Yes, and I responded to him above:phyllo wrote: ↑Sun Apr 30, 2023 12:46 pmFlannel Jesus wrote: ↑Sat Apr 29, 2023 9:25 pmSo because all of that there's no difference between one thinker and another? Between one thought and another? You can't use your thinking facilities to discern between a thinker mired in bias and a thinker at least attempting to overcome his bias?
Because all of that, everyone is either "fractured and fragmented" or a Taliban Nazi, nothing in between
We'll need a context of course.
But let me ask you...
Do you believe in God?
And, if not, do you believe it is possible using the tools of philosophy to "think up" a deontological moral conviction? Kant and other philosophers who embraced one or another rendition of objective/universal morality always included one or another rendition of God in the picture.
I wonder why?
Or, using the tools of philosophy in a No God world, what would the argument be to those like Hitler who rationalized the Holocaust? Or to sociopaths who rationalize raping and killing children?
In fact, I posed these extreme behaviors to myself here:
This comes closest to upending my own "fractured and fragmented" frame of mind. People tap me on the shoulder and ask "can you seriously believe that the Holocaust or abusing children or cold-blooded murder is not inherently, necessarily immoral?"
And, sure, the part of me that would never, could never imagine my own participation in things of this sort has a hard time accepting that, yes, in a No God world they are still behaviors able to be rationalized by others as either moral or, for the sociopaths, justified given their belief that everything revolves around their own "me, myself and I" self-gratification.
And what is the No God philosophical -- scientific? -- argument that establishes certain behaviors as in fact objectively right or objectively wrong? Isn't it true that philosophers down through the ages who did embrace one or another rendition of deontology always included one or another rendition of the transcending font -- God -- to back it all up?
For all I know, had my own life been different...for any number of reasons...I would myself be here defending the Holocaust. Or engaging in what most construe to be morally depraved behaviors.
After all, do not the pro-life folks insist that abortion itself is no less a Holocaust inflicted on the unborn? And do not the pro-choice folks rationalize this behavior with their own subjective sets of assumptions.
Though, okay, if someone here is convinced they have in fact discovered the optimal reason why we should behave one way and not any other, let's explore that in a No God world.
How about you?
And I'm still waiting for you to note how given an issue like abortion your own value judgments are not just another existential rendition of my assessment in the OP here: https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
We'll see how he responds to that. If he responds at all.
Anyway, I'm still completely confused regarding how, given a particular context, you connect the dots between God and objective morality and your own sense of identity. Perhaps you might be willing to elaborate on that "here and now"?
Come on, the evaluations of the objectivists among us are never to be questioned. Though in places like KT and here if some do dare to question them they become "one of them"...the loathsome enemy. The morons. The Retards.
Only at KT if you question them, you get banned from further discussions. You are "disappeared". Oh, sure, you are still a "user". You can still log in a follow the discussions as they mock and pillory you. You just can't post a response.