I am just arguing for what I see as the only possible discursive or intersubjective justification of moral principles; that they are more or less universally believed. — John
Well, then your imagination isn't very good. I don't think this is even a plausible
lay account of how these things work. Moral principles don't become true in virtue of people believing them, and by and large no one thinks they can make them true by getting everyone to believe them. Presumably, people want to believe in moral principles or values because they're right or valuable, not vice-versa, and I'm not sure how the notion of a value is coherent otherwise.
The only possible discursive or intersubjective justification of an empirical belief is also that it is more or less universally believed. — John
But that's simply false. Again, if everyone believes the earth is flat, it's still round. And a way better justification for this is, say, looking at it from a distance and seeing what shape it is, not asking everyone what shape it is. They try to believe what is true, rather than trying to make true what is believed. I mean, to even consider this plausible makes a hash of the notion of any sort of inquiry other than survey taking, and of any attempt at advancement besides opinion-changing.
Observation is obviously subject to a different set of conditions than intuition is. — John
Observations are just certain kinds of intuitions -- we have certain feelings and then draw conclusions from them. What is the difference? Those feelings don't justify anything outside of themselves.
What do you think the skeptics have shown us except that our beliefs cannot be deductively certain? The certainty of empirical beliefs can only be relative, because they are contingent on observation, The certainty of moral beliefs is only as good as the intuitions they are based upon. I am not arguing for deductive certainty, so the skeptics' findings are irrelevant here. — John
The Skeptics have shown, not that such beliefs cannot be certain, but that thus far no means has been proposed to show that any one is any more likely than any other.
Can you give me any examples from history of cultures wherein the people unanimously agreed that, in general, murder, rape, child torture or sexual exploitation, or even theft, dishonesty, cowardice, disloyalty or refusal to work and contribute to the life of the community were OK practices within their own culture? — John
First off, this doesn't matter, because what you're committed to is actually far stronger -- you must believe that no community, past, present,
or future, nor any
possible community, could ever hold inverse values. This is what you must say if you think consensus is somehow what is required, or definitive of, the correctness of values. What's more, you have the same problem on a smaller scale so long as any two people, ever, at any time, have any value disagreement, even within a community. So providing examples isn't necessary, since your argument is flawed in a way that makes examples irrelevant. But even if it weren't, sure, people vary widely on whether it is okay to kill infants or the old, what constitutes rape versus use of one's property, whether torture is acceptable, what counts as theft and whether it's appropriate (see, taxation), and so on. To suggest otherwise is just profoundly sheltered.
Generally people cannot be wrong about their consensual observations such as that the sun is shining, the leaves are beginning to fall, the snows have come, it is windy today and countless other such common observations. — John
Of course they can. What a bizarre claim. Suppose we discovered the sun was a visual artifact and not a real object. Then we would have been very, very wrong about it.
But such things are ultimately determined by context; — John
That's not at all clear, and in any case, this could mean any number of things.
what could it possibly mean to say that disapproval of murder, child torture, dishonesty, cowardice and so on could be "wrong-headed"? What alternative standards could you offer to support such a contention, and on the basis of what could you justify them? — John
If it turns out those things are acceptable. Every decade people decide that things that were once deemed acceptable are now unacceptable and vice-versa. These people are not, and do not see themselves as, literally changing what is right and wrong by changing their opinion, but changing their opinion in light of a new moral sensibility and so discovering or taking seriously new moral truths. This is how they think of and present their motivations, and their desire to change them makes little sense otherwise.