Berkeley's assertion - that your idea of the Pepsi bottle is identical to mine - incoherent, because we only perceive our own ideas of the bottle, not one another's. — Pneumenon
First, that's not the common meaning of the word, "same." I'm drinking out of a plastic Pepsi bottle right now that is, by my senses at least, indistinguishable from all the other bottles like it, but still not the same as those bottles. I'm not drinking from every bottle in the world when I drink from this one. Berkeley seems to think that "the vulgar" have no concept of two things having all the same perceptible qualities while being two different things (I guess he never met any twins), but I have no idea where he gets that. He seems to be using "the vulgar" as some kind of weird authority he can appeal to in order to reject a concept of identity that he doesn't like, and it's an authority that we conveniently can't ask to speak for itself. It's OLP tom-foolery before OLP even existed. — Pneumenon
But, that specific problem seems pretty far astray from your lament with Hume. Yours seems more general, in that Hume's account of knowledge is largely the product of analysis -- the breaking of categories and things and concepts into its constituent parts, as well as the sort of hammer-scourge which skepticism has on other kinds of questions or inferences which are not exactly certain or even close to certainty, but still worth considering and wondering about in a philosophical fashion. — Moliere
To address just the first of those, he advanced the bundle theory of the self, which gives a sceptical account of personal identity. — Sapientia
The failure of logical deduction does not prevent him from constructing a philosophy that seeks to explain why we think of things as having to do with other things. — Sapientia
We happen to be in agreement that torturing kids is wrong. But I'm sure we can find moral issues that we will strongly disagree with. What then? — Marchesk
What makes them wrong, though? Because the rest of us say so? — Marchesk
That's the problem. There is no way to objectively determine that it's wrong. — Marchesk
how do you account for such individuals? Are they wrong? — Marchesk
Or because other human beings have similar aesthetic tastes? How do you get from people having aesthetic experiences to the object being aesthetically pleasing independent (real) of anyone? — Marchesk
and there is nothing else to something being beautiful than our perception of it. — Marchesk
Are we not discussing the case for or against moral realism? I'm confused at your confusion. If morality is no better than beholding a beautiful object for any given individual, then how is it real? — Marchesk
So you are the arbitrator of what's beautiful? — Marchesk
But if we have two cultures, where one thinks that torturing kids in some situations is moral, and the other disagrees, then what independent means is their to determine who's right? — Marchesk
I would say yes, because we have no other way of determining their truth than what people find moral or beautiful. — Marchesk
It's different with empirical or mathematical claims, because we do have means to investigate independent of what one group or another thinks. There are still some people who remain convinced the world is flat, but they're simply wrong. This is easily shown. — Marchesk
So let's say you have a specific belief - maybe torturing children is wrong - then you find out that it isn't true. Is that a possibility — shmik
When I respond that I don't believe in the bible's authority you think its strange that I'm OK with killing children. — shmik
You seem to want to say that 'torturing children is wrong' without a 'because'. For me that doesn't make any sense. That gap between by reaction to the thought of it, and it being a fact is insurmountable to me. — shmik
If someone says to me torturing children is wrong - I would likely say one a 3 things. — shmik
Do you think that you are wrong about certain moral facts? Wrong in a way that isn't caused just by lack of information on a topic. — shmik
Yeh that's part of my issue. I'm unwilling to take on the metaphysical commitments that I think are necessary to say that 'X is wrong'. Repulsive is as far as I can go. — shmik
You behold them as beautiful because of the kind of creature and individual you are, — Marchesk
Yeah but the same can be applied to aesthetics, and the case for realism qua aesthetics is even less well supported than morality. — Marchesk
It's different than some ordinary fact that we can have consensus on. Let's take slavery as an example. It's just as bad as torturing children, yet it has been defended vigorously by various cultures and individuals over time. — Marchesk
There are other examples. Some cultures have practiced human sacrifice, probably as a sacrifice to their gods. Then there's female circumcision, untouchable class distinctions, conquest by war, and many other abominable practices that were seen as justifiable and even good. There's probably even been some offering of children as a sacrifice, given a couple references in the Old Testament.
And then there's how the Spartans treated their kids to toughen them up, which might be considered as a form of torture to modern values. — Marchesk
Back to morality. Would aliens find torturing human children to be immoral? — Marchesk
Of course I don't think it is wrong to torture children — shmik
I didn't say it has nothing to do with people. I said that the moral realist will argue that something about the act of stealing (which includes its affect on people) is what makes the claim "it is wrong to steal" true. They wouldn't accept – unlike when it comes to matters of the law – that the claim is made true by the verdict of some relevant moral authority, or that whether or not the claim is true is relative to particular individuals or cultures. — Michael
What it means to be an anti-realist about the claims of human psychology (whatever that would be) is not necessarily what it means to be an anti-realist about moral claims. — Michael
A moral realist won't accept that claims like "it is wrong to steal" are made true by the decisions or attitudes of some person or group of people. They will say that some feature of the act itself (or consequence) is what makes it true. They might be a naturalist and reduce this moral feature to some empirical feature like doing harm or they might be a non-naturalist and claim that moral goodness (or wrongness) is a non-empirical feature that is recognised via intuition, or possibly reason. — Michael
But the question isn't asking about that. There is something more to saying 'it is wrong to torture children', something that I likely don't agree with. — shmik
I'm leaving it vague because it's vague in the question. I don't agree that somehow, there are just somethings that us as humans should for some reason not do. — shmik
I struggle to see the self evidence of whatever is outside actions to prevent it and human condemnation of it. — shmik
We're talking about objective, mind-independent truthmakers of normative claims and to say otherwise is a red herring. — darthbarracuda
From a purely descriptive sense, yes, just as I can say certain things are commonly seen by humans as moral or immoral without attaching any prescription to the description. — darthbarracuda
Again, this doesn't have much to do with anything, since I already said that moral fictionalism is not only a rational position to hold but also a comfortable position to hold. — darthbarracuda