Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 12:53 am
iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon May 01, 2023 10:54 pmMy own interest in philosophy revolves by and large around the question, "how ought one to live morally in a world bursting at the seams with both conflicting goods and contingency, chance and change?"
That's pretty much the question everyone is trying to answer.
Come on, you know damn well there are posters here [and there] who are adamant that their days of trying to answer it are long gone. They
have answered it. Objectively.
Or, for those like you...logically.
God or No God, just ask them for the answer. About abortion, about guns, about homosexuals. More to the point [mine] dare to insist to them that it is your answer instead. Still, what disturbs them [on either side] about me is that I suggest that in a No God world there is no Right or Wrong answer. Philosophically or otherwise. That, as Nietzsche suggested, in a No God world, we are beyond Good and Evil. All things can be rationalized...and all the way up to mass murder and genocide.
All I ask of those who go there is to bring their conclusions down out of the theoretical clouds and note how in their view they are applicable given a particular set of circumstances in which there are often conflicted value judgments.
Mr. Wiggle wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 12:53 amThat's what you think you're doing. You think you're James Randi of philosophy forums (
your own words. ) What did James Randi do? As far as I can recall, he went around asking people who make supernatural claims to prove them. Obviously, you think you're someone who's going around asking people who make claims pertaining to moral issues to prove them. But the problem is that you don't know what constitutes a proof.
The proof regarding what? Again, stop your wiggling and note one of these proofs in regard to a conflicting good most here will be familiar with. Describe the argument such that all of us will agree that no reasonable person could possibly not think exactly as you do.
Claims of the supernatural are entirely different from claims about objective morality. We all agree that pregnancy is as a result of sexual intercourse. A natural thing. But is it natural or unnatural to abort the unborn. After all, in the form of miscarriages and still births, nature is aborting human life all the time.
Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Tue May 02, 2023 12:53 amIn other words, you can't assess the quality of a philosophical argument. What you're doing instead is you're trying to pull people into pointless conversations with you in an effort to portray them as charlatans ( regardless of whether or not they are charlatans ) and to preach moral subjectivism i.e. the idea that the truth value of moral proposition is whatever you want it to be.
"Mary is right from her side, John is right from side. They are both right. It's not either / or. This is not an either / or world!"
Again, simply preposterous. What I'm pointing out is that the anti-abortion folks insist that the quality of the pro-choice arguments is inferior to their own. Their argument is necessarily rational and moral and the other side's argument is not.
Just cue God or one or another secular Humanist dogma.