If I believe that "kicking puppies is wrong" is true then "kicking puppies is wrong" is true
"Kicking puppies is wrong" may be true, but my belief, or lack thereof, in said statement does not change its truth-value. — Moliere
Gotcha. I would concur.
This seems to cloistered in one's own thoughts, to me. — Moliere
Drawing and maintaining the distinction between thought/belief and thinking about thought/belief is imperative to understanding all sorts of things about us and the world we find ourselves within. It's crucial for the ability to discriminate between conceptions/notions, including but not limited to morality. Academia has failed here, and still does as far as I can tell. The relevance to moral philosophy and doscourse would include allowing one to be able to distinguish between moral thought/belief that is informed by language, and moral thought/belief that precedes language. Again, the term
moral denotes a classification and/or kind of thought/belief.
I am of the very strong opinion that everyone is involved in the same process, in the same set of circumstances, regarding forming and/or having our initial worldview, which includes belief about what's good/bad, right/wrong, moral/immoral. By and in large one's, initial worldview is adopted via language acquisition and it's subsequent use.
We're all in the same boat in this way. Unpacking what that is existentially dependent upon gleans knowledge of morally relevant common denominators. Trusting the truthfulness of the teacher being an important one.
When we moralize we are addressing others.
And ourselves...
When Ted moralizes on the evils of adultery, he is not talking about his beliefs, he is talking about adultery.
I would concur that this is often the case. Ted is expressing and/or presenting his beliefs about adultery, via language use. That's an overly simplistic account though.
When we begin to explain our reasoning, our ground for our belief, or when we begin to compare/contrast... we are most certainly talking about our belief. Knowing the difference is crucial to understanding the world and/or ourselves.
A point I use because we can often moralize about what I don't think is within the domain of morality. You can rationalize why adultery is wrong by making some notion about promises, but to me it just doesn't come on the same level as, say, ensuring the hungry are fed or preventing murder.
But even when we moralize about what I believe is not morally significant, we're talking about actions, dispositions, or character -- not our own beliefs.
I get what you're saying here
Moliere. It is interesting that you've chosen to invoke promises, giving one's word. I would sharply disagree regarding the moral significance of making a promise, but do not look to argue this point here, as the thread is about the meaning of moral statements/claims.