Is morality objective or subjective?
- FlashDangerpants
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
The theistic approach to morality starts with the theist deciding what he wants God to tell him to believe, then he believes that, then he thanks God for making this all so very true.
Harbal just drops a couple of the redundant steps.
Harbal just drops a couple of the redundant steps.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
For the most part, yes.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pmSo you mean you simply absorbed your moral principles from your cultural tradition?
I think society questions its moral principles from time to time, and we, as members of it, change our views along with it. I don't suppose it is unusual for an individual to develop a moral attitude that is, to some extent, not completely in step with that of his social environment. But yes, as I have got older I have questioned my moral views, and even changed some as a result.Did you ever question them?
I assume you mean "right" in my opinion, according to my own sense of morality. I often know which ones seem right to me, and which don't, but these things a very often not so clear cut.Do you really know which priniciples are right and which would be merely traditional?
Is it my job to sort it out? I sometimes don't know what the "right" moral position is, and when the issue does not affect me directly, or I have no influence over the matter, I probably don't sort it out.How did you go about sorting all that out?
I could accept that, but it wouldn't change the fact that you got it wrong. The wording you used to describe the situation totally misrepresents how I experience it.IC wrote:I actually don't. All I've done, above, is to strip away the trappings of language that hide how the thing actually works, in down-to-earth terms. And if that makes it look a little naked, I can't be blamed for that.Harbal wrote:That is more or less correct, in principle, although you have done your best to make it sound as trivial and worthless as possible. In practice, there is much more to it than you suggest, but you do actually know that.
So when I say I don't find it to be the case, you are saying I do find it to be the case, but am unaware of it, or something like that?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pmWell, it would have to be -- if, as you say, I essentially got the description above right (even if a little blunt).Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 10:09 amI don't find that to be the case.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 5:54 am Not much moral guidance is provided by such a system. None at all, in fact.
If the atheist is me, he says: "what you are presenting to me as evidence is so weak as not to strictly qualify as evidence". It isn't that I refuse to be convinced by it, it is that it isn't remotely convincing. Most of it necessitates the suppression of laughter, actually.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pmThat's exactly how it goes. The Theist says, "There's evidence," and the Atheist says, "There's none." And the Theist cannot beat the Atheist's strategy, because how can you argue with somebody who simply refuses the evidence before him?Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 10:09 amNo, I don't accept that.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 5:54 am
They are. But a great many refuse the evidence, just as you do.
So God creates us, and gives us free will so that we can demonstrate whether we are ultimately deserving of punishment or reward? So I ask again; what is the point of that; where is the sense in it?IC wrote:It's the only thing that makes sense, especially if one believes that people have "will" at all. God could not give people free will, and then prevent them from making bad or evil choices. That would be to give them no actual choice at all, since they could only do good. So what would be the point in giving them volition at all, since they couldn't use it for the purposes they chose? It would be self-contradictory.Harbal wrote:And you think that makes sense, do you? Or that if it were true, there would actually be a point to it?
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I mean a little more. I mean the sort of thing when a society once treated racism as common or even as morally positive, and somebody goes, "Hey, y'know, this isn't actually right, and we shouldn't do it."Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 5:30 pmI assume you mean "right" in my opinion, according to my own sense of morality. I often know which ones seem right to me, and which don't, but these things a very often not so clear cut.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pm Do you really know which priniciples are right and which would be merely traditional?
Have you ever done that about some value your tradition delivered to you?
There's no choice about whether or not you have to. Because you're either going to go along with the tradition, or you're going to cross it in some way, if not outright defy it, even.Is it my job to sort it out?How did you go about sorting all that out?
We do have the choice not to think about our actions and choices; we don't have any choice about whether we choose and act.
And yet...the phenomenon is exactly the same. The words are just decorations to hide the facts, then.I could accept that, but it wouldn't change the fact that you got it wrong. The wording you used to describe the situation totally misrepresents how I experience it.IC wrote:I actually don't. All I've done, above, is to strip away the trappings of language that hide how the thing actually works, in down-to-earth terms. And if that makes it look a little naked, I can't be blamed for that.Harbal wrote:That is more or less correct, in principle, although you have done your best to make it sound as trivial and worthless as possible. In practice, there is much more to it than you suggest, but you do actually know that.
It's like when an Atheist insists, "I'm a moral person," and at the same time, that "moral" has no meaning, no objective referent, no reality outside of his own subjectivity. He's really saying no more than, "I approve myself." He's not saying he's objectively a good person at all...even though THAT is the very thing he wants to believe, and wants you to take for granted, too.
I'm just calling things as they are. When they're seen, sometimes they're not as pretty as people want them to be.
I would say simply that you're "uncomfortable with the bluntness of the characterization," but realize it's not wrong.So when I say I don't find it to be the case, you are saying I do find it to be the case, but am unaware of it, or something like that?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pmWell, it would have to be -- if, as you say, I essentially got the description above right (even if a little blunt).![]()
No. The "punishment-reward" perception is bad theology.So God creates us, and gives us free will so that we can demonstrate whether we are ultimately deserving of punishment or reward?IC wrote:It's the only thing that makes sense, especially if one believes that people have "will" at all. God could not give people free will, and then prevent them from making bad or evil choices. That would be to give them no actual choice at all, since they could only do good. So what would be the point in giving them volition at all, since they couldn't use it for the purposes they chose? It would be self-contradictory.Harbal wrote:And you think that makes sense, do you? Or that if it were true, there would actually be a point to it?
There are punishments and rewards, for sure; but they're not the point. They're merely the outcome of a much more important project: the establishing of relationships between God and people that are free, genuine and just. In other words, the creation of the conditions under which human beings can freely love God, and God can justly love free human beings. In other words, relationship.
That's the sense in it. And that's the larger project.
The "free and genuine" part cannot be had without giving mankind free will. The "just" part cannot be had without what you call "rewards" and "punishments," but which are really nothing more than the free agent has freely chosen. Those who want to know God get what they choose; those who do not want to know God get what they choose...and both get all that their choices naturally entail.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
When social attitude changes, it brings the matter to your attention and causes you to think about the issue in question. That very often leads to a change in one's own attitude.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 5:50 pmI mean a little more. I mean the sort of thing when a society once treated racism as common or even as morally positive, and somebody goes, "Hey, y'know, this isn't actually right, and we shouldn't do it."Harbal wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 5:30 pmI assume you mean "right" in my opinion, according to my own sense of morality. I often know which ones seem right to me, and which don't, but these things a very often not so clear cut.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 3:38 pm Do you really know which priniciples are right and which would be merely traditional?
Have you ever done that about some value your tradition delivered to you?
So are you suggesting I reject my own experience of morality and accept it for the worthless thing you say it is? I think not.IC wrote:And yet...the phenomenon is exactly the same. The words are just decorations to hide the facts, then.Harbal wrote:The wording you used to describe the situation totally misrepresents how I experience it.
The fact that it is subjective doesn't prevent it from having meaning. It may not have meaning to you, just as your assertion that morality comes from God has no meaning to me, but who are we to say what has meaning to each other?It's like when an Atheist insists, "I'm a moral person," and at the same time, that "moral" has no meaning, no objective referent, no reality outside of his own subjectivity.
I am being open and honest, and making absolutely no attempt to make anything look pretty.I'm just calling things as they are. When they're seen, sometimes they're not as pretty as people want them to be.
That is tantamount to claiming to be a mind reader, which shouldn't surprise me in the light of all the other outlandish claims you make.IC wrote:I would say simply that you're "uncomfortable with the bluntness of the characterization," but realize it's not wrong.Harbal wrote:So when I say I don't find it to be the case, you are saying I do find it to be the case, but am unaware of it, or something like that?
And God embarked on this seemingly pointless "project" for what reason, I wonder.IC wrote:No. The "punishment-reward" perception is bad theology.Harbal wrote:So God creates us, and gives us free will so that we can demonstrate whether we are ultimately deserving of punishment or reward?
There are punishments and rewards, for sure; but they're not the point. They're merely the outcome of a much more important project: the establishing of relationships between God and people that are free, genuine and just. In other words, the creation of the conditions under which human beings can freely love God, and God can justly love free human beings. In other words, relationship.
That's the sense in it. And that's the larger project.
The "free and genuine" part cannot be had without giving mankind free will. The "just" part cannot be had without what you call "rewards" and "punishments," but which are really nothing more than the free agent has freely chosen. Those who want to know God get what they choose; those who do not want to know God get what they choose...and both get all that their choices naturally entail.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
So it isn't really tradition of cultural baggage that forms your morality; it's something beyond it, something to which you refer that's capable of informing you of ways your tradition has gone (objectively) wrong?
It prevents any supposed "meaning" it has from being anything more than "what it means to the individual." That entails that nobody else needs to believe it at all. There's certainly nothing common and objective that compels agreement.The fact that it is subjective doesn't prevent it from having meaning.It's like when an Atheist insists, "I'm a moral person," and at the same time, that "moral" has no meaning, no objective referent, no reality outside of his own subjectivity.
It's a privately-held delusion, by one man, then.
"Pointless?" Far from it. The securing of an eternal, free-will-based, friendship and alliance between the creature and the Creator is hardly "pointless." And it's analytically necessary that things should go this way: man must freely choose to invest in that relationship. There's no way he can, unlessfor at least some period of time, he can also choose the wretched alternative; he must be allowed genuine choice, both of the good and of evil.Harbal wrote:And God embarked on this seemingly pointless "project" for what reason, I wonder.
We have been gifted our freedom. But it is ours to use wisely. And no choice is ever free from the natural consequences of it.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I don't think that is the case. We learn about morality and moral values from our social group. Where else could it come from? We don't come into the world instinctively knowing that stealing is wrong, homosexuality is a "sin", or adultery is a bad thing. Every species of animal that lives socially has to have some system that modifies the behaviour of its group members towards each another, so each individual has to have the biological mechanism that induces it to cooperate within that system. We come with the software already installed, but the settings and preferences have to be set up by our environment before it can start functioning.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 9:01 pmSo it isn't really tradition of cultural baggage that forms your morality; it's something beyond it, something to which you refer that's capable of informing you of ways your tradition has gone (objectively) wrong?
Have you noticed how people from any particular country all tend to have more or less the same diet? They all eat according to their individual taste, but each individual tends to have a very similar taste to all the others. Morality is a bit like that, I would say.IC wrote:It prevents any supposed "meaning" it has from being anything more than "what it means to the individual." That entails that nobody else needs to believe it at all. There's certainly nothing common and objective that compels agreement.Harbal wrote:The fact that it is subjective doesn't prevent it from having meaning.
I think it tends to be more of a communal delusion, consisting of similar individual delusions.It's a privately-held delusion, by one man, then.
Well I certainly can't see what point God had in mind when he created us just so we could behave in various ways with various consequences.IC wrote:"Pointless?" Far from it. The securing of an eternal, free-will-based, friendship and alliance between the creature and the Creator is hardly "pointless." And it's analytically necessary that things should go this way: man must freely choose to invest in that relationship. There's no way he can, unlessfor at least some period of time, he can also choose the wretched alternative; he must be allowed genuine choice, both of the good and of evil.Harbal wrote:And God embarked on this seemingly pointless "project" for what reason, I wonder.
We have been gifted our freedom. But it is ours to use wisely. And no choice is ever free from the natural consequences of it.
- Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
If that were the whole story, then it would be inconceivable...impossible, even...for you to ever have or adopt a moral stance that was different from that of your own social ethos. You would have no other place from which to launch any criticism of what your society does, or wants to do. You could never indict your own society as "unjust" in any way; and whatever they do, that's what you'd have to believe in.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 9:14 amI don't think that is the case. We learn about morality and moral values from our social group. Where else could it come from? We don't come into the world instinctively knowing that stealing is wrong, homosexuality is a "sin", or adultery is a bad thing. Every species of animal that lives socially has to have some system that modifies the behaviour of its group members towards each another, so each individual has to have the biological mechanism that induces it to cooperate within that system. We come with the software already installed, but the settings and preferences have to be set up by our environment before it can start functioning.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 9:01 pmSo it isn't really tradition of cultural baggage that forms your morality; it's something beyond it, something to which you refer that's capable of informing you of ways your tradition has gone (objectively) wrong?
Is that how it is? Clearly not. So again, from where do you get your basis for critiquing your own society, if your morals are already nothing but the deliverances from your society?
People eat similar things primarily because that's the food they have available, primarily. But we know that some diets are very bad, starchy, fatty, full of refined carbs or sugars. But we can see that because some things are objectively good to eat, healthy for the human body, and energizing to body tissue, and some are not.Have you noticed how people from any particular country all tend to have more or less the same diet? They all eat according to their individual taste, but each individual tends to have a very similar taste to all the others. Morality is a bit like that, I would say.IC wrote:It prevents any supposed "meaning" it has from being anything more than "what it means to the individual." That entails that nobody else needs to believe it at all. There's certainly nothing common and objective that compels agreement.Harbal wrote:The fact that it is subjective doesn't prevent it from having meaning.
To carry the analogy, then, you'd have to say the same was true of morality: some moralities are bad for us. And like diet, that would have nothing to do with what the culture approves, but rather with what is objectively good for us. Is that, in fact, what you would say?
But delusions. That's the point.I think it tends to be more of a communal delusion, consisting of similar individual delusions.It's a privately-held delusion, by one man, then.
Genuine personhood. Genuine volition. Genuine freedom. Genuine identity as an individual.Well I certainly can't see what point God had in mind when he created us just so we could behave in various ways with various consequences.
Without the power to make our own decision, we can never make a free decision to love God or not. We would be utterly incapable of genuine relationship, in fact. We'd be mere automata, robots, slaves, drones -- programmed entities that had no choices, no special identity, and no possibility of giving or receiving love, since they can never freely enter into any relationship at all.
If, as I suggest, God's endgame is genuine relationship, then the sine qua non of that is giving human beings their own volition...choice...freedom...individual identity and will. And for that to be genuine, each person must have a choice that counts, that makes a difference, and which is respected as to its result...even when that result is not what a loving God would choose. In the matter of relationships, both persons must freely engage. (We do have names for compelled "relationships," but none of them are savoury.)
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Peter Holmes
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
IC's team's 'loving' god.
'You are completely free to believe in and love me or not. But if you don't, you will suffer either annihilation (the loss of eternal life), or eternal torture in hell, after you die.'
And IC claims this malicious demon is the source of objective morality.
'You are completely free to believe in and love me or not. But if you don't, you will suffer either annihilation (the loss of eternal life), or eternal torture in hell, after you die.'
And IC claims this malicious demon is the source of objective morality.
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Veritas Aequitas
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
IC's 'loving' God is an illusion reified as 'real'.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 7:17 pm IC's team's 'loving' god.
'You are completely free to believe in and love me or not. But if you don't, you will suffer either annihilation (the loss of eternal life), or eternal torture in hell, after you die.'
And IC claims this malicious demon is the source of objective morality.
1. It is Impossible for God to be Real
viewtopic.php?t=40229
Your critique of IC's morality is dubious because there are,
Two Senses of 'Objective'
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=39326
i.e.
1. Philosophical Realism sense - Illusory
2. FSK-ed sense - objective in the empirical-rational in degrees
Since yours is grounded in the philosophical realism sense, i.e. illusory, you do not have any credibility to critique IC's theistic claim of Objective Morality.
However, from the FSK perspective, IC's theistic-FSK morality is granted to be objective, but because of "1. It is Impossible for God to be Real" the theistic morality as objective has ZERO [0.00001] degrees of objectivity in contrast to the objectivity of science-FSK as the standard.
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Peter Holmes
- Posts: 4134
- Joined: Tue Jul 18, 2017 3:53 pm
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
By all means, keep straw-manning philosophical realism - because all your arguments for philosophical antirealism are fallacious - so you have no choice. But none of this gets you anywhere near moral objectivism.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 4:18 amIC's 'loving' God is an illusion reified as 'real'.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 7:17 pm IC's team's 'loving' god.
'You are completely free to believe in and love me or not. But if you don't, you will suffer either annihilation (the loss of eternal life), or eternal torture in hell, after you die.'
And IC claims this malicious demon is the source of objective morality.
1. It is Impossible for God to be Real
viewtopic.php?t=40229
Your critique of IC's morality is dubious because there are,
Two Senses of 'Objective'
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=39326
i.e.
1. Philosophical Realism sense - Illusory
2. FSK-ed sense - objective in the empirical-rational in degrees
Since yours is grounded in the philosophical realism sense, i.e. illusory, you do not have any credibility to critique IC's theistic claim of Objective Morality.
However, from the FSK perspective, IC's theistic-FSK morality is granted to be objective, but because of "1. It is Impossible for God to be Real" the theistic morality as objective has ZERO [0.00001] degrees of objectivity in contrast to the objectivity of science-FSK as the standard.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Could you tell us more about your distance metric?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:12 pm But none of this gets you anywhere near moral objectivism.
What gets us “nearer” to moral objectivism?
What gets us “further” away from moral objectivism?
We have the Mathematical language to talk about distances and measurement thereof.
Surely Peter “Dumb Cunt” Holmes can elaborate on what he means?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
Well I don't suppose it is the whole story; it is just the basic outline of how things seem to me. I don't feel compelled to believe in whatever my own society considers just, so I have not explained very well, or you have misinterpreted.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 6:24 pmIf that were the whole story, then it would be inconceivable...impossible, even...for you to ever have or adopt a moral stance that was different from that of your own social ethos. You would have no other place from which to launch any criticism of what your society does, or wants to do. You could never indict your own society as "unjust" in any way; and whatever they do, that's what you'd have to believe in.Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Sep 09, 2023 9:14 amI don't think that is the case. We learn about morality and moral values from our social group. Where else could it come from? We don't come into the world instinctively knowing that stealing is wrong, homosexuality is a "sin", or adultery is a bad thing. Every species of animal that lives socially has to have some system that modifies the behaviour of its group members towards each another, so each individual has to have the biological mechanism that induces it to cooperate within that system. We come with the software already installed, but the settings and preferences have to be set up by our environment before it can start functioning.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 9:01 pm
So it isn't really tradition of cultural baggage that forms your morality; it's something beyond it, something to which you refer that's capable of informing you of ways your tradition has gone (objectively) wrong?
I may absorb the general moral attitudes of my own society, but there is nothing at all to prevent me from questioning them, or deviating from them.So again, from where do you get your basis for critiquing your own society, if your morals are already nothing but the deliverances from your society?
What do you mean by, "some moralities are bad for us"? Bad in what way?IC wrote:People eat similar things primarily because that's the food they have available, primarily. But we know that some diets are very bad, starchy, fatty, full of refined carbs or sugars. But we can see that because some things are objectively good to eat, healthy for the human body, and energizing to body tissue, and some are not.Harbal wrote:Have you noticed how people from any particular country all tend to have more or less the same diet? They all eat according to their individual taste, but each individual tends to have a very similar taste to all the others. Morality is a bit like that, I would say.
To carry the analogy, then, you'd have to say the same was true of morality: some moralities are bad for us. And like diet, that would have nothing to do with what the culture approves, but rather with what is objectively good for us. Is that, in fact, what you would say?
If you say it is a delusion, then my fondness for cigars is also a delusion, and my preference for sunny days over rainy ones is also a delusion, as is your preference for Christianity over Buddhism.IC wrote:But delusions. That's the point.Harbal wrote:I think it tends to be more of a communal delusion, consisting of similar individual delusions.
That story must appeal to you, but I don't find it either inspiring or interesting. It leaves me wondering what the point of it all was, but not with enough curiosity to bother trying to figure it out. Think about it:IC wrote:Genuine personhood. Genuine volition. Genuine freedom. Genuine identity as an individual.Harbal wrote:Well I certainly can't see what point God had in mind when he created us just so we could behave in various ways with various consequences.
Without the power to make our own decision, we can never make a free decision to love God or not. We would be utterly incapable of genuine relationship, in fact. We'd be mere automata, robots, slaves, drones -- programmed entities that had no choices, no special identity, and no possibility of giving or receiving love, since they can never freely enter into any relationship at all.
If, as I suggest, God's endgame is genuine relationship, then the sine qua non of that is giving human beings their own volition...choice...freedom...individual identity and will. And for that to be genuine, each person must have a choice that counts, that makes a difference, and which is respected as to its result...even when that result is not what a loving God would choose. In the matter of relationships, both persons must freely engage. (We do have names for compelled "relationships," but none of them are savoury.)
If God created us in order to have a relationship with him, it must have been purely for his own benefit, because if we had never been created, it would not have been here nor there to us whether there was a relationship, would it? Did he create us just to see what choices we would make? A lot of us were obviously created with the potential for getting it wrong, and will regret it for the rest of eternity, so it would have been far better for us not to have been created in the first place, but we were never given that option.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
I didn't find it difficult to understand what he means.Skepdick wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:22 pmCould you tell us more about your distance metric?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:12 pm But none of this gets you anywhere near moral objectivism.
What gets us “nearer” to moral objectivism?
What gets us “further” away from moral objectivism?
We have the Mathematical language to talk about distances and measurement thereof.
Surely Peter “Dumb Cunt” Holmes can elaborate on what he means?
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
You understand what he means by “nearer” and “further” in context of the goal?Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 1:34 pmI didn't find it difficult to understand what he means.Skepdick wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:22 pmCould you tell us more about your distance metric?Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:12 pm But none of this gets you anywhere near moral objectivism.
What gets us “nearer” to moral objectivism?
What gets us “further” away from moral objectivism?
We have the Mathematical language to talk about distances and measurement thereof.
Surely Peter “Dumb Cunt” Holmes can elaborate on what he means?![]()
Ok. You tell us how he is measuring distance.
Re: Is morality objective or subjective?
With his metaphoric ruler.Skepdick wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 1:39 pmYou understand what he means by “nearer” and “further” in context of the goal?Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 1:34 pmI didn't find it difficult to understand what he means.Skepdick wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:22 pm
Could you tell us more about your distance metric?
What gets us “nearer” to moral objectivism?
What gets us “further” away from moral objectivism?
We have the Mathematical language to talk about distances and measurement thereof.
Surely Peter “Dumb Cunt” Holmes can elaborate on what he means?![]()
Ok. You tell us how he is measuring distance.