that there is a difference between "I am trying to kick a goal" and "We are trying to kick a goal". Collective intent is not simply the concatenation or addition of individual intents. Collective intent is shared; collective intentionality is shared.
Searle introduced the term in his paper "Collective intentions and actions". The argument there is that collective intentions are not reducible to individual intentions and beliefs, and yet happen in an individual's mind. There is no supernatural linking of minds here, just the intent to work as a group.
Briefly and dogmatically, Searle contends that
We-intentions do not reduce to I-intentions; they are basic,
We-intentions happen in individuals
We-intentions have as a background that there are others who may engage in the collective exercise
We-intentions have an intent and a propositional content, S(p), that aligns with the force and propositional content of speech acts, F(p). — Banno
