Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sat Feb 20, 2021 6:21 am
I don't agree with (2).
The physical referent of normatives are universal in all humans, thus the same for all people.
For many commonly held "oughts" I'm a "different person."--I have a lot of unusual moral views. And for almost all others, I know some "different people"
Perhaps you want to retract or edit the above post?
Ah--I didn't remember typing exactly that, and it didn't make sense to me out of context.
Re the context: I was explaining to Skepdick that morality isn't morality (a la what the vast majority of people are talking about/doing with respect to what they're naming "morality") if we're not talking about normatives. He said "Morality is the collective effort of ensuring the continued human survival and improved human wellbeing. Morality is about constructing a hospitable environment . . ." So using his own wording (which is one thing that threw me off--that's not wording I'd ever use on my own; I used it because I was repeating it back to him), I was trying to say, although I didn't make this explicit enough, that the very idea of "ensuring human survival" has an "embedded" "ought" in it, because logically, one has to think or feel that "We
ought to ensure human survival" in order to be focused on that. Otherwise one would be neutral about ensuring human survival or one might even think "We ought to NOT ensure human survival."
Based on what you wrote, the embedded ought/should as embedded via the DNA/RNA,
No, no, that's nothing like what I was saying. I was saying that
logically, "Morality is the effort of ensuring continued human survival . . . well-being" etc. implies that one is thinking normatives a la "We OUGHT to ensure human survival," "We OUGHT to ensure well-being," "Such and such OUGHT to count as well-being," etc. One could just as well think, "We OUGHT to NOT ensure human survival" and so on (and some people do think that).
then all normal people will act from the same based of ought/should thus will not feel differently.
Only the abnormal [psychiatric cases] will feel differently.
There's nothing normative about statistical normalcy. You keep assuming that there is.
That is because you don't have necessary depth in the neurosciences to understand the above.
Holy crap are you continually patronizing, lol. Would you like to compare our academic backgrounds?
The opposite of surviving is death.
And?
Again, this has absolutely nothing to do with normatives.
As explained above, the above oughtness to survive implies avoiding premature death
There is no ought to "avoiding premature death."
and that is a fact of human nature.
It might be a statistical norm, but STATISTICAL NORMS DO NOT IMPLY NORMATIVES. To suggest that they do is to fall to the argumentum ad populum fallacy. You keep simply assuming that statistical norms imply normatives, but they don't. It's simply falling prey to a tendency to be conformist.