Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 06, 2023 2:28 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 03, 2023 7:22 pm...if you want to say that morality is no more than an "emotional response"...
I think it is demonstrably the case.
Oh? Can you "demonstrate" it, then? What's the line of reasoning to substantiate that?
It's got to be more than, "Well, moral judgments do come with emotions," because although that's obviously true, so does everything. So it's the "no more than" part that needs showing.
I haven't studied ethics since I was an undergraduate, which I grant was a fairly cursory overview of Plato to Mackie, but off the top of my head took in Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Kant, Mill, Nietzsche and no doubt others that don't spring to mind. These include some bright minds who could tidily put a syllogism together, and yet they all started with different propositions. I don't see any reason for this beyond emotional response.
Well, Kant thought he was responding to the dictates of reason. Mill thought he was responding to the basic preference of people for pleasure over pain. Nietzsche thought that all ethics are just a 'fix' anyway. And Aristotle thought ethics were dependent on good character.
Those are thumbnail summaries of the obvious differences. But among those you list, I thik only Hume was fully committed to the idea that morality is nothing but an expression of emotion -- and his view has been roundly criticized by all sides, to the point that practically no ethicist, religious or secular, is a Humean-style emotivist anymore.
Emotion is simply too weak, variable and impotent a basis upon which to generate any ethics. It would basically allow anything and prohibit nothing, so long as somebody "had a feeling" about it.
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 03, 2023 7:22 pm...then the corollary is going to be that it's a trivial phenomenon that is not actually capable of approving or prohibiting anything.
That's why we have laws.
Laws are supposed to be reflective of ethics and responsive to ethics, though. Laws don't
produce ethics. It's supposed to work the opposite way around: laws are supposed to formalize what is
already ethically determined...but they always do so tentatively, since laws can go quite wrong.
You can tell that's true, because there have been plenty of unethical laws. The aparteid laws would be one example, or the Judenrein laws of the Third Reich, or the slave laws of the pre-bellum Southern States...some would say that the Supreme Court's elimination of Affirmative Action in colleges is unethical, or the dismissal of Roe v. Wade is unethical...but if ethics were simply consequences of what laws are in place, that could not be the case.
So neither side of these issues supposes that "Well, that's the law" answers the question of "What is ethical here?"