Objectification is what your are doing . Objectification is treating something abstract as if it is concrete i.e. exists in space-time. As any colourist can tell you , red is relative to what other colours are present. In extreme form you could not identify red if other hues were lacking.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Mar 15, 2021 11:48 amI agree that we can feel there are moral facts. And I think that's where the claim that there are moral facts comes from. And I agree that sometimes we can't tell if a factual assertion is true or false, in context. But the crux is whether a moral assertion has a truth-value at all - whether its function is to make a truth-claim about reality. And I don't think that's its function.Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Mar 15, 2021 10:24 amSometimes we can't establish what is true and what false. This is because of 1. our understanding is limited as the convex/concave picture demonstrates. And 2. sometimes we cannot know all the relevant causes of an event.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Mar 14, 2021 10:05 pm
I wasn't being sarcastic. To be honest, I didn't pay VA's post much attention, I'm afraid, because I'm reluctant to waste time reading his nonsense. But I just checked back - and, yes, his argument is nonsense once again. Here it is.
Who are humans to say what reality really is? How do we know that what we call reality really is reality? After all, we can be fooled by visual tricks. And if we were bats, we'd think reality was completely different.
Okay. So how do we get from this bombshell insight to the existence of moral facts? What's the argument - that we invent facts, so there's no reason why we can't or don't invent moral facts? And are they what we can empirically show to exist - things we invented in the first place?
If you can straighten out this mess and present a coherent account, please do. And then I'll show you why the argument is fallacious.
Because of our perennial lack of understanding we understand some events emotionally . When you call a judgement a moral fact what is happening is you feel it subjectively and either blame or praise based on your own feelings.
Any individual's own feelings are conditioned by a compound of her nurture
and her nature.
The analogy with aesthetic assertions is very precise. To say 'this is beautiful' is to express an opinion - a value-judgement. The claim that the thing's beauty is a fact - say, a property - of that thing, so that the claim that it's not beautiful is false - is false. And the invention of an 'aesthetic framework and system of knowledge' doesn't confer factuality, and therefore objectivity, on aesthetic assertions. It just means: against this standard of beauty, this thing is beautiful and is not not beautiful.
And this is nothing like the claim: against this use of the word 'red', this colour patch is red. The idea that we use the word red in the way we use the word beautiful is a nomenclaturist delusion that goes like this: 'red' and 'beauty' are both nouns, so they must both be names of something; 'red' and 'beautiful' are both adjectives, so they must both label properties that exist.
Same with beauty, you could not identify beauty if ugliness was not another value. Same with good/evil you could not identify either in the absence of the other. Conclude: an ethic relates to its absence as in 'your ability to identify a good depends on your ability to identify its relative evil'.
Plato thought there was an ideal, i.e. non-relative, Form of the good. Do you?