What could make morality objective?
- henry quirk
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Re: What could make morality objective?
The definition of personhood has no bearing on this issue.
The definition of, no; the nature of, yes.
the assertion that acting contrary to someone's personhood is morally wrong remains a matter of judgement - not a fact.
I disagree.
The definition of, no; the nature of, yes.
the assertion that acting contrary to someone's personhood is morally wrong remains a matter of judgement - not a fact.
I disagree.
Re: What could make morality objective?
If you think it will help. In the meantime show us the exact point where you think I "calculated the odds as 1 in 3". Who am I kidding? You can't because I didn't - it's all in your head. Skepdick me old china, if you're determined to show that philosophers are dumb, don't delude yourself that you have done so on the back of utter bollocks you have made up yourself.Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 12:42 pmDude. Must I get you a shovel?uwot wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 12:33 pm My mistake, you are that stupid. Seriously Skepdick, show us how you get this:From this:uwot wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 2:59 amOh please. There are 3 options: murder rates go up, they stay the same or they go down. You can stare at that until the cows come home but there will only ever be those 3 options, and you in your 'I'm a cor-blimey computer scientist' brilliance has concluded that the probability of any one obtaining is 1 in 3.
Re: What could make morality objective?
Sure!
It happened right where you trivialised the argument, caricaturised the statistical significance of 500+ years of data, ignored the nuance between prior and posterior probabilities and reduced the conclusion to a number then projected your mis-understanding onto me.
It happened right here:
Your strawman is indicative of your misunderstanding.
A. This is red.
B. This is red.
C. This is red.
A has 1/3 odds of obtaining.
B has 1/3 odds of obtaining.
C has 1/3 odds of obtaining.
So which team are you on and how did you end up there if all options have 1 in 3 odds?
Last edited by Skepdick on Mon May 18, 2020 1:52 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Peter Holmes
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Re: What could make morality objective?
No, the nature of personhood has no bearing either.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 1:12 pm The definition of personhood has no bearing on this issue.
The definition of, no; the nature of, yes.
Okay. Please demonstrate the factual entailment. Or don't. No worries. I knew the answer to my OP question anyway.
the assertion that acting contrary to someone's personhood is morally wrong remains a matter of judgement - not a fact.
I disagree.
Re: What could make morality objective?
These are your words Skepdick:Skepdick wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 1:25 pmSure!
It happened right where you trivialised the argument, caricaturised the statistical significance of 500+ years of data, ignored the nuance between prior and posterior probabilities and reduced the conclusion to a number then projected your mis-understanding onto me.
It happened right here:
Your strawman is indicative of your misunderstanding.
What exactly have I misunderstood?Skepdick wrote: ↑Sat May 16, 2020 3:58 pmThe derivative of the mathematical function which represents the historical murder rate over centuries of data is a certain value.
That value is not positive (murder is not increasing), and it's not zero (murder is not steady).
Murder is decreasing.
That's 2:1 unlikely, or just above 3 decibels of evidence.
- henry quirk
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not re-litigatin'
No, the nature of personhood has no bearing either.
I disagree.
Please demonstrate the factual entailment.
Already did, multiple times. You disagree.
I disagree.
Please demonstrate the factual entailment.
Already did, multiple times. You disagree.
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Peter Holmes
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Re: not re-litigatin'
Nope. All you've done is try to establish your killer fact that people own themselves - then claim that means it's morally wrong to enslave them.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 2:37 pm No, the nature of personhood has no bearing either.
I disagree.
Please demonstrate the factual entailment.
Already did, multiple times. You disagree.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: What could make morality objective?
Well, then, you can explain what conditions under which its use is warranted, and which it's not; and if there's no difference, then what content is left in the word "morality," and what is added by using it at all?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 7:56 pmThe meaning of a word is not the thing (real or abstract) to which it refers. Meaning is use.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 5:05 pmI gave you an option: use your own word, "objective."
But look here, Pete...we can go around and around, or we can get back to what your started with: your OP question.
You asked what could make morality objective? That question assumes that a thing called "morality" exists.
So describe this "morality," so we're clear on it. Or give an example. Otherwise, the question becomes absurd...it's like asking, "What could make an inherently non-existent thing objective?"![]()
But if that's not what you meant, then convince us that "morality," as you understand it, is a word that refers to something...that "morality," as you understand it, "exists."
So. as you know, I think we're talking about the function of moral assertions,
That's your position, I see. I don't "know" that, because I don't happen to agree that function, considered without further information, is what the word "morality" is used for. I see that you don't think moral terms can refer to anything objective. I think it not only can, but is nonsensical if it does not.
That nonsensicalness is why an account that claims "subjective morality" is a coherent term must justify that claim. I would suggest the very terms is a contradiction between the ascribed adjective and the noun. Nothing that is purely "subjective" can be "moral," because to appeal to morality is, to say the least about it, to appeal for approval or censure, and to appeal to other people to agree with that approval or censure. Absent that, there is no "use" for the word "moral" at all.
So my contention is that I see no content in your use of the term "subjective morality." It's closeted Nihilism. But if I'm wrong about that, you can surely show why.
As for producing a moral fact, I'll happily go forward with that, if you're not a Nihilist. With a Nihilist, nothing can be done, in terms of speaking of morality...he doesn't believe it exists in reality all. But at present, it seems to me you're a Nihilist that doesn't know he's a Nihilist, because he hasn't fully thought through what it means to assert "morality is subjective." What it means is that either the noun or that subjective completion is misguided.
- henry quirk
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Pete
seems like you wanna tussle: no worries, mannie will accommodate you
, or skep, or va
me: I'm satisfied with my argument, so -- except for an occasional comment -- I'm done
me: I'm satisfied with my argument, so -- except for an occasional comment -- I'm done
- Immanuel Can
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Re: What could make morality objective?
And your source for these two claims is...?Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 5:31 am DNA/RNA wise ALL humans are "programmed" [not by God] with a potential of an existential crisis.
Humans since then, had been resorting to all sorts of ways to relieve the inherent unavoidable crisis.
This is called "the genetic fallacy." The origin of an idea does not tell us whether or not the idea itself is right or wrong. It's also ad hominem, as you're relying on a particular critique of the speakers to deny the content of a proposition. Stereo fallacies there.
This claim is really amazing. I tells me the claimant has actually never read anything in regard to this debate at all. I would expect you to say, "I've read the arguments, and I don't believe X because of Y." But you don't say that...you try to say that no empirical argument even exists...but that's so manifestly untrue that only somebody who knows nothing about it could even say that.Since the emergence of the illusory God, there had been no direct empirical evidence to justify God exists as empirically real.
However, for your further information, try the "Argument from Design." Now, you may still say, "I don't believe any of those arguments," and if you can say why, that's fair. But one thing you cannot possibly say: "no empirical arguments exist." They manifestly do.
The only valid and pragmatic reason to 'believe God exists' is solely from desperate psychology
Empty bluster, already debunked in front of your own eyes. Psychologizing like this doesn't work, because it can be used to exactly the same effect against Atheism...or rather, it can be used to no legitimate effect against either Theism or Atheism.
Done. If you read my "aliens" argument, you know exactly how. But you must not have read it at all.The fact is how can you extricate morality from human beings. No way! If so, how?
You're misusing the term "relative," as it's used in connection to morality.IF God exists, God's morality in one sense is logically conditioned upon God thus relative.
"Relative" when used of morality, means "unstable, variable, or circumstantial," not merely "applied to a person." God is a Person, so a morality established on the basis of His character and identity is not "relative" in the proper sense of the word. That is, it doesn't change depending on which person (or Person) is applying it.
If God exists, murder is wrong, even if you think it isn't. And it doesn't become right even if I think it does. And if that's how it is, then morality is not, in the appropriate sense, "relative."
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Peter Holmes
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Re: What could make morality objective?
Produce a moral fact, and show why it's a fact - not the expression of a value-judgement - and you'll demolish moral nihilism at a stroke. There'd be no more need to tilt at your straw man.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 3:10 pmWell, then, you can explain what conditions under which its use is warranted, and which it's not; and if there's no difference, then what content is left in the word "morality," and what is added by using it at all?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 7:56 pmThe meaning of a word is not the thing (real or abstract) to which it refers. Meaning is use.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun May 17, 2020 5:05 pm
I gave you an option: use your own word, "objective."
But look here, Pete...we can go around and around, or we can get back to what your started with: your OP question.
You asked what could make morality objective? That question assumes that a thing called "morality" exists.
So describe this "morality," so we're clear on it. Or give an example. Otherwise, the question becomes absurd...it's like asking, "What could make an inherently non-existent thing objective?"![]()
But if that's not what you meant, then convince us that "morality," as you understand it, is a word that refers to something...that "morality," as you understand it, "exists."
So. as you know, I think we're talking about the function of moral assertions,
That's your position, I see. I don't "know" that, because I don't happen to agree that function, considered without further information, is what the word "morality" is used for. I see that you don't think moral terms can refer to anything objective. I think it not only can, but is nonsensical if it does not.
That nonsensicalness is why an account that claims "subjective morality" is a coherent term must justify that claim. I would suggest the very terms is a contradiction between the ascribed adjective and the noun. Nothing that is purely "subjective" can be "moral," because to appeal to morality is, to say the least about it, to appeal for approval or censure, and to appeal to other people to agree with that approval or censure. Absent that, there is no "use" for the word "moral" at all.
So my contention is that I see no content in your use of the term "subjective morality." It's closeted Nihilism. But if I'm wrong about that, you can surely show why.
As for producing a moral fact, I'll happily go forward with that, if you're not a Nihilist. With a Nihilist, nothing can be done, in terms of speaking of morality...he doesn't believe it exists in reality all. But at present, it seems to me you're a Nihilist that doesn't know he's a Nihilist, because he hasn't fully thought through what it means to assert "morality is subjective." What it means is that either the noun or that subjective completion is misguided.
You failed with 'incest is morally wrong', so it's puzzling that you don't understand that you'll always fail. But go ahead and try again, by all means.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: What could make morality objective?
They may. Some do. But I have found that most are not that thoughtful. Often, they're just knee-jerk skeptical of the whole idea of morality. Or they're general anarchists, who like to extend their anarchism to morality. Others like Nihilism because they imagine in grants them moral exemption or personal freedom. Others try to stop at "moral subjectivism," but are really Nihilists in ignorance of the implications of their own view. So there are different motives, and different ways of embracing Nihilism.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 5:45 am Moral Nihilist is one who do not believe there are justification for any form of morality. I believe they will be very dogmatic with "is/ought" dichotomy.
Actually, they do.Right/Wrong do not necessary pertains to Morality.
Politics is independent of morality.
You should hope that's not true.
True: you can "value" vanilla ice cream over chocolate, and morality is involved. But that's not what we're talking about. We're talking about moral values. See the OP.Values are not exclusively related only to Morality.If there's "something" in a "nothing," then there's not a "nothing" anymore. And if there's "nothing," then by definition, there is not even one bit of "something." Thus, Moral Nihilism entails the absolute, total and unequivocal denial that there are any true, objective or real values at all.
Pull up short of that, and you're no longer a Moral Nihilist.
Never, so far as I know. But one does not have to have seen the logical implications of one's own view to still have those implications be rationally necessary. A moral subjectivist may not be personally bound to be a Nihilist, but he or she is rationally compelled to become one, if he or she follows through the logic of his or her own claims.When have I ever claimed I am a moral nihilist?
That's because there's a difference between having a personal view and having a rational view.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: What could make morality objective?
I can.
But not if you're a Nihilist, since Nihilists deny the very issue can possibly exist. There is no question a Nihilist can ask about morality, since one cannot ask questions about things one doesn't believe exist, just as one cannot ask, "How many unicorns can you fit on a ranch?"
But the fault, then, is in the questioner. The answer is not lacking; the recipient is refusing delivery.
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Peter Holmes
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Re: What could make morality objective?
Nonsense. If you produce a moral fact, and demonstrate that it is a fact, then whether there are any moral nihilists is completely irrelevant. There being moral nihilists wouldn't stop your moral fact being a fact. Don't play this pathetic game again.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 3:38 pmI can.
But not if you're a Nihilist, since Nihilists deny the very issue can possibly exist. There is no question a Nihilist can ask about morality, since one cannot ask questions about things one doesn't believe exist, just as one cannot ask, "How many unicorns can you fit on a ranch?"
But the fault, then, is in the questioner. The answer is not lacking; the recipient is refusing delivery.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: What could make morality objective?
Not so, at all. "Moral" expresses a value -- whether it's an objective or subjective value being the present matter of debate. Values are not "demonstrable" in such a way as to defeat somebody who doesn't even believe the relevant value exists.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon May 18, 2020 3:47 pm If you produce a moral fact, and demonstrate that it is a fact, then whether there are any moral nihilists is completely irrelevant.
Here's my argument, in short form:
Moral subjectivism is moral nihilism.
Peter declares he is a moral subjectivist.
Therefore, Peter is a moral nihilist.
What step of that syllogism do you dispute?