You're making a classic error if you hold that that reason only supports views you like. — Tom Storm
Meta ethics has supplanted Ethics it is just that people are slow to realise this. — I like sushi
In a few hundred years it will likely be viewed as laughable ad phrenology is. — I like sushi
I can justify killing someone but justification is just as likely an ‘excuse’ as a ‘reason’. — I like sushi
I don't think it's irrelevant. It explains that, and why, murder is wrong but war is right, why there are the moral strictures there are and how they are not arbitrary in the main but sometimes they are, and why different environments produce different moralities in the same species. — unenlightened
The justification of any morality is 'group interest' - nature demands it, the ancestors say it, God says it, everyone says it except the individual, who insists on asking "why should I?" as though they are not part of a larger whole. — unenlightened
Dilemma questions such as this (if I understood you) arise out of consideration of group conflict - ie conflict of scale. Family, tribe, nation, species, ecosystem, all have a claim on the individual's loyalty and self-sacrifice. We are seeing the result of the failure of traditional moralities to consider the interests of the environment. We have not been taught to make that identification in particular by Capitalist economics, which is founded on the merciless exploitation of environmental resources as slaves, as ancestor fossils, and as the living environment. 'Why should I not burn fossil fuels?' has a very clear, very cogent answer, that we need to learn to internalise as a species. Antisemitism, racism, the persecution of any sub-group, corrodes the cooperative functioning of society and prevents us from acting together to address global issues. — unenlightened
my good friend Hume — unenlightened
my good friend Hume did not deny morality, He merely denied the authority of reason. Thus you cannot get an ought from an is, nor a will be from a has been, nor an object from a sensation by any reasoned argument. But he was no more against morality than he was against science. — unenlightened
What metaphysical process do you have access to that can demonstrate why my values are better than theirs, other than already agreeing to my suppositions about wellbeing? As Hanover says you need to believe in some transcendent guarantor of morality to do this definitively and then you also need to demonstrate that your version of transcendent is in agreement with your version of morality. How is that done? — Tom Storm
The only ‘right’ thing we can do is acting as we see fit rather than bending to the will of others mindlessly. — I like sushi
we can hardly ever judge what we do as being right or wrong but we are always unable to escape from the idea that what we have done, or do, is a defining part of how we navigate through life. — I like sushi
Morality and ethics are social apparatus. We are not bound by pure subjectivity yet we are enchanted by the idea that we choose as an individual for ourselves and independent of others’ views. — I like sushi
It is a sea of hidden nuances and dead ends. I this respect it has more in common with the general outline of science being a constant riling against convention for the sake of seeking ‘better’ pathways to fuller understanding. — I like sushi
If murder is bad - as the very meaning of murder is that of a certain kind of killing that is bad - then murder is bad. — I like sushi
Nuance in language and interpretations of events and circumstances does not take away from the general meaning of the term ‘murder’ being bad. — I like sushi
Not everyone likes the taste of strawberries but that does not mean that strawberries are considered to taste bad, yet no doubt there is someone out there who thinks something most consider to taste awful to taste bad. The experience of tasting something nice and something bad exists. The variance of experiences does not detract from the existence of such experiences. — I like sushi
Morality is as meaningless as ethics. There is meta ethics and we are never within its reach yet constantly craving its presumed judgement our lives even if that means said ‘craving’ is non-existent. What we do is what we do. How we interpret what we do is merely that … an interpretation of NOT a complete understanding of. — I like sushi
This is where one might be mistaking an axiom with reasonableness. An injunction against murder is reasonable and ethical, though we might find that there is not an axiom that specifically calls out that murder is false. — L'éléphant
This is not an axiom. This is an example of harm principle. Oh yeah, Mill's harm principle is not an axiom -- it is a moral assumption with strong, reasonable backing such as the golden rule. — L'éléphant
I'd rephrase it: correct (what is right) is good; incorrect (what is wrong) is bad. Don't know, but am thinking this might make significant differences to your question. — javra
I'm working with the presumption, if one can call it that, that everyone is fallible. — javra
If one wants to assume some infallible proclamation of truth, correct proposition, etc. — javra
Could you clarify this question? — javra
As do I, as I believe I previously expressed via "verification and falsification". — javra
Perhaps god needs to host a show on Fox News. — Tom Storm
All the same, do you find that appraisal discordant to the way thing are in the world? — javra
The problem with theistic morality is that it provides no objective basis for right and wrong. — Tom Storm
In simplistic terms — javra
when one appraises if 1 + 1 = 2 is correct, one's judgment will be fully relative to that concerned in one's appraisal (differing from, say, if it is correct that 236 - 45 = 6) but in all such cases the notion of correctness remains constant irrespective of that addressed. — javra
We furthermore universally deem correct answers good - so that we all seek correct answers to questions, irrespective of what we may deem to be the correct answer in concrete terms (e.g., if we deem it the correct answer that 1 +1 = 1 we will then abide by that answer on account of deeming it correct). — javra
I hear you, but I rule them out anyway since there is no way we can demonstrate 1) what they are or 2) if they exist. We have no choice but to be pragmatic - for me humans create morality to facilitate social cooperation in order to achieve our preferred forms of order. — Tom Storm
In parallel, all analytical judgments of correctness will always be relative to those particulars address, yet the notion of correctness remains constant. — javra
I wasn't addressing lack of disagreement. I was addressing the possibility of an objectively true psychological reality that universally applies to all psyches. If it were to be somehow discovered, all would have it, true. But it's objective truth wouldn't be a product of agreements. — javra
Would this analogy help?: In parallel, all analytical judgments of correctness will always be relative to those particulars address, yet the notion of correctness remains constant. — javra
Isn't the point that TC is arguing there are no moral facts, just ideas which work or don't in context? This means justification is moot and context dependent, for we do not have access to some transcendental realm of moral truths. — Tom Storm
Since this objectively true goal would in principle satisfy that which all yearn for, it would then be an objective good - a good that so remains independently of individuals’ subjective fancies.
Since this good would be objectively real to one and all, a proposition regarding it could then be conformant to its reality and, thereby, true. — javra
You are conflating specific moral beliefs with logical truth of a claim. — L'éléphant
philosophers are also aware of the universal implication of individual experiences -- so they come up with universal claims such as the golden rule, veil of ignorance, the harm principle, categorical imperative, etc. — L'éléphant
As I see it, morals mostly express human values, not facts. Morals are not true or false, they work or they don't. Where do those values come from? I think some are inborn and some are learned. — T Clark
Morality limited to "the law" is a very low morality. A higher morality is a good understanding of virtuous thinking and action. — Athena
A common understanding of what makes a pest is a consensual understanding of the meaning of the word pest, but this is not the same thing as a consensual experience of the feelings of revulsion, disgust, etc that make rats a pest for some people and not others. — Joshs
And if rats are found to be ideal pets within another culture is that culture empirically incorrect? — Joshs
Prinz argues that the basis of our moral values are not in fact propositional beliefs but pre-cognitive preferences. — Joshs
Does this necessarily require "everything is A or B?" — Edmund