I believe you are wrong in not differentiating a moral fact from an empirical fact and other facts.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Thu Feb 13, 2020 8:15 amI'm sorry, but you aren't using the word 'objective' in the standard way, to mean 'independent from opinion'.henry quirk wrote: ↑Wed Feb 12, 2020 11:18 pm So your argument is: whatever people think is morally right or wrong is, in fact, objectively, independent from opinion, morally right or wrong.
Not exactly, no.
A sane man won't spend a lot of time wonderin' hmmm, me as a slave, is that a good fit?, he knows straight off the bat, without thinkin' about it, it's a lousy idea, a rotten deal, a bad thing and he'll reject it.
To be free is normal and natural to him; to be a slave is wrong and unnatural to him.
Sounds to me like an objective morality, a natural law.
Prove me wrong: show me a sane man who craves enslavement.
You won't find one in this Reality.
In Bizarro World, mebbe, but not in this world.
I'll go one further: give me an example, from any point in history, from any culture, where sane men actively sought to be enslaved cuz they believed they should be slaves.
One example will suffice to toss my idea in the shitter.
Your claim is: everyone is of the opinion that slavery is morally wrong, so slavery is morally wrong. To put it another way: if everyone is of the opinion that x is morally wrong, then x is morally wrong. And it follows that if everyone is of the opinion that x is not morally wrong, then x is not morally wrong. And earlier you agreed to that. The fact that you can't imagine such a situation is irrelevant. Your criterion for morality is 'what everyone thinks'.
And this has nothing to do with objectivity. Try this: if everyone is of the opinion that the earth is flat, then the earth is flat. But if everyone thinks the earth is an oblate spheroid, then the earth is an oblate spheroid.
Your claim about slavery is as ridiculous as these claims about the shape of the earth. With the earth, there's something in reality that verifies or falsifies a claim as to its shape, so anyone's opinion on the matter is irrelevant. It isn't a matter of opinion - it's objective.
So if morality were objective, then everyone's opinion about slavery would also be irrelevant. But you're saying everyone's opinion is the criterion for moral rightness and wrongness. This argument is a mess.
It may be a fact that everyone thinks slavery is morally wrong. But that doesn't means it's a fact that slavery is morally wrong. That's an elementary logical error.
In Arithmetic, it is an objective fact, 1 + 1 = 2 i.e. objective.
As Henry Quirk had requested, show us a sane human who would want to be enslaved?
Just start asking with yourself [given you are sane], your spouse, children, relatives, kins, friends, and the rest of sane people [verified by DSM-V].
Thus it would be fact that everyone agree slavery is morally wrong, and from this, it is a moral-fact, slavery is morally wrong. There is no logical error in this.
Therefore "slavery is morally wrong" as reasoned is an absolute moral law within morality specifically and nowhere else.
Note there is no claim 'slavery is morally wrong' is a scientific fact, an empirical fact, an arithmetic fact, a legal fact, and economic fact, etc. but only that it is a justified moral fact.