Yes, that seems fair.
No, I think it's a case where we have to go with what turns out to be most rational and plausible. Absolute proof won't be available, because it involves morals, which are evaluations, not merely material facts.
Yes, that seems fair.
No, that's pretty clearly not the case. When somebody says, "What does X mean," they don't mean, "Is X moral?"popeye1945 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 10:47 pmBeg to differ, morals are meanings,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 10:01 pm"Meanings" and "morals" are not the same things, so I'm still not clear on the relevance. Maybe you can help me out with that.popeye1945 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 9:51 pm
Well, do meanings belong to the object or the subject, very relevant to whether morality is objective or subjective.
It doesn't work, for two reasons: one, that morality is differently understood by different groups, and two, because biology only describes facts, and morality deals with values. It's the is-ought problem, all over again.Our common biology is the only really sane foundation to morality for that is its topic.
To "bestow meaning" on that which is inherently "meaningless" is only to create a delusion, then.There is only meaning for life forms and those meanings are the subject's experiences, once he experiences it becomes knowledge/meaning, to which he then bestows as it were on a meaningless world.
I think we can at least agree that morals are evaluations.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:05 amYes, that seems fair.![]()
No, I think it's a case where we have to go with what turns out to be most rational and plausible. Absolute proof won't be available, because it involves morals, which are evaluations, not merely material facts.
Ponder it a bit. It may be a delusion but a biologically determined one. Your first disagreement is rather a perversion, X can stand for anything. What you must understand is that all meanings belong to a biological subject, and experience is how the object alters the biology of the subjective consciousness through the subject's body. All meaning is experience which the subject then attributes to the world at large. However, what is experienced is not the source itself, but the source's effects in altering one's biology, this is experience, this is meaning.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:10 amNo, that's pretty clearly not the case. When somebody says, "What does X mean," they don't mean, "Is X moral?"popeye1945 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 10:47 pmBeg to differ, morals are meanings,Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 10:01 pm
"Meanings" and "morals" are not the same things, so I'm still not clear on the relevance. Maybe you can help me out with that.It doesn't work, for two reasons: one, that morality is differently understood by different groups, and two, because biology only describes facts, and morality deals with values. It's the is-ought problem, all over again.Our common biology is the only really sane foundation to morality for that is its topic.To "bestow meaning" on that which is inherently "meaningless" is only to create a delusion, then.There is only meaning for life forms and those meanings are the subject's experiences, once he experiences it becomes knowledge/meaning, to which he then bestows as it were on a meaningless world.
Well, they are. But there's no way that the evaluations themselves cause or explain the origin of morality, because they "evaluate" something that exists already, and does not depend on the evaluation.Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:18 amI think we can at least agree that morals are evaluations.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:05 amYes, that seems fair.![]()
No, I think it's a case where we have to go with what turns out to be most rational and plausible. Absolute proof won't be available, because it involves morals, which are evaluations, not merely material facts.
A "delusion," by definition, is the belief in a thing that does not exist. Biology is a thing that does exist: but it has no information for us about morality. Biology, like evolution, does not care. It is not a thing capable of caring: it's a label we use for a category of human learning, having to do with the animal world. Whether what you do is "right" or "wrong" is of no interest to "biology," anymore than it's of interest to "chemistry" or "physics."popeye1945 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:32 am Ponder it a bit. It may be a delusion but a biologically determined one.
Delusion is indeed belief in something that does not exist, but that just maybe our apparent reality, after all apparent reality is the summation of biological effects of some unknown source, we do not experience the source, we experience its effects upon us. Life forms/consciousness is the only thing that can care. Hume's Guillotine, both is and ought are meanings, so are chemistry and physics. Biology is the measure and the meaning of all things, for in the absence of a conscious subject, the physical world is utterly meaningless.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:51 ampopeye1945 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:32 am
Ponder it a bit. It may be a delusion but a biologically determined one.
A "delusion," by definition, is the belief in a thing that does not exist. Biology is a thing that does exist: but it has no information for us about morality. Biology, like evolution, does not care. It is not a thing capable of caring: it's a label we use for a category of human learning, having to do with the animal world. Whether what you do is "right" or "wrong" is of no interest to "biology," any more than it's of interest to "chemistry" or "physics."
Biology is an "is." A moral evaluation is an "ought." Hume's Guillotine covers that.
Ummm...no, no, they're not. Sorry...that's just not so.
You should look it upImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 9:33 pmYes. That's why you should look it up.Atla wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 9:07 pmDon't know what you mean.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Jun 27, 2023 9:03 pm
You'd perhaps better look up "ad hominem fallacy." You're mistaking the objection.![]()
Because it's you who doesn't know what it means.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 4:33 amWhy? I know what it is. You said you don't know what it means.![]()
A claim of any sort is a meaning. Meanings are what we communicate. All words are qualifications and/or limitations in our efforts to communicate meanings.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 1:48 amUmmm...no, no, they're not. Sorry...that's just not so.
"Is" is an ontological claim. "Ought" is a moral claim. Both "mean" something, but "meaning" is a different type of claim, something we might call a "teleological" claim.
A claim of any sort is a meaning. Meanings are what we communicate. All words are qualifications and/or limitations in our efforts to communicate meanings.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 1:48 amUmmm...no, no, they're not. Sorry...that's just not so.
"Is" is an ontological claim. "Ought" is a moral claim. Both "mean" something, but "meaning" is a different type of claim, something we might call a "teleological" claim.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:51 amA "delusion," by definition, is the belief in a thing that does not exist. Biology is a thing that does exist: but it has no information for us about morality. Biology, like evolution, does not care. It is not a thing capable of caring: it's a label we use for a category of human learning, having to do with the animal world. Whether what you do is "right" or "wrong" is of no interest to "biology," anymore than it's of interest to "chemistry" or "physics."popeye1945 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:32 am Ponder it a bit. It may be a delusion but a biologically determined one.
Biology is an "is." A moral evaluation is an "ought." Hume's Guillotine covers that.
That's a bad analogy. What is a moral issue for you, might not be one for me, but when it rains we both get wet.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:45 amWell, they are. But there's no way that the evaluations themselves cause or explain the origin of morality, because they "evaluate" something that exists already, and does not depend on the evaluation.Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:18 amI think we can at least agree that morals are evaluations.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 28, 2023 12:05 am
Yes, that seems fair.![]()
No, I think it's a case where we have to go with what turns out to be most rational and plausible. Absolute proof won't be available, because it involves morals, which are evaluations, not merely material facts.
To imagine that evaluating causes morals to exist would be like imagining my thermometer causes the weather. Thermometers don't cause anything; they just take a reading on what it already is. They can be accurate or inaccurate, but the weather will be what it is, regardless of how accurate or inaccurate the thermometer's reading is.
Of course they cause something; they influence our behaviour.Likewise, our moral evaluations do not cause anything.
No, they play an important role in how those people function together as a group. Societies develop their morality over time; it's an evolving thing. Morality is just a set of invented rules, but rules that are based more on emotional sentiment than rational practicality.They merely report on what one or another person, or one or another group, takes to be the correct "temperature" of the situation in question.
They can only be right or wrong in as much as they are in or out of tune with the moral attitudes of the group in general. In my view of morality, I suppose society takes on the role of God.They can be right or wrong about that.