Remind me - are you a philosophical anti-realist?Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed May 13, 2020 5:06 amWhen did I ever use the following moral statement 'people should be allowed to breathe' ?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Tue May 12, 2020 11:45 amNope. You still don't get it. Only factual assertions, such as 'people must breathe or they die' can be verified or falsified with evidence.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Tue May 12, 2020 10:53 am
Nope it is not an opinion.
It is objective because such an ought can be verified and justified from empirical evidences.
Such moral facts are justified as supervening upon empirical facts which are objective.
If you do not agree [ignorantly] with the above, are you insisting on the opposite or you are just a morally indifferent irresponsible selfish person?
Do you have a counter to my other accusation of you, i.e. 'kicking your own ass' in the following;
- Nah, the point is you are trapped inside the SILO of ontological moral realism, i.e. morality is a thing [like external objects or Plato's universals] that exist via floating within reality.
These days within the discussion of the Philosophy of Morality, there are rarely anyone supporting this version of ontological moral realism.
If you think so, name me one modern secular philosopher of morality who support such an ontological moral realism.
The only ones are the theists whose morality is pseudo-morality and insist God [itself immoral] commands ontological moral laws that believers must comply else they are threaten with hell fire.
Btw, whilst you are condemning the ontological moral realists to the ground, you are ignorant you are exactly like them in your claim of ontological philosophical realism.
Actually with your strawman on ontological moral realism you are actually kicking your own ass as an ontological philosophical realist.
I bet you don't understand how you ended up kicking your own ass.
But a moral assertion, such 'people should be allowed to breathe' doesn't make a factual claim with a truth-value, so it can't be verified or falsified.
We can explain and try to justify holding the opinion that people should be allowed to breathe - but nothing can turn it into a fact - a true factual assertion.
The empirical and moral fact is;
"ALL humans ought to breathe else they die."
The objective moral absolute in this case is;
"No human ought to prevent another human from breathing"
I had condemned your view of your dogmatic philosophical realist view of "what is a fact", i.e. a true factual assertion which is ultimate an illusion.
I had explained there are many types of fact which are objective as justified within a Framework of Knowledge.
You have not disputed the above to support your dogmatic "what is a fact."
The above is due to your ignorance.And you can stuff your nonsense about ontological philosophical and moral realism where the sun don't shine. Not interested. Nothing to see here.
Ontological Philosophical realism and ontological moral realism are very valid topics within Philosophy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_realism
In metaphysics, realism about a given object is the view that this object exists in reality independently of our conceptual scheme. In philosophical terms, these objects are ontologically independent of someone's conceptual scheme, perceptions, linguistic practices, beliefs, etc.
Realism can also be a view about the nature of reality in general, where it claims that the world exists independent of the mind, as opposed to non-realist views.Note the similarities between the above Philosophical Realism and Moral Realism.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_realism
Moral realism (also ethical realism or moral Platonism)[1] is the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world (that is, features independent of subjective opinion), some of which may be true to the extent that they report those features accurately.
Since you are a philosophical realist, you are kicking your own ass when you condemn Moral Realism.
Ignoring the above and not defending your position tantamount to being a philosophical retard.
And if so, remind me - are you a moral realist?
And if so, how do you reconcile your philosophical anti-realism with your moral realism?