RCSaunders wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 4:19 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 3:07 pm
To say that something is "valuable" is not enough to say that it is also "moral," or "worthy of being valued."
Well, duh! Who said it was. I specifically said this is only about values, not any particular kind or any particular values. All values must have something they are valuable to or for.
Then the whole issue simply reduces to the trivial. All it means is, "Can somebody 'value" whatever they want?" And of course, we can answer that very simply, "Yes."
So I'm surprised you think it worthy of discussion, if that's all it was.
But I don't think it is all you actually had in mind.
If there are such things as, "moral," values, what they are valuable to or for must be specified.
Yes. But not
merely instrumentally. As I say, to say that a gas chamber works well for killing people doesn't make it worthy of us declaring the
moral value of gas chambers.
So now you'd be having a very different discussion.
Something can be good-for (achieving something), and also morally good (an example: giving food to children is good-for their health, but also a morally good action). ...
If the food killed them, would it still be morally good to give them the food?
We have a different word for that. We call it "poisoning" them. And it has a different moral standing, as well.
That is the whole problem with the abdsurd view of intrinsic values. It completely disconnects values from any possible relationship to anything.
So, say, your wife...she's not
intrinsically valuable? She's only valuable for the instrumental purposes one could have for her, or for the extent to which she serves your "goal, end or purpose"? She can't matter in her own right?
Just asking. Have you told her?
Would it be, "morally bad," to drown the puppies if the puppies liked it?
That doesn't happen. So we have to ask if the puppies' distaste for drowning is merely arbitrary, or indicates something. Likewise our own antipathy to doing it; does it signal only that we happen not to like drowning puppies, or does it signal that what we're doing is objectively bad?
Isn't it the fact you believe the puppies suffer that you believe it is, "morally bad?"
No. There could be other reasons. One could be that they're not my puppies. Another could be that drowning helpless puppies is actually universally bad, because that's not what puppies are created for.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 3:07 pm
So to say something is "valuable" is unfortunately ambiguous.
That is exactly my point. To say something is valuable or good, morally or any other way, without specifying how it is valuable is exactly like saying something is, "big," or, "necessary," without saying what a thing is bigger than or necessary for.
But the point you're missing, so far, is that mere human purposes are themselves either moral or immoral. So one can't improve the situation merely by saying that somebody has a reason or value for what they're doing.
Like I say, gas chambers were selected by the Third Reich as most highly effective for purpose. But saying that they were "for" that, and that they were very "good" for the "purpose" of killing people, with the "end" of eliminating Jews from Europe, does not confer one ounce of moral dignity on that situation. It was still a hideous evil.
Human purposes and ends are judged by God. There are good human values, and bad human values. And "efficiency for" in the first may be a virtue; but it's an outright vice in the second.
There is, as far as I know, no special class of values called, "efficiency values,"
And yet, there are. So I'm happy to fill that knowledge out for you.
... "benevolent," and "just," certainly are not.
There it is!
You've now imported moral language into a situation in which you claimed earlier that "values" are not moral terms. "Benevolence" is only good if it's a moral imperative for us be benevolent. And "just" implies that people get exactly what is fitting for them, what they "deserve," so to speak. But human beings, on their own, cannot "deserve" anything; nor is there any sense of what "fitting" might mean, since there is no secular definition of what a human being is
for.
Secularly speaking, we are not even "for" whatever we might happen to value at a given time. We're "for" oblivion. Given that, what do human "values" and "purposes" do to deserve dignity or special "value"? They have none. They reflect only the inherently objectively-meaningless and contingent projects of dying beings, who live in a doomed race on a fated planet, in the middle of an uncaring solar system, constituting one infinitesimally small 'blip' in cosmic time and scale.
If what you mean by, "moral values," cannot be explained in terms of any objective or purpose, they are not values, but mandates, imposed obligations, or arbitrary dictates.
Not, they aren't.
Again, if you value another human being, like your wife, do you "value" her only as means to your purposes? I trust not. And, of course, Kant would point out that that was quite the opposite of at least one version of the categorical imperative, though I know that will not impress you. But Kant wasn't entirely wrong there. There are a lot of people who find a common-sense rightness in Kant's claim that we cannot use people as means instead of ends-in-themselves. And while I agree with you i you say that Kant didn't go far enough in specifying
why, I don't think he was ultimately wrong about that. He had the right idea...just not enough justification for it.
"This is good just because it is," does not describe any value.
Good thing nobody said that. I certainly didn't.