I think such a consequentialist would say that (3) is self-evidently true, because to feel pain is to suffer; suffering is undesirable; and what is undesirable should—ceteris paribus—be avoided. "Suffering ought to be sought" is a sort of synthetic contradiction. — Leontiskos
This does not demonstrate that it has no shape. — unenlightened
1. In a world without morality, folk would kill babies if they wanted to and not if they didn't want to. There would be no law against it or moral opprobrium attached to it. — unenlightened
There's your resolution regarding the dissonance. — creativesoul
Does it? I mean justificatory regress has to stop somewhere, right? Why not right there? — creativesoul
Need it be 'proven' in order for you to know it? — creativesoul
If you have convinced yourself that feeling disdain for roughly 80 million people is normal, I doubt I'll be able to change your mind. Personally, I think it suggests disconnection from reality. — Tzeentch
Perhaps dropping the notions of categorical and hypothetical imperatives would help? — creativesoul
So that serves as a clear cut counterexample to the notion that all claims in the form of "One ought not X" imply conditions. — creativesoul
"One ought not kick puppies."
How does your claims quoted above cover that one? Seems perfectly meaningful and true from where I sit despite not needing to be bolstered by what you suggest all such claims require. — creativesoul
I wonder if people realize that this thread in a nutshell explains why Trump might win a second term.
The disdain for ordinary people, the "all means necessary" approach confirming one's own moral bankrutpcy while pretending to have a moral high ground, etc. — Tzeentch
Unnecessarily multiplying entities. Reward and punishment requires a judge. Causality does not. — creativesoul
Because there is no need for a rule giver(God) or reward/punishment but rather just good ole knowledge of causality. Hence, it is not the case that obligation is vacuous sans a rule giver and/or reward/punishment. — creativesoul
Seems like the demonstrably provable negative affects/effects stemming from not honoring one's voluntarily obligations(promises) should work just fine in lieu of a rule-giver and/or reward/punishment. — creativesoul
Remember when you yourself made the same point I am making? — Leontiskos
I would say that, by the very substance of anti-realist metaethics, obligations aren't obligatory. If the anti-realist theory intends to be normative, then this makes it incoherent. If the anti-realist theory intends to be merely descriptive, then it is denying the existence of true obligations and substituting some faux placeholder. Folks in this thread flip back and forth between those two options, wanting to have their cake and eat it, too; to have obligations while simultaneously holding that nothing is truly obligatory. — Leontiskos
They might approve if it helps Trump but they might not want to help a liberal president. — Fooloso4
I thought it was for the same CRIME — Relativist
"[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb..."
I think they are smart enough to see that such a ruling could bite them in the ass. — Fooloso4
It is a kind of definition or stipulation — Leontiskos
Would you agree that you don't know of any persuasive argument for moral realism? — frank
Would you agree that a persuasive argument for moral realism is going to have to account for why morality attaches only to certain kinds of intelligence? — frank
You appeared to agreed with Hyp, in his asserting those incompatible ideas. — Banno
So why is your assessment superior to the Bible's? Why do objective moral rules only apply to persons who understand them? — frank
You have
"One ought do X" is true when everyone believes it's true.
And yet you seem to deny
"You ought to do what everyone believes you should" — Banno
Even if you want to pick a certain point where there was a mutation, this choice for where we draw the moral line is going to be arbitrary. For instance, we know that Homo Sapiens and all our close relatives have a mutation that makes our jaw muscles weak. That would be an objective separating line between us and the other animals. But why would having a weak jaw make us subject to moral rules? — frank
Again, for the third or fourth time, your purpose here is obscure. It's not clear where your reasoning leads, or where it comes from. What's your point? Are you supporting subjectivism, or just positing it for the sake of discussion? — Banno
The question is: is morality only for humans? The idea is that if morality is only for homo sapiens, then morality is artificial because there's an ancestral continuum between humans and their forebears.
If morality is artificial, then moral realism fails. — frank
Taxation is not a just acquisition or transfer. — NOS4A2
The problem is that "contracts" aren't aimed at reaching morally just outcomes; they are generally not included at all. So the idea people have an extra-legal moral right to pre-tax income is fundamentally flawed. — Benkei
Certainly not descriptive ethics. If you don't like my instinct example, go with your version of moral subjectivism:
"One ought do X" is true when everyone believes it's true.
It is not a valid objection to say "Why ought I do something just because everyone believes I should?".
Because it is not an ethical theory that says "You ought to do what everyone believes you should".
It is a metaethical theory that says "The truth of ethical propositions arises from everyone's belief in them".
Raising an ethical objection to a metaethical theory is a mistake. Because it is an is theory, not an ought theory, even though its subject is ought statements.
an hour ago — hypericin
So we apparently take as true that one ought not eat babies. — Banno
So long as they are just in their transfers there is no reason to prevent someone from becoming wealthy. To do so would be to engage in the unjust transfer of wealth, for instance through theft, exploitation, and forced labor like taxation. — NOS4A2
The challenge to moral realism is in asking about what's moral for homo habilis, or homo erectus. — frank
But why is it a response to my post? — hypericin
One would treat this as a reductio, that shows the supposed argument to have gone astray. That one ought not eat babies takes precedence over the argument. — Banno
Use of this Latin terminology traces back to the Greek expression hê eis to adunaton apagôgê, reduction to the impossible, found repeatedly in Aristotle’s Prior Analytics. In its most general construal, reductio ad absurdum – reductio for short – is a process of refutation on grounds that absurd – and patently untenable consequences would ensue from accepting the item at issue. This takes three principal forms according as that untenable consequence is:
1) a self-contradiction (ad absurdum)
2) a falsehood (ad falsum or even ad impossible)
3) an implausibility or anomaly (ad ridiculum or ad incommodum)
The first of these is reductio ad absurdum in its strictest construction and the other two cases involve a rather wider and looser sense of the term.
