Immanuel Can wrote:
But morality then has nothing at all to do with reason. It has to do with things like wishes or cultural preferences, but is not a subject for which reason has any application in the generation of premises. So it what sense does "morality" belong to the field (or "set") of reason-capable entities?
Morality has everything to do with reason. Morality is about taking the relevant wishes and cultural preferences and combining them to form a certain conclusion -- that is what reason is all about.
But there "reason" is not doing any work. For if one rejects the premises, then reason has no further way of clarifying the situation. For "reason" to work, it needs, at the minimum, two defensible premises. Absent either of these two premises being granted, the conclusions simply do not follow. So what's doing the work are those two initial premises.
You misunderstand me. The premises of a moral argument consist of at least one objective fact or assumption and at least one subjective condition (needs/wants/goals). It is not a matter of other people accepting or rejecting the premises; the premises are merely the conditions of the situation that one is using to form the moral argument. As I explained in my previous post, the conclusion of the moral argument is not an absolute, but is only valid within the context of the argument itself.
So it would read something like:
P1: I'm in ISIS.
P2: ISIS believes murdering infidels is good.
C: Therefore, murder is right.
Not only is this syllogism framed incorrectly but is also blatantly invalid. I would re-phrase the syllogism this way:
P1: Members of ISIS believe murdering infidels is good.
P2: I am a member of ISIS.
C: Therefore, I believe murdering infidels is good.
Not exactly the sort of case one would want to defend, would one? Or are you happy with it? Because if you accept that there are no objective moral premises, then this is precisely the argument you would have to believe to be "rational." After all, its premises are granted by its culture, and if I were an ISIS member, then the two premises rationally produce the conclusion. Slitting people's throats in the desert becomes not just an
excusable act, but actually a
moral one then. Yikes.
Since your syllogism was invalid, I will refer to my rendition of it. The conclusion in my re-phrased argument is a specific conclusion rather than a general conclusion as was in your syllogism. The specific conclusion was a perfectly valid conclusion based on the premises given. It is not to be understood as a moral absolute, obviously, but as one individual's motivation for their actions. Now, just because an individual comes to this conclusion with the premises given doesn't mean that the conclusion is immutable or irrevocable; if the same individual were to provide a different set of premises, he may very well come to a completely different conclusion.
That explanation won't help: "facts" usually means "objective realities." But you don't believe in moral facts, just in moral fancies, if I understand you aright.
You do not understand me aright. As I said before, a moral argument involves at least one objective fact of the situation and at least one subjective condition. In the WWII example, one of the facts (or at least assumptions) was that an American ground invasion against Japan would be extremely difficult and would cost many American lives; one of the subjective conditions in the situation was that the US wanted to minimize American casualties. The idea that the US wanted to cut down on their casualties is a fact. The opinion can be considered a fact in the sense that it is a fact that the individual holds that particular opinion.
So what "facts" can be salient to making a moral judgment? I can understand that they might issue in a prudential judgment (i.e. a judgment that 'works' best to produce a desired outcome), but never a moral one. For "moral" doesn't really mean anything then. It's just a word. A better way to put it would be "what works for me." But nothing makes "what works for me" distinctively deserving of the kind of approbation that comes with a word like "moral." And nothing makes it obligatory to anyone else.

I'm confused. I don't know how you would define the word "moral" but I understand it to refer to "a judgment that works best to produce a desired outcome." If an action does not produce a desired outcome, then in what sense is the action good?
I believe that morality is a subset of reason, yet it is somewhat different from how we normally think about reason. Common reason is typically concerned with finding the right answers, but I think morality is a type of reason that is equally concerned with finding the right questions. Morality is about asking oneself what is most relevant and most valued, and then drawing conclusions from those premises. Morality is not about fixed answers but is about the dynamic process of reasoning and about looking at the situation from the most appropriate perspective.
And also, your comment about morality being "obligatory" assumes moral absolutism. But I am a moral relativist.
Your claim here is a mass of contradictions. Firstly, "relevant objective details" cannot include morality if there are no objective moral facts. There's nothing objective about morality to become a "detail," in that case. Secondly, it's not clear what a "circumstance" (of the relevant kind) would be, so that needs to be made specific and informative before your claim can be assessed. But the bigger problem is why anyone should take "subjective details" as morally obligatory. They would seem to be matters of pure taste, with no compulsory force at all. Why should anyone care about anyone's "subjective" position, or think their own "subjective" preferences placed any obligation on other people to give a fig?
The "relevant objective details" are simply the circumstances in the situation at hand, such as the WWII case which I explained in my previous post. Also, as I have said before, I believe that morality is a subset of reason and, by association, logic. You keep referring to moral "facts," however the truth is that logic does not pertain to facts. Logic is about judging the validity of arguments. So within the context of this thread, it is pointless to talk about "moral facts." Morality is a subset of reason: this means that it is not the conclusions themselves that are obligatory but
the reasoning process itself.
Non-sequitur. God is claimed to be a "sentient being." Therefore, moral arguments with objective premises would be entirely warranted. However, if you deny that premise, you lose morality altogether as well. For the fact that some being "makes an argument" or claims a thing does not go one step in showing the argument is reasonable or the claim is justified...not unless the Being in question has the authority to make it stick for other beings.
I am an atheist and a moral relativist. I don't believe any particular action is right or wrong in itself. The OP of this thread indicates that fact. If mass-murder of civilians can be justified then anything can potentially be justified given the right circumstances. Instead of denying this reality, I instead embrace it. I embrace the fact that morality is a reasoning process, and that as such the reasoning process should be carried out as accurately and carefully as possible.
Well, in some sense this is certainly true. But I'm a Theist, so I can think so: I have grounds to call some premises "right."
But for you, what makes a moral premise "good" if there is no objectivity to the idea of "good"? Or what makes something "righteous" if it's really nothing more that the expression of personal bias of some animal, human or otherwise, or even of some herd of such animals? And what can a "right" moral question be when you've denied the objective existence of any "right"? You see, you toss value laden terms into your judgments, but then turn around and deny the objective reality of all those same value terms.
If rationality is what you want, then you're going to have to pick a horse and ride it. If morality can be objectively "right" or "good," then you'll have to give up mere subjectivism. If it cannot, then you are powerless to call even subjective morality "good" in any meaningful sense. You have no good or evil, no right or wrong: only the provisional prejudices of individuals or groups.
And anything -- literally anything has to be considered "moral" if it meets the criteria of "working for and being supported by some cultural group." So on your description, the years of slavery in the American south would have to be accepted as "moral."
Happy yet?
First of all, I have never used the phrase, "working for and being supported by some cultural group." I don't know where you got that from, but I never said it.
Anyway, an act is ultimately only as good as its outcome. We all have different goals/values; so the closest thing we can come to what you might call "objective" moral good is to ascertain what goals/values we have in common and then try to come to a consensus on what we would consider a good outcome.