I have explained extensively on the following;Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:13 amNote my question.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sat Dec 12, 2020 4:45 amNote my response to the above in this post,Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Fri Dec 11, 2020 12:52 pm
Don't dodge. How do we empirically verify that X (eg, humans killing humans) is or isn't morally wrong?
Non-answer: there are loads of moral facts and each must be verified and justified empirically and philosophically.
Non-answer: there are moral facts related to humans killing humans.
Non-answer: a decrease in humans killing humans is moral progress.
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How can we empirically verify or falsify a moral assertion, such as 'humans killing humans is morally wrong'?
Answer: the question is incoherent, because a moral assertion doesn't make a factual claim about reality with a truth-value independent from opinion.
So a moral assertion can't be verified or falsified. All we can do is agree or disagree with it. And whatever facts we deploy to justify a moral opinion, it remains an opinion and can never be a fact.
There are no moral facts, but only moral opinions held by people, some of whom think their own moral opinions are facts. And that's our inescapable moral predicament. Moral realists and objectivists are simply deluded.
- 1. What is fact and what is moral fact.
2. The concept of FSK and FSR, thus moral FSK/FSR.
3. Justified Moral Standards and thus variation from the standard as a moral variance or is 'morally-wrong'.
Analogically you are like a Newtonian who is trapped within the Newtonian FSR, thus would never be above to agree with Einstein's or QM's claims within their specific FSR.
It is the same with Einstein who was trapped within his own FSR, thus unable to agree with the facts of QM from the QM FSR.
Note the "HINT" 56% of philosophers in a survey are moral realists who believe in moral facts, only 28% are moral-anti-realists.