Sorry to butt in - but I just wanted to shout out for this salutary observation. Note to self.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 12:45 pm
It happens with free will and determinism. If I point out problems with one position, most people assume I have the other position.
Is morality objective or subjective?
-
Peter Holmes
- Posts: 4134
- Joined: Tue Jul 18, 2017 3:53 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
-
Iwannaplato
- Posts: 8535
- Joined: Tue Aug 11, 2009 10:55 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
And just to be clear, I was extremely snarky with him for a variety of reasons. I think this pattern may have colored your response to me...once. But you were polite and didn't add a lot of assumptions about me and my brain in general. I don't think everyone who does this is shallow. I'm sure I've done it myself. Made the assumption or even unconsciously made the assumption and this colored my response. In fact, I remember doing this on another forum and being corrected.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 1:46 pmSorry to butt in - but I just wanted to shout out for this salutary observation. Note to self.Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 12:45 pm
It happens with free will and determinism. If I point out problems with one position, most people assume I have the other position.
My temper just wanted to generalize back at him in the same hysterical way he was generalizing about me.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
It's just a variation on the more direct question of; "does the Biblical God exist"?Sculptor wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:31 pm I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
-
Peter Holmes
- Posts: 4134
- Joined: Tue Jul 18, 2017 3:53 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Agreed. I asked the question because moral realism and objectivism are amazingly persistent and tenacious absurdities that continue to plague us. 'Of course there are moral facts, and I/we know what they are.'Sculptor wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:31 pm I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
So the question isn't idiotic - just the answer: 'it's objective'.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Well I still don't know what you mean by "moral facts". What would be a good example of a moral fact?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:12 pm 'Of course there are moral facts, and I/we know what they are.'
-
Peter Holmes
- Posts: 4134
- Joined: Tue Jul 18, 2017 3:53 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Well, there aren't any. That's the point. But take any moral assertion - such as 'abortion is morally wrong' - and objectivists claim such as assertion has truth value - true or false - because it's supposed to be a fact that abortion really is or isn't morally wrong. It's bonkers, of course. And dangerous.Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:28 pmWell I still don't know what you mean by "moral facts". What would be a good example of a moral fact?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:12 pm 'Of course there are moral facts, and I/we know what they are.'
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
No it is not.Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:10 pmIt's just a variation on the more direct question of; "does the Biblical God exist"?Sculptor wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:31 pm I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
Please don't balls up the thread.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I suppose I'm being over optimistic to think that a moral objectivist would dare attempt to answer this question.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:12 pmAgreed. I asked the question because moral realism and objectivism are amazingly persistent and tenacious absurdities that continue to plague us. 'Of course there are moral facts, and I/we know what they are.'Sculptor wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:31 pm I find it very puzzling why this idiotic question comes up again and again ad nauseam.
Consider...
Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private.
So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice.
Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
So the question isn't idiotic - just the answer: 'it's objective'.
But they are out there, lurking.
- henry quirk
- Posts: 16379
- Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 8:07 pm
- Location: 🔥AMERICA🔥
- Contact:
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
deleted an incomplete post
Last edited by henry quirk on Tue Aug 23, 2022 12:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
- henry quirk
- Posts: 16379
- Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 8:07 pm
- Location: 🔥AMERICA🔥
- Contact:
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
As a man (any man, every man) is free and has an inalienable natural right to his, and no other's, life, liberty, and property, the government was (is) wrong to prohibit consensual behavior between and among homosexuals.Until very recently (historically) the penal system was being used to convict adult consulting men who chose to have sex with one another in private. So a few decades ago judges and juries were being asked to make their moral assessment on this issue and hand out discretionary sentences for the practice. Today it is perfectly legal and no one's business except the men involved.
So tell me please what exactly is the objective moral stance here?
What Joe and Stan consent to do together is nobody's business but theirs.
If Joe or Stan withdraws his consent, as the other has no claim on him, he can gather up his sundries and walk away. If his former partner attempts to waylay him, attempts to stop his exit, that partner is as wrong as the government was (and is).
- henry quirk
- Posts: 16379
- Joined: Fri May 09, 2008 8:07 pm
- Location: 🔥AMERICA🔥
- Contact:
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
As a person (any person, every person) is free and has an inalienable natural right to his, and no other's, life, liberty, and property, takin' his life, outside of self-defense or defense of another, is unjust, is wrong.take any moral assertion - such as 'abortion is morally wrong' - and objectivists claim such as assertion has truth value - true or false - because it's supposed to be a fact that abortion really is or isn't morally wrong. It's bonkers, of course. And dangerous.
If what a woman carries is a person then she has no claim on his life. takin' that life, outside of self-defense, is unjust, is wrong.
Now, pregnancy is unique in that one person (if it is a person) exists for a time inside another. While it's wrong to evict the indwelling person (if it is a person) who is the product of consensual sex, it's unreasonable to expect a rape victim carry the product of her violation.
I don't think it's unreasonable, however, to hold the woman, who consented to sex, morally accountable for the care of the person (if it is a person) she created and who is temporarily inside her, any more than it is to hold the mother of a six year old morally accountable for the care of her child.