I forgot to add 'at least till the inevitable' where natural mortality is human nature.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 10, 2023 1:34 pmNo, it's not.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Mon Jul 10, 2023 6:18 am It is an imperative ought of human nature that ALL humans must breathe.
If "nature" had any such "ought" then humans would all keep breathing, and not die. As it is, both individuals and species of all kinds die all the time.
Nature is not a person. It has, and is capable of having, no opinion at all about what "ought" to be. Things live if they're fit to survive, and they die if they're not. Nature sheds no tears for them.
That's how the Darwinian story goes.
Thus while not subject to the inevitable of human nature,
"It is an imperative ought of human nature that ALL humans must breathe, at least till the inevitable".
Obviously, Nature is not a person.
But it is an objective fact that is verifiable and justifiable via personal experience and the human based scientific-biology FSK that
"It is an imperative ought of human nature that ALL humans must breathe, at least till the inevitable"
Since morality itself is part and parcel of human nature,
it is an objective fact of moral elements that are verifiable and justifiable via personal experience and the human based scientific-biology FSK that
"It is an imperative ought of human nature that ALL humans must act morally at least till the inevitable"
For example there is an inbuilt neural-based imperative ought of human nature that ALL humans do not torture and kill babies for pleasure.
This is so evident as an objective moral fact as a Normative.
That a few humans [out of >8 billions now and then] did torture and kill babies for pleasure is because of malfunction of that objective moral mechanism, not because it is non-existent within them.