My premises fit this description: they are not themselves appeals to subjective dispositions. — Bob Ross
I am asking if this syllogism itself is objective—not whether some subsequent one is or not. P1 is a claim which is expressing something objective: it is not saying ~”Something has intrinsic value if I want it to”. — Bob Ross
P1: A thing that is not a mind and motivates a mind to avoid or acquire it (despite that mind's conative or cognitive disposition towards it) has intrinsic value. — Bob Ross
If, by this, you are claiming that an argument is subjective if the fully expounded list of syllogisms (required to prove it)(which would be infinite, by the way) anywhere contains a subjective element; then, my friend, there are not objective arguments. You can’t prove ‘1+1=2’ with an ‘objective argument’ if you are that absurdly strict with your definition of ‘objective argument’. — Bob Ross
"A mind is unique to every person and cannot be explicated," then we have a subjective definition of mind
Do you mean to say that, in this hypothetical, the term ‘mind’ is defined as something of which its meaning is relative to the given subject-at-hand? The fact it is inexplicable, in this scenario, has nothing to do with it being subjective. — Bob Ross
Now, I don't want you, right now, to contend with the premises in the sense of what you merely disagree with; but, rather, I want you to tell me if this syllogism meets your requirements for being an 'objective argument'. — Bob Ross
P1: A thing that is not a mind and motivates a mind to avoid or acquire it (despite that mind's conative or cognitive disposition towards it) has intrinsic value. — Bob Ross
, then this is a subjective answer to the question because belief alone is entirely subjective. Because you have a subjective answer as part of a major foundation of your argument, any part of your argument that relies on this foundation is now a subjective argument.I believe in external motivation — Bob Ross
P2: The state of pain is not a mind and motivates a mind to avoid it (despite that mind's conative or cognitive disposition towards it). — Bob Ross
I don’t see any way for our conversation to progress, because we keep dead-ending at the same spots, so I will just respond to the parts where I think I am adding to the conversation (instead of reiterating). — Bob Ross
You use the term ‘objective’ in really nonsensical ways—e.g., ‘objective knowledge’, ‘objective definition’, ‘objective wavelength’, ‘objective argument’, etc. Sometimes its use is straight up incoherent, and other times it adds nothing to what you are saying. — Bob Ross
I have already explicated clearly what objectivity is, and I think your position on it is wrong and confused. — Bob Ross
An argument is an evidence-based proof; and can absolutely include intuitions in it. Arguments are not objective; but are hopefully rational. — Bob Ross
Using your example of green, there is a set wavelength of light that is green. That's the objective wavelength of light for green. How we see or interpret it is subjective, but that right there, is the intrinsic color of green.
You completely missed the point of the example, and failed to explicate what green looks like. — Bob Ross
No. I don't reject this notion. We're talking about value, and you keep changing the subject. Why?
You rejected it many times in our older conversations about epistemology; and it was relevant to what you said, because by saying a concept is simple (and indefinable) is NOT to say that they cannot be known. — Bob Ross
Finally, pain can be defined objectively. If your nerves fire with a particular signal up to the brain, that's pain.
This doesn’t completely define pain, because it does not define how it feels (phenomenologically). You can’t completely strip out the subject, Philosophim: it doesn’t work. — Bob Ross
And I did come along and give you a competing definition. So no hypotheticals are needed, why is my definition logically wrong?
Yeah, that's an odd way to remove desires from yourself and imprint them on other things. Things don't motivate us Bob
I believe in external motivation; so I deny this. I think we can have reason which motivate us without us having any desire towards it. You are clearly a Humean, and there’s no easy way to find common ground on that. — Bob Ross
You seem to confuse the idea that 'mind independent' means 'independent of minds'.
???
Cancer-independent is not identical to being independent of cancer? — Bob Ross
Or if they don't someone else creates a competing induction and we just decide to do based on which one we like more
No, it is based off of what seems more correct—which one is more convincing. Just because you are not convinced, does not make this endeavor subjective: you have a tendency to do that. — Bob Ross
If something has been determined, by analysis, as inexplicable (i.e., explicated as inexplicable), then one should not continue to try to explicate it — Bob Ross
You reject the idea of implicit knowledge: I don’t. — Bob Ross
I don’t know why you would believe this. We convey concepts to each other all the time implicitly (through action, experience, and intuition) and they are clearly not subjective. A 5 year old cannot explicate clearly a definition of a triangle, but definitely knows notionally what a triangle is. — Bob Ross
Claiming to invalidate all possible definitions of value is a tall order that requires some major proof
It’s inductive: I don’t have to provide a proof such that it is impossible. Inductions don’t work like that. — Bob Ross
If someone said, "Here is my definition of value that is clearly explicated," do you have a proof that this is impossible?
It isn’t going to be actually or logically impossible, and there is no definitive way to determine whether a concept is simple or simply misunderstood. Abductively, through the attempts to define it and failing to do so, one slowly understands better how primitive the concept is by way of how entrenched it is into all the other concepts one deploys to try and define it. — Bob Ross
There is no proof of this here, which means that someone who comes along and claims they have a definition, automatically competes with your claim at minimum, equally.
Prima facie, this is true. I would then demonstrate that either (1) they begged the question or (2) did not convey properly the concept. If you say “well, Bob, I can explicate what the color green looks like”. I would say “ok, let’s hear it”. — Bob Ross
If there is an alternative way of determining value intrinsically, we need that method for me to be able to think in those terms.
The other way, in addition to what I have already explained, is the idea that it is extrinsically motivating for subjects and does not arise out of a subject itself: — Bob Ross
I was saying that IF you think that it is possible for the person to understand that the pain has value despite having no belief or desire that it is; then we have found common ground. If you do not, then it doesn’t help our conversation. — Bob Ross
I am trying to dance our way into giving you the intuition. This is similar to debates between people about internal vs. external theories of motivation: one guy can’t see how someone can be motivated to do something without having a desire to do it, and the other can—they then spend days having the former convey the intuition to the latter, and usually to no avail. — Bob Ross
In light of our conversations, I have been trying to come up with different ways to express it; just to try to convey it to you, and I don’t think I have found a better way to explain it. Nevertheless, I will try again; — Bob Ross
Now, because the concept of value is primitive, it does not follow that we cannot analyze how ‘things’ can be valued and what has value—but, merely, what the concept of value means is off limits to proper explication. — Bob Ross
Now, because the concept of value is primitive, it does not follow that we cannot analyze how ‘things’ can be valued and what has value—but, merely, what the concept of value means is off limits to proper explication. — Bob Ross
How things can be valued, in principle, is two-fold: either (1) the value of a thing is bestowed upon it by a subject or (2) it has it itself. You seem to think that only #1 is possible, but I think both are. — Bob Ross
You are right that this is a great example of extrinsic value, and note that ‘value’ did not need to be explicated here; as one would is sufficiently experienced will know exactly what is being conveyed here with the ‘value’ of this clock. — Bob Ross
What I think you are saying, is that when in pain the valuing of the negation of that pain is solely the subject’s cognitive or conative evaluation of it—I think this is mistaken. — Bob Ross
If a person completely believes and desires that pain has no value and you are right that value is purely subjective judgments, then even if they are in tremendous pain the pain will not be have any value; but, if you can envision a person which, in tremendous pain, still appreciates the value of avoiding pain despite not believing and desiring it to have no value, then you have contradicted your own point: the pain must have value independent of the desires and beliefs of the person. — Bob Ross
to determine intrinsic value is a matter of analyzing how much, if at all, a ‘thing’ demands value. — Bob Ross
From my perspective, I gave you two different ways to think about intrinsic value, you ignored both, and segued immediately into a discussion about how you will reject the whole theory if I cannot define 'value' other than as an unanalyzable, simple concept. — Bob Ross
if you don't understand how it is impossible to define what it means to exist, then I am at a loss of words how to explain what a simple concept is to you. — Bob Ross
Ironically, I don't think people are going to care about that part of the analysis: when I say 'value' is 'worth', people will understand sufficiently what I mean, just like how they will understand that 'being' is 'existence'. Maybe I am wrong about that, but we will find out soon enough when I open a thread on it. — Bob Ross
In terms of your theory, I think I understand it more than adequately (at this point), and disagree with it. So I don't think there is much more to discuss. — Bob Ross
Or just “there is discreet experience”. This is pivotal, because it purports to unify our knowledge of experience over here in the experience of being me, with reality, over there, that any mind would have to see. Logically, this unifies the deductive with the inductive; or better said, we can induce “there is discreet experience” and we can deduce “there is discreet experience.” — Fire Ologist
This quote is essential. It’s why Aristotle came to the law of non-contradiction instead of “there is discreet experience” as fundamental. You are playing in the same playground here. — Fire Ologist
This argument would almost be better without premise 4, because premise 4 introduces a gap between discreet experience and reality. — Fire Ologist
You can unify your discreet experience to your knowledge, bridge that gap, but this diesnt necessitate (by deduction) that you’ve bridged the gap between discreet experience and reality. — Fire Ologist
I agree with all of the moving parts you identify. I agree with the way your are talking about them. — Fire Ologist
Probability to possibility to plausibility - needed distinctions. — Fire Ologist
"existence" here is supposed to be referring to the general and generic quality of existing; and not 'the sum of all discrete identities observed and unobserved': your definition just doesn't cover what the word refers to. — Bob Ross
If existence = X, then existence = plurality of X. Your use of 'existence', and its variants, betray your own meaning. — Bob Ross
This completely misses the mark, and is confusing. — Bob Ross
Correct. But do you see how the word 'exist' here isn't referring to what you have been calling 'existence' and how that is really weird? — Bob Ross
There's escaping that under your terminology, because that's how you defined it. Obviously, this doesn't work, as 'that exists' is referring to the quality of existing; and you haven't defined that. — Bob Ross
The quality of existing, property of existence, 'to exist', does not refer to a slice of existence: it refers to existing itself. — Bob Ross
To be charitable, I don’t think you even tried to define existence in the sense of ‘to exist’ but, rather, are defining ‘existence’ as the ~‘the whole’. I can demonstrate really easily how ‘to exist’ cannot be defined as what you have defined as ‘existence’: — Bob Ross
Please go down my response where I lay out what existence is
You did not provide a definition in this response, and you gave the definition “Existence being defined as 'everything'” in this response. — Bob Ross
Philosophim, a really easy way to help, would be if you just clarified what the definition is. — Bob Ross
No, that was not a formal definition. If you wish that, I will.
We observe the world in discrete identities. A discrete identity which is confirmed to match our perceptions (I claim that is an apple, and that is actually apple), is being. Existence as a whole, is the sum of all discrete identities observed and unobserved. As such, it is an abstract logical concept.
This requires me to amend being, as I had not formally defined existence. So a discrete identity is existence, but unless it is confirmed that the perceived identity is not contradicted by real application, it is not being. — Philosophim
Philosophim, I have linked TWO TIMES my demonstration; and you have ignored it TWO TIMES. — Bob Ross
If ‘existence’ = ‘everything’, then: — Bob Ross
Also, I am not asking for a definition of what the 'totality of existent things' is: I am asking for a definition of the concept of 'to exist'. — Bob Ross
Which is the same definition you gave originally, with the addition of more clarification of what you mean by 'everything'. This has the exact same issues as my response I linked; and you still haven't addressed any of it. — Bob Ross
So far, you have failed to do so: you saying "I can" doesn't beat the challenge: you have to provide the definition. — Bob Ross
You took a jab at it here:
Existence being defined as 'everything' and being as 'a part'.
Ok, so you define ‘existence’ as ‘everything’. This doesn’t work and is circular. — Bob Ross
That is exactly what you just did!!!! You just said “being” is “a slice of being”. Unless you are really about to tell me that “existence” is different than “being”, which is obviously isn’t, then you are using the term in its definition. — Bob Ross
My challenge to you is simple: (I want you to) define ‘being’ without circularly referencing it. Fair enough? — Bob Ross
No, its not. Being is a slice of existence.
Do you see how you just circular defined ‘being’ referencing ‘existence’ in its definition? So this fails to beat my challenge. — Bob Ross
Are you asking for how, in my theory, we quantify value, or what value actually is itself? — Bob Ross
When you say it is ‘very different’, are you referring to that you explain how to quantify value, or that you don’t think ‘importance’ and ‘worth’ are circular references to ‘value’? — Bob Ross
Moore held that goodness, and ‘good’, is undefinable, unanalyzable, and primitive. — Bob Ross
I am just noting that it is not uncommon in metaethics for moral realists to consider goodness primitive in this sense without conceding it is subjective. — Bob Ross
My definition of value, is Moorean—not subjective. — Bob Ross
By your reasoning, being is also subject; which is clearly false. — Bob Ross
Value: A designation of importance.
This is no different than defining it as ‘value: a designation of worth’. — Bob Ross
Likewise, value isn’t a designation: it would be, by your definition here, equal to importance. Something designates value, value is not some sort of designation itself; just like how someone can designate tasks, but a task isn’t defined as a designation <of something>. — Bob Ross
Irregardless, I am confused why you are insisting on disregarding the whole theory, in the sense of not even granting my definition of value for the sake of the conversation, when you clearly understand that my use of ‘value’ is ‘to have worth’; and you know darn well what ‘to have worth’ means, and that it is not itself subjective. — Bob Ross
People use the term ‘value’ exactly, by-at-large, how I am using it: I am not using it in some generic different way, so I am confused why you ignored the real content of my responses. — Bob Ross
The metaphysical point is this: motion is. Also, identity evades.
The epistemological point is this: we will never be finished coming to know, even one thing. — Fire Ologist
The reason I don’t start with it, is because I don’t feel the need, when initially explaining the theory, to explain what ‘value’ is itself: I just use it. Every theory starts with something presupposed; and I find it satisfactory to start with ‘goodness is identical to “having value”’: this is generally, immediately understood by common folk. — Bob Ross
I think we are referring to two different things by ‘value’ here. When I say ‘value’ is unanalyzable, I mean it is the sense of ‘what does it mean to be valued or have value?’ (i.e., what is value itself?); whereas you talking about ‘what has value, and how much?’. — Bob Ross
I think we can investigate intrinsic value, by means of the scientific method, as it would pertain to the study of discerning value which is derived from a person’s (conative or cognitive) dispositions vs. what mind-independently pressures, by its own nature, a person into valuing it. I think that answers your question pretty well. — Bob Ross
No. Take the same pain example, but imagine you genuinely believe, while in that state, that pain has no value — Bob Ross
But subjects are those that evaluate and determine value
Epistemically, of course we determine value: just like we determine truth, what exists, etc. The question is whether or not what we deem is valuable, actually is. And it only actually can be, if it is intrinsic. — Bob Ross
I am, and never was, claiming that what is intrinsically valuable—i.e., what is morally good—is contingent on our vote; I was saying that any institution we could create would preserve and gain knowledge of what is intrinsically valuable by way of convergence of experiences of states, as agreed upon by experts in the field. — Bob Ross
Philosophim, this is no different than science. Our institutions safeguard and declare scientific knowledge by way of expert consensus. As humans, we have no other way of doing it (institutionally). Does that mean what exists is subjective? Of course not! What nonsense! — Bob Ross
No, its pretty clear at this point that its value rests on minds and is absolutely subjective. I'm not seeing the case at all that it exists independently of people's judgements
Think of yourself in severe pain. Forget everything else.. Imagine you believe that the avoidance of pain is completely valueless: you will still behave like it has some value (in a negative sense). Why? Philosophim, if pain has no intrinsic value, then your belief or desire that it has no value should be enough to conclude it isn’t valuable; but it clearly isn’t enough, because pain, by its nature, compels you to value it. — Bob Ross
I still think you are misunderstanding what the property of valuableness, in principle, is. It doesn’t reference how much value a thing has—only that it has value. That is the property we discussing: it is the very idea of ‘value’. — Bob Ross
Then you have no objective way of evaluating morality. If there is no moral value in anything, all is permitted.My theory doesn’t have any notion or idea of ‘moral value’, because it is does not exist. — Bob Ross
Now, what I have not noted, is why it does not exist. If you reflect back on my definitions, you will notice that valuableness is more fundamental than goodness. — Bob Ross
Where a ‘moral’ marker comes in, is when one denotes a specific type of value, that being intrinsic value, and this is called ‘good’ in a moral sense. — Bob Ross
Moral goodness = ‘to have intrinsic value’. — Bob Ross
I think the real issue you are having, is that you don’t think intrinsic value, in the sense I am using it, exists; nor how it possibly could; nor how one could go about deciphering what has it, and to what degree. — Bob Ross
So, let me try again. Intrinsic value is ‘value which is demanded by virtue of a thing’s nature’. — Bob Ross
I blundered here before, by saying, at this point in my analysis, that only states which are associated with (sufficiently) living beings: I was confusing epistemology with ontology. — Bob Ross
A state which can demand (i.e., innately insistence on having) value is one which IF it were experienced by a subject, then it would compel that subject to value it to a degree equal to its insistence; but such a state could exist, of which no current subject has the capacity to experience it. — Bob Ross
So, how do we determine that a state has intrinsic value? By experience. — Bob Ross
We experience a state, such as pain, and it is clear (to any reasonably rational person with the proper capacities to produce pain [neurologically]) that it compels value in its avoidance. — Bob Ross
Think about, Philosophim, from your own perspective: forget your parents, forget everyone else. Imagine you are in severe pain: you are seriously telling me you cannot fathom how the state of pain compels you to value its avoidance, all else being equal? — Bob Ross
Now, like all other empirical studies, our knowledge of intrinsic value as an institutionalized study would be a convergence of perspectives on empirical studies of states, such that we could sufficiently conclude that certain states do compel to be valued, and to a degree equal to its force of compelment. — Bob Ross
I don’t hold that valuableness, and subsequently goodness, is a natural property: you can’t scientifically investigate the property, because it is supervenient on the physical constitution of entities (viz., it is supervenient on the natural properties). — Bob Ross
if it compels, simply from its own nature, to be valued (e.g., if I really like pizza being thrown across the room, that doesn’t make pizza being thrown across the room inrinsically valuable: whereas, whether I like it or not, being in pain, by its nature, compels me to avoid it — Bob Ross
Intrinsic value is factual, because it is value which is objective; and it is objective because its value is exists mind-independently and the truth of the matter whether it exists is stance-independent. — Bob Ross
Does that help? — Bob Ross
Goodness is ‘to have value’: so how can you say I haven’t answered what goodness is? You can disagree with what I claimed it was, but you certainly can’t say I didn’t answer. Likewise with valuableness: I said it is an unanalyzable property, like beingness, which is akin to beingness. That’s an answer. — Bob Ross
Moral goodness? What would immoral goodness be then?
Ah, I am not intending to use ‘moral’, as the adjective here, in the sense of ‘being good’—as that is circular—but, instead, to denote a sub-type of goodness which pertains to morality. — Bob Ross
Even if I didn’t, it would not follow (from what I said) that alive beings are intrinsically valuable (which is what you said here). Rather, the state, which only an alive being could experience, would be intrinsically valuable. — Bob Ross
No, Kant isn't confused here.
I think Kant is, but I don’t think this is very important to what I am saying. By noting that a thing has value in-itself, I am noting that it has value intrinsic to its nature. — Bob Ross
To evaluate whether something has the property of valuableness, is just to assess its worth — Bob Ross
which is to say nothing beyond saying it has value. — Bob Ross
How much value is not something determinable from the (general) property of valuableness itself: if that were the case, then we would have to posit an infinite amount of properties to account for each value—which is clearly misguided. — Bob Ross
So, how one can determined the exact value of something, which is an ‘evaluation’ in the sense that you implied, has no bearing on whether or not the property of ‘having value’ is primitive or not because the property will necessarily, even if it could be defined, not contain a means of evaluation but rather is the mere idea of ‘worth’ in general. — Bob Ross
Goodness = ‘to have value’. — Bob Ross
Moral goodness = ‘to have intrinsic value’. — Bob Ross
This is ‘to have worth’, and this is just to reiterate ‘to have value’ with a synonym. The property itself is primitive, and unanalyzable. — Bob Ross
Likewise, why you should care about intrinsic value, is that it is morally good; and if you are a virtuous person of morally good character, then you will. — Bob Ross
There is nothing that forces, per se, anyone to value anything—but this does not takeaway from the fact that there are moral facts. — Bob Ross
Whether or not someone should care about what has intrinsic value, does not in takeaway from the fact that it has intrinsic value. — Bob Ross
All you are noting, by asking why anyone should care, is that people can devalue (or not value at all) facts. — Bob Ross
I wasn’t using ‘state’ this generically, but that is fine. It is fine to think of states as ‘states of being’, for all intents and purposes, and, to that, I would then clarify that the state of being that a rock has does not have intrinsic value because that state is incapable of any innate insistence/demand (of value). — Bob Ross
Under your theory, its fine to destroy matter as we wish as long as it does not affect life.
Correct. This is because the states which have intrinsic value, are only possible for beings which are sufficiently alive.
If only states of life can have value, why?
No. States which are not attributable to beings that are alive can have value—it just isn’t intrinsic. — Bob Ross
Intrinsic value, is value which is demanded in virtue of the nature of the state: that is a very clear definition — Bob Ross
The chief mistake Kant made, is thinking that because a thing-in-itself is not directly experienced that it cannot be known at all—which is clearly false. — Bob Ross
In a sentence, he is confusing absolute knowledge with things-in-themselves: no one has to concede that they have absolute knowledge of a thing-in-itself to say they have conditional knowledge of it, by way of theirs senses. — Bob Ross
that doesn’t takeaway from the fact that we have good conditional knowledge to claim that the apple itself, which is to immediately discuss as it is in-itself, has mass. — Bob Ross
For example, let’s take your reasoning seriously that a thing-in-itself is unknowable because we only every directly experience a representation of it. Ok. Take an apple, for example: does it have mass in-itself? It seems like it does: every bit of evidence points to that conclusion—but, Kant will insist that we can’t absolutely know it is true, because we only have representations to go off of. — Bob Ross
So, I have no problem analyzing the nature, the essences, of things—which you cannot do if you take your position seriously because the essence doesn’t pertain to mere appearances but, rather, what a thing’s actual properties are as it is in-itself—while conceding I have only conditional knowledge of it. — Bob Ross
I am not referring to absolute knowledge of the nature of a thing, but, rather, conditional knowledge of the nature of a thing. I doubt you deny we can evaluate the natures of things. — Bob Ross
Even if I were claiming that healthy and rational people always recognize intrinsic value 100% of the time (which I am not) — Bob Ross
99.99% of the time a rational + healthy person would behave as if it had value when put in that state—and that is what I mean by “they can only superficially deny its value”. — Bob Ross
and that is what I mean by “they can only superficially deny its value”. — Bob Ross
Whether they recognize the value, cognitively their faculty of reason, is a separate question; and the answer is the vast majority probably wouldn’t conclude it has intrinsic value; because they don’t know what that means. — Bob Ross
Externalised expressions convey concepts as independent of the speaker, while Non-Externalised expressions rely on the speaker's personal factors. — Judaka
Externalised expression presents concepts as objective, introducing them independently of personal criteria. — Judaka
In contrast, Non-Externalised expression, such as "I don't like the pacing of country music because I prefer a faster tempo," removes this ambiguity. Preferences do not qualify as objective reasoning. — Judaka
Externalised expression inherently carries a stronger force due to its establishment of concepts as potentially objective. — Judaka
Great discussion! — Bob Ross
Valuableness in an unanalyzable, primitive property: all that can be described of it is with synonyms (e.g., ‘to be of value is to have worth’, etc.). — Bob Ross
With respect to #1, it is obvious that valuableness is not identical to ‘to ought to be’ by way of examples (of its valid use). For example, when one says “that diamond is worth $1500”, they are not commenting on whether it should exist per se but, rather, that it has a specific, quantitative worth. In short, it is impossible to convert quantitative values to the property of ‘to ought to be’. — Bob Ross
With respect to #2, a great example of an unanalyzable and primitive property is ‘beingness’. It is impossible to explain ‘beingness’ without circular reference — Bob Ross
I absolutely agree that our moral principles cannot be absolute; but what it is a right, for it to be a right in the traditional sense, requires that it is irrevocable but does not require us to posit an absolute principle — Bob Ross
Of course, I also agree that we refurbish them; but this is not because the fact of the matter about what is a right has changed but, rather, our understanding of it. — Bob Ross
When you relativize rights, you mask mere privileges under the name of something with much more vigor to its name. — Bob Ross
Thirdly, you ask for evidence of intrinsic value. I have already given it, but there are some things worth clarifying: — Bob Ross
2. When I say a thing demands value, I mean it in the sense of innate insistence. — Bob Ross
3. One thing I have failed to mention, is that intrinsic value is only possible for states; because nothing else can provide innate insistence on value. Thusly, to take your rock example, a rock can’t have intrinsic value, simply because it cannot innately compel whatsoever. However, the state of pain can. — Bob Ross
I answer, to your dissatisfaction, that a rational and healthy person would only be able to superficially deny its value when in that state. This does not beg the question, because I am not presupposing the truth of the conclusion in an (implicit) premise; and it is not confirmation bias because I am not saying that a person is definitely unhealthy or irrational if they deny it in a non-superficial sense: I am saying that, based off of the empirical knowledge on rational + healthy people in such states, it is sufficiently proven that they confirm the value of such states. — Bob Ross
Fourthly, you noted the Kantian position on things-in-themselves again; and I wanted to briefly note that I deny that altogether. I think you are conflating absolute truth with things-in-themselves: the former is what you are really arguing is unobtainable (by my lights). — Bob Ross
Fifthly:
"Goodness" is a state of reality with the embodiment of "What should be" as "What is".
“what should be” and “what is” are both not properties. — Bob Ross
Sixthly:
Explicated and identified Good = moral value
&
I have the answer of what a value is (what should be)
I am not following. First, I thought you were saying ‘goodness’ is ‘to ought to be’; now you seem to be agreeing with me it is ‘to have value’. You have also said — Bob Ross
Then, to make matters more confusing, you have also said that
To know what ought to be, you have to know the value of what is
: that implies you need to determine the value of a thing before you can determine whether it ought to be, — Bob Ross
Seventhly, morality does not boil down to the question of “should there be existence?”, nor is that a moral foundation. — Bob Ross
A moral foundation is the core of an ethical theory, and that is going to be, in any good theory, an outline of the hierarchy (i.e., the ontology) of things with intrinsic value. — Bob Ross
By ‘objective value’, I am assuming you mean value which is objective; and this is not synonymous with intrinsic value per se. Any value which is objective, is just any value which exists mind-independently and the truth of the matter (whether it has such value) is stance-independent. — Bob Ross
Where intrinsic value ties in, is that it is the only possible form of ‘objective value’ because it is the only type of value which is inscribed, so to speak, on the thing per its nature: it is the only form of value that is of the thing in-itself. — Bob Ross
A useful way of thinking about intrinsic value, by my lights, is that the thing which has it demands recognition as valuable; and that is how one can decipher whether or not one simply values the thing because of their own (cognitive or conative) disposition, or whether it has actual value. I do not mean ‘demands’ in a personified sense. — Bob Ross
A great example is the pain example, but I have already explicated that one; so I will leave it there. — Bob Ross
I agree that pain has value in the fact that its purpose is to ensure the living being stops injuring itself and gives itself time to heal. However, pain has no intrinsic value in itself. If I'm going to get surgery, feeling the pain from the knife serves no purpose at that point. Something that has intrinsic value means that it has value in itself. But in this instance, it does not. — Philosophim
In an abstract armchair sense of 'people will always choose the more positive state', it sounds good. In reality, people aren't like that. Many people choose the state that we we would consider less valuable.
This isn’t a contention with anything I said, and I wholly agree. Some people simply lack the cognitive ability, or the wisdom, to see that the state is better; and some are so defective or damaged that they no longer can recognize it, even though they could have earlier in their life. — Bob Ross
My point was that, in isolation, and reasonably healthy and intelligent person will not be able to deny the value of a state that has (negative or positive) intrinsic value if put in that state. Of course, if you put a defective person, a damaged person, a really cognitively impaired person, in such a state, then we would not expect them to fully grasp that state properly (due to their condition). — Bob Ross
“Good” is not a property. Your definition needs to of the form “goodness is <insert-definition-here>”. Likewise, “what should be” is not a property. Thusly, you have not analyzed the property of goodness whatsoever in making this remark. — Bob Ross
I believe I've answered that question though. Good is "What should be." "Goodness" is a state of reality with the embodiment of "What should be" as "What is". — Philosophim
To know what ought to be, you have to know the value of what is
If:
1. the property of goodness is not ‘being valuable’; and
2. one needs to know the value of what is to know what to predicate as ‘”oughting” to exist’; and
3. you reject the idea of intrinsic value
Then what can be predicated as good under your view is dependent on subjective dispositions because what is valuable is always extrinsic. — Bob Ross
Then what can be predicated as good under your view is dependent on subjective dispositions because what is valuable is always extrinsic. — Bob Ross
The second problem with this is that, on a similar note, what we determine as good is relative to what is valuable; and it seems incorrect to posit vice-versa (or something else entirely). — Bob Ross
The third problem is that by ‘goodness’ I am assuming you mean ‘moral goodness’ with your definition, and the property of ‘to ought to be’ is not a purely objective analysis and, consequently, your view of moral goodness is not solely about what might be objective. — Bob Ross
With mine, on the other hand, moral goodness is ‘to have intrinsic value’, and so it is always an objective matter of dispute what is morally good; with respect to how you defined it, that is not the case. — Bob Ross
Disputes about what ought to be by means of subjective dispositions are still about what is morally good under your metaethical view of ‘goodness’. — Bob Ross
This gets you out of the first objection, but not the second: a right is something which cannot be violated in any circumstances. — Bob Ross
We don't exactly get to tell a hungry lion, "I have a right to life." No one is there to care.
That one has a right, is different than whether anyone else recognizes it. — Bob Ross
I believe your real issue is that in both cases, these things are determined by societies and not any one individual
It is more than that though: if the society needs to violate one citizen’s rights to save itself, then, unless I am misunderstanding, in your view that is morally permissible (at best) and obligatory (at worst). It is not a right if it can be taken away: that’s a privilege. — Bob Ross
robbing someone is generally bad because of the expected outcome.
Then, under your view, robbing someone isn’t wrong in-itself; because you are not looking at the nature of the action but, instead, looking at its consequences. — Bob Ross
My overall point is that if intentions are good in themselves regardless of the outcome, then logically we can create a situation in which an intention always has a negative outcome and yet it would be considered moral.
I didn’t understand this part. An intention can be bad, and its nuanced consequences good; and vice-versa. This makes sense to me: are you contending with that? — Bob Ross
In one of my recent classes, we discussed the famous "inverted qualia" argument against physicalism about consciousness. For those unfamiliar, it posits a scenario where two individuals (Alice and Mark) have qualitative experiences that are systematically inverted relative to each other (e.g. what feels like "red" to Alice feels like "green" to Mark), despite being physical/functional duplicates. — Matripsa
So Alice and Mark both experience the same qualia of "green", but Alice has a different label for it, so when they look at "green", Mark says that's green, Alice says that's blue, and yet they both see the same color and are having the same qualia experience. — Matripsa
Agreed. But that philosophy should be provided by the scientists. — jgill
So, it appears that you, like me, see the two disciplines connected within a bi-conditional relationship. — ucarr
I need to define society. A society occurs when there is more than one person involved.
Ok, I was using society in the sense of an institutionalized state. — Bob Ross
Rights only come about with the interplay of the individual and societies
They are only explicated in societies. You still have a right to life even if you are the only human left. — Bob Ross
If we are talking universal rights, yes. Because what we also must consider is the interplay between societies.
The interplay of societies doesn’t imply rights in the sense that you have set up: if the societies determine rights, then two societies which are not subsumed under another, larger society would have no way to resolve any disputes between society members of one vs. the other. — Bob Ross
Privileges are permissions from society. Rights are restrictions on society.
If society is making up rights, then they are also permissions. — Bob Ross
Correct. A ‘right’ in the traditional sense of the word does not exist in your view — Bob Ross
It is bad because it violates a general moral principle that robbery is (generally) wrong. It is generally wrong, because it is morally bad, when analyzed in isolation, to rob someone. Why this is the case will depend on the ethical theory in play. — Bob Ross
If robbery is bad in-itself, then an intention to do it is bad. — Bob Ross
When they get angry and explain that it is also an insult, I insist that I will continue to the use the word as my principle demands that I use 'sir' when talking to people
This is just a conflation of words, and not an absurd insistence on one’s duty to a principle. The principle would be ‘one should be polite’, not ‘one should say the word ‘sir’, specifically in English’. — Bob Ross
To be objective, you need a solid foundation. What is objective value? What determines value?
Not at all. To be objective, is to exist mind-independently. Goodness is identical to ‘having value’ because that is, at its core, what the ‘being good’ is about. — Bob Ross
An easy way to demonstrate this, is to think of what ethics, axiology, and pragmatism would be if it had nothing to do with value: it would be merely about what is and not what ought to be—and this is a fundamental shift from what the studies traditionally are about. — Bob Ross
When you say “existence is good”, you are saying “one can validly predicate ‘existence’ with the property of ‘goodness’”. It is still an entirely valid question to ask: “what is ‘goodness’?”. — Bob Ross
“Objective value” is just intrinsic value; for it is the only type of value which a thing can have in-itself. — Bob Ross
The fact that someone can be motivated to value or not value it, is not relevant itself to whether the thing demands to be value because it has intrinsic worth. — Bob Ross
Why is flourishing valuable?
It is intrinsically valuable, because, as per its nature, it demands value. Which can be easily understood when one is in such a state. — Bob Ross
Imagine two states that your mother could be in. The first is constant pleasure obtained by being an alcoholic. The second is a persistent state of flourishing, happiness, and prosperity. — Bob Ross
Intrinsic value is objective. She does not determine whether or not a state of flourishing has intrinsic value nor how much. — Bob Ross
That's a fine opinion, but not an objective argument.
I don’t see how it isn’t an objective argument; insofar as the argument demonstrates (to my satisfaction) that morality is objective, and The Good is universal flourishing. — Bob Ross
“Objective value” is another phrase for ‘intrinsically valuable’; and flourishing has intrinsic value because the state demands to be valued in virtue of its nature, and this is hard to demonstrate if you haven’t experienced it—this is an empirical claim, and not something abstract. — Bob Ross
Your theory presupposes a property of goodness, of which your analysis (so far) is the discovery of what can be predicated to have such a property, but, interestingly, doesn't give any analysis of the property itself--it is merely a presupposed, notional, property that is utilized for the rest of the analysis. — Bob Ross
Now, instead of meaning "more existence is good" in an analogous sense to "this car is red", you may mean it as an identity relation---that 'is good' here refers to "goodness is identical to the property of 'having more existence' [or something like that]" (i.e., goodness = having more existence). I think there are good reasons to believe that goodness cannot be reduced to such a claim. — Bob Ross
Firstly, goodness, then, would not be normative; because it only refers to whether something has or does not have 'more existence' than some other possibility. — Bob Ross
Secondly, it doesn't seem correct that "having more existence [than ...] is to have more existence [than ...]" is identical in meaning to "to be good is to have more existence [than ...]": the latter seems to add something extra, in meaning, by denoting what is good as opposed to expressing a tautology. — Bob Ross
I've read it. I guess I was wondering if you were interested in considering a different perspective. — wonderer1
It's not rare for me to accept that I know things, based on my intuition having been highly trained and tested in some fairly specific areas. Is there some reason I should accept your definition? — wonderer1
If we trace your logic back to its roots, we are going to find intuitions anyway, don't you think? — wonderer1
Under your definition, then, people who are not a part of a society do not have the right to life nor bodily autonomy. — Bob Ross
I would say that rights are innate. It is a mistake to think of rights as relative to societies, because they are then subject to the whims of the society and not subject to what is good (morals). — Bob Ross
It may be for the benefit of one society to persecute and enslave outside members, whether they be a member of another society or not, and I would say that this still violates their rights. — Bob Ross
Also, I would consider your definition to be a form of privileges — Bob Ross
I think that, still your view also agrees (along with what you said here above) that all else being equal it is better to save the 5 by sacrificing the 1. — Bob Ross
Whether the intention is good or bad is completely despite any consequences that my be brought about.
For example, if I intend to rob someone and end up accidentally saving their life, then my intention was bad and the consequences of my actions was good. — Bob Ross
The intentions and consequences matter — Bob Ross
If whether it is immoral to torture billy is undefined without explicating all possible skills Dave could be acquiring instead, then something is very wrong with your theory. — Bob Ross
You conclude: “Nah, it seems like, given my experience and knowledge, I am not in a simulation, although it is actually and logically possible.”. This abduction is your reasoning, sherlock-holmes style, about the information you have that makes you conclude that your aren’t in a simulation; and the seeming is that you find the abduction valid and correct: it seems right that this abduction demonstrates that you are not in a simulation. — Bob Ross
For example, I, with all due respect, consider your theory to be making such a mistake (of skipping #1): when you declare, even if I were to grant it as true, that “existence is good” — Bob Ross
Such a statement says nothing about what goodness actually is, but rather what can be said to ultimately be good. Yours is missing an analysis of the nature of goodness: it only covers, at best, The Good. — Bob Ross
For me, I will briefly say that goodness, in my theory, is identical to ‘having value’ and moral goodness is identical to ‘having intrinsic value’. — Bob Ross
To keep things brief, I consider ‘intrinsic value’ to be value which is demanded by the ‘thing’ in virtue of its nature — Bob Ross
To keep things brief, I consider ‘intrinsic value’ to be value which is demanded by the ‘thing’ in virtue of its nature: it is value which can be ignored or denied, but only superficially. A great example (to initially convey the point) is pain: pain has intrinsic value (in the sense of avoiding it) insofar as one can superficially say or feel that “avoiding pain is not valuable” but when put in a state of serious pain it is undeniable that it there is value (all else being equal) in avoiding it — Bob Ross
There are states which demand more value which, if grasped by the person, can lead one to overcome (some or even all) pain or pleasure to acquire it; and the end result is far better than mere avoidance of pain and pursuit of pleasure. — Bob Ross
An easy example of this is Aristotle’s eudamonia (i.e., ‘flourshing’ or ‘happiness’, as roughly translated): for one to truly flourish, they must overcome and even volunteer to be in pain or give up pleasure. — Bob Ross
Just like how it may be hard to understand how more demanding (of value) flourishing is over pursuing pleasure but, nevertheless, if one were placed in such a state their denial (of the supremacy of such a state) would be superficial — Bob Ross
if one who has achieved an optimal state of flourishing must relinquish or sacrifice some of it, or even most of it, to help them and another achieve mutually beneficial flourishing, then this will be an undeniably better state than the first. — Bob Ross
The Good, in my theory, is thusly universal flourishing (which relates very closely to universal harmony). — Bob Ross
This theory, since it posits the The Good as universal flourishing, is not subjective: whether or not a ‘thing’ is flourishing is not stance-dependent—it is not dependent on conative nor cognitive dispositions. — Bob Ross
In your view, whether or not it is immoral to torture Billy to acquire the skill of torturing is undefined — Bob Ross
in mine, it is immoral, because torturing a person for the sake of acquiring a skill does not uphold nor progress towards a state of mutual flourishing between them. — Bob Ross
This is getting long, so I will stop here (; — Bob Ross
Is there some reason I should accept your definition? — wonderer1
I would like to ask a quick question: are you a moral particularist? — Bob Ross
Where you begin to disagree, and correct me if I am wrong, is when it comes to humans specifically because they are a part of a society and that society cannot function properly if there is no reassurance of at least basic rights. — Bob Ross
1. I don’t see how sacrificing one to save five, even if it were institutionalized, would result in overall less potential and actual concrete entities; and so I think you are miscalculating by your own theory’s standards. — Bob Ross
If I were to grant that when one includes society into the calculations that it maximizes potential and actual concrete entities, then it does not (still) follow from that that people should be granted rights. — Bob Ross
So, if #2 is right, then your justification only gets us to privileges — Bob Ross
I completely disagree. The intention is valuable if the intention is for doing good — Bob Ross
it does not matter if the foreseeable or actual consequences when actualizing the intention turn out to be good. — Bob Ross
the intention is good because it is meaning to perform an action which would, if it actualized correctly, produce more potential and actual concrete entities. — Bob Ross
They have a choice to torture or not torture Billy; but the reason Dave should not torture billy is certainly should not be relative to what else they could be doing — Bob Ross
I indicated that you should exclude from consideration the other possible skill Dave could accomplish instead of the skill of torture. — Bob Ross
I apologize, that was supposed to say “the end justifies the means”, and you are certainly affirming that. — Bob Ross
The end is ‘maximizing potential and actual concrete entities’ and the means is whatever is needed to achieve it. — Bob Ross
Firstly, I mention that most moral realists disagree fervently about some of your conclusions, and so does the vast majority of the west (at least), simply to demonstrate that it goes completely against the predominant moral intuitions. this does not mean that your conclusions are false. — Bob Ross
Secondly, I say, and many others, that some of your conclusions are objectively wrong because they are incoherent with the moral facts. However, I cannot substantiate this claim without importing my own ethical (moral realist) theory—so I refrain for now, unless you want me to. — Bob Ross
A desire, a gut-feeling, an emotion, is conative and unreliable; whereas an intellectual seeming is cognitive and reliable. — Bob Ross
I can feel very strongly that 1+3=1, but, upon intellectually grasping the proposition ‘1+3=1’ (which requires me to contemplate it as unbiased as possible), it does not (intellectually) seem right that 1+3=1; — Bob Ross