That's correct. "X is morally wrong" means "X is morally wrong for a set of people not explicitly mentioned in this statement" where "a set of people" can be 1) an individual, such as you, 2) a group of people, such as everyone living on certain territory, 3) every single living human benig, 4) every single human being that can be conceived, or 5) any other combination that I did not cover.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 12:53 pmAnd by exactly the same argument, 'X is morally wrong' isn't much different from 'X is morally wrong to me'.
This is a mere assertion, not an argument. Certainly, you did not present a complete argument. There is a premise and a conclusion but no explanation as to how the latter follows from the former.And here dies moral objectivism, by your own hand.
In any case, it's false. The truth value of the statement "X is morally wrong for me" is independent from what anyone thinks. It's similar to how "Eating junk food is bad for me" is independent from what anyone thinks. It's not a matter of opinion. Either eating junk food is bad for you or it isn't. It does not matter what you think. Even if you think that it's good, it's still bad for you.
Nothing can be shown to a man who keeps his eyes closed. If you want him to see anything, you must first open his eyes.Whoa. You accuse me of lazy arrogance. Produce your valid and sound argument for moral objectivity, or shove that accusation up your arse.
If you don't carefully listen to what other people are saying, and if you're not willing to explore their reasoning process, you don't have an open mind, and thus, it's near impossible to prove anything to you.