I'll start by thanking you for linking the relevant threads, just in case I hadn't read them. But rather than having issues with understanding them, I've taken issue with the way they've been accepted/posed.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Jul 13, 2020 5:47 am Not sure of your precise point.
If you are not sure of 'what is a fact' this is the thread to explore;
What is a Fact?
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=29486
The moral fact deniers has a different definition of 'fact' from the norm.
If you are not sure whether there are moral facts, then this thread;If you do not agree there are moral facts, then, provide your arguments and justifications.
- There are Moral Facts
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=29777
If you are accept there are moral facts, don't expect the moral-facts-denier to be "gentle", they will simply tear you to pieces as driven by their dogmatic ideology.
So, I'll try to be more clear as to my arguments here.
I'll say that there are 2 ways that we can look at morality: Morality is objective; and, Morality is not objective.
Personally, I believe the former is a superior argument to the latter, but that's for a different thread.
I'm going to continue on the assumption of truth for morality being objective. You want to approach these arguments from the presumption that it is not objective, just let me know. I just think that argument is less interesting.
I'd say that, independently of us, moral facts would not exist. Only moral truths would exist.
P1: Facts are not truths, because 100% of empirical evidence is circumstantial.
P2: Truths exist independent of experience and verification, and must be discovered not created.
P3: If morality is objective, then morality exists independent of experience and verification.
C: There are no moral facts, only moral truths.
Now, as with everything in life, humans seem to personalize concepts. If you take the argument above from a personal perspective, we still need to discover what those "truths" are. Until we are able to verify the claims we make, they remain unverified -- facts. I suppose that argument would look like this:
Definition: Unverified claims, which aim to tell us something about the universe, are facts.
P1: Truths are accessible through the logical verification of facts, beyond circumstantial evidence.
P2: Facts only have utility when truths are not immediately apparent.
P3: Truths are not immediately apparent to moral agents, and must be discovered through verification.
C: Moral facts exist, only within the purview of a moral agent.
Would that not mean that the only way facts/moral facts exist is because of the fallibility of humanity? Hell, the fallibility of any agent with a perspective limited by experience and a faculty of logic that must develop?