Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 11:45 pm
Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Thu Nov 19, 2020 6:02 am
Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Wed Nov 18, 2020 10:20 am
Answer this question. Could the claim 'no human ought to kill another' be false? And if so, what would have to be different for it to be false?
I'll wait till you answer this question.
At the present it is already happening where psychopaths with their defective 'ought-not-to kill are turned to be 'ought-to' kill another human. If you research into psychopathy, many psychopaths who killed and caught claimed they were compelled to kill by some internal forces.
So Yes, it can be false if ALL humans are programmed with an "ought-to kill humans".
This is VERY possible if there is a sudden rare mutations in the genes and DNA in the evolution of humans and by the next or two generations ALL humans born are "programmed" with an ought-to kill humans.
From there people will start killing humans.
Some will resist killing but that won't last because their resistance will weakened due to the inherent program 'ought-to' kill humans get more and more active.
The last man standing will not be able to survive by himself and VIOLA the human species will be extinct then.
The current moral facts [within a Moral FSK] as programmed can be changed in time, albeit is reality it may take 100s, 1000s or millions of years.
So yes, the moral reality, fact, truth of 'ought-not-to-kill another human is falsifiable.
Okay. This answer - which I expected - exposes the mistake in your argument. I'll try to explain it here.
1 The only features of reality that can be true or false are factual assertions - typically linguistic expressions. And 'ought-not-to-kill' programming is not a linguistic expression, so it can't be true or false. It simply either does or doesn't exist.
You are the one who has made the mistake philosophically.
Where in Philosophy does it declare only linguistic expression can be true or false.
Basically 'truth' is defined as;
Truth is a complex topic with a huge variety of issues.
Truth is one of the central subjects in philosophy. It is also one of the largest. Truth has been a topic of discussion in its own right for thousands of years. Moreover, a huge variety of issues in philosophy relate to truth, either by relying on theses about truth, or implying theses about truth.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truth/
Scientific truths are not linguistic truths.
I suggest you read up the SEP article on "truth" and note the various perspectives of truth.
Therein your linguistic perspective is very plastic and limited.
Your are also entrapped with the outdated 'Correspondence Theory of Truth' which is ultimately unrealistic.
What concern reality is this 'Realism versus Anti-Realism' which I had always referred to.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truth/#ReaAntRea
Realistically, 'ought-not-to-kill' state [physical and mental] is a biological, neurological, psychological truth/fact within their specific FSK.
The 'Ought-not-to-kill' state [physical and mental] within its specific Moral FSK is a moral fact.
2 If we are programmed not to kill humans, then that is the only fact of the matter. And in that case, the appropriate factual assertion is: 'we are programmed not to kill humans'. That linguistic expression would have the truth-value 'true'.
There is no question of 'ought-to-kill another human' within human nature.
3 Similarly, if instead we were programmed to kill humans, that would be a fact, and the factual assertion 'we are programmed to kill humans would be true - and the factual assertion 'we are programmed not to kill humans' would then be false.
Note the program is 'ought-not-to-kill humans' within a moral FSK.
4 Notice that, in these cases, truth-value and therefore falsifiability applies to the assertions 'we are programmed not to kill humans' and 'we are programmed to kill humans'. And neither of those assertions is moral - neither says 'ought-to' or 'ought-not-to'.
If you want to play the language games, you will have linguistic truth-value.
In reality what we have is all humans are "programmed" with a state of oughtness of ought-not-to-kill another human. These are represented by real tensions and forces of inhibitions where if damaged will force one to kill, e.g. as in a psychopath.
5 Your mistake is this. You think that, if we're programmed not to kill humans, then the claim 'no human ought to kill another' is a factual assertion with the truth-value 'true'. But it's not a factual assertion at all. It makes a separate moral claim about killing humans.
You are the one who is making the mistake in confining the truth to the linguistic perspectives.
What I am dealing here is directly with real mental forces represented by neural connectivities and features that inhibit [thus ought-not-to] all normal humans from killing other humans.
6 If instead we were programmed to kill humans, then it would still be rational to say 'no human ought to kill another'. That moral assertion would be perfectly compatible with our programming. It wouldn't be falsified by reality, because it isn't a factual assertion with a truth-value in the first place.
There is no question of 'human programmed to kill humans' that is not human nature at present till another million years until the exceptional happened.
As I had stated the 'ought-not-to-kill' is falsified where there are damage or weakening of the 'ought-not-to-kill' inhibition that compel ought-to-kill and these are considered within the Moral FSK.
Conclusion: if we were programmed to kill humans, that wouldn't falsify the moral assertion 'no human ought to kill another''. And that's because the moral assertion doesn't make a factual claim with a truth-value at all.
So there can be no contradiction between the two claims: 'we are programmed to kill humans'; and 'no human ought to kill another'. These two assertions have completely different functions.
The above is a mess because you are confined to the linguistic perspective.
In the real empirical world perspective, the 'ought-not-to-kill' is a reality and thus is a scientific [applied] truth and a moral fact [within a moral FSK].
It is falsifiable because it is empirically possible for humans to be programmed with 'ought-to-kill' if the program is changed suddenly or evolved to it in the future.