Both definitions 1. and 2. pertain only to facts one perceives:Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 7:03 pmSorry to interrupt here, RC...just a minor point, but one that is causing some confusion.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 6:30 pmAnything dictated by any agency, God or man, is certainly not objective, but a mandate or imposed obligation, so certainly not anythig that could be discovered by any objective means.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Wed Apr 29, 2020 5:14 pm We await your demonstration that morality is objective ...
To say that something "is objective" is not to imply that it can "be discovered by objective means." Those are two different uses of the word "objective," listed as 2 and 1 respectively, below, as per Webster's Dictionary.
objective: adjective
ob·jec·tive | \ əb-ˈjek-tiv , äb- \
Definition of objective (Entry 1 of 2)
1a : expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations
objective art
an objective history of the war
an objective judgment
b of a test : limited to choices of fixed alternatives and reducing subjective factors to a minimum
Each question on the objective test requires the selection of the correct answer from among several choices.
2a : of, relating to, or being an object, phenomenon, or condition in the realm of sensible experience independent of individual thought and perceptible by all observers : having reality independent of the mind
objective reality
… our reveries … are significantly and repeatedly shaped by our transactions with the objective world.
— Marvin Reznikoff
— compare SUBJECTIVE sense 3a
b : involving or deriving from sense perception or experience with actual objects, conditions, or phenomena
objective awareness
objective data
c of a symptom of disease : perceptible to persons other than the affected individual
objective arthritis
— compare SUBJECTIVE sense 4c
d : relating to or existing as an object of thought without consideration of independent existence —used chiefly in medieval philosophy
To illustrate the difference, we might say that when nobody in Europe had "objective means" to discover America, America still "objectively" was there -- the continents, I mean, not the country.
To say something IS objective is to say it exists independent of opinion. To say something is being "investigated objectively" is to say its nature is being investigated by impartial methods...not that it does, or does not, exist.
Therefore, it makes no sense to say that because morality is not investigated by objective methods (sense 1), we can conclude no objective (sense 2) morality exists.
1. expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived
2. involving or deriving from sense perception or experience
Neither definition has anything to do with whether there are such facts if they are not perceived, and both pertain to what ideas are based on: either perceived facts (objective) or something only made-up in one's head (subjective).
I happen to disagree with both definitions, because objectivity, to me, means based on non-contradictory reason and pertains to both the ontological and epistemological. Life, consciousness, and the human mind are all objectively valid concepts which cannot be based on perception. Language, mathematics, and logic are objectively sound methods that cannot be perceived. Etc.
It's like language. One can learn a language or invent a language, but one cannot discover a language, because a language is an arbitrary invention by human beings. In the same way dictated proscriptions and prescriptions cannot be discovered, because they must be made up or invented by some agent. There is no way to objectively discover a language and there is no way to objectively discover a dictated mandate. If they are to be known they must be taught or learned from someone else.
Nice try!