Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Thu May 07, 2020 11:22 am
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Thu May 07, 2020 9:58 am
The moral goals are derived from empirical facts and philosophical reasoning as moral facts.
Note the wiki link re 'What is fact'.
There is no issue with
moral fact as long as it is explained sufficiently as related to the moral framework.
Not so. You're mistaking 'derivation' for 'deduction'.
There's no deductive entailment from 'people must breathe or they die' to 'people
ought to breathe'.
If there were an entailment, as you know, to accept the premise and reject the conclusion would be irrational. But here there's no contradiction in doing so: P 'people must breathe or they die' C 'people ought not to breathe' - is not a contradiction - so there's no deductive entailment in the original.
Of course, we can try to justify the judgement 'people ought to breathe' by citing the fact that if they don't breathe they'll die. But then, why ought people not to die? Is that supposed to be a fact? No- it's just another judgement.
The lack of deductive entailment between a factual assertion and a moral one is what makes the expression 'moral fact' incoherent.
The below is a deduction
Note here is the deduction;
- P1 ALL humans are programmed to survive at all costs at least till the inevitable.
P2 If all humans do not breathe they will not survive and will die prematurely.
C1 Therefore all living human ought to breathe at least till the inevitable.
If you cannot see the deduction, here is another perspective;
- P1 ALL humans are programmed to survive at all costs at least till the inevitable.
P2 To survive at at costs all living humans must breathe, else self-evidently, they will die.
C1 Therefore to survive at all costs, all living human ought to breathe at least till the inevitable.
There is entailment, C1 follow from P2 from P1.
The above premises are deliberated within a Moral Framework, thus the conclusion is a moral fact.
Note within the Legal Framework, persecutors and the defense teams in many cases rely upon
scientific facts and other facts to facilitate the jury's to reach a conclusion of a
legal fact. What so incoherent about that?
What is critical here is there must be Framework of Knowledge to co-ordinate the various facts to arrive a conclusive fact.
In may case, I have relied upon a Framework of Morality and Ethics to co-ordinate the relevant facts [empirical or otherwise] to arrive a deductive moral fact with reliance on philosophical reasoning.
As I had stated you are SO stuck in rut of narrow and shallow ideas such as Philosophical Realism and its constipated 'objectivity' which is not fundamentally realistic at all. This is why you are unable to realize the truth of reality.
I understand Hume's contention, i.e one cannot simply make moral evaluations directly out of empirical facts based on reason alone.
In my case, I have relied upon human nature [a priori] to ground my argument, i.e. in P1.
Note I have deeper ground of human nature but P1 is sufficient.