Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Oct 08, 2023 6:20 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Oct 08, 2023 5:35 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Oct 08, 2023 2:26 pm
What does this have to do with the argument at hand?
Simple. It shows that even the most ardent advocates of moral subjectivism don't act as if what they advocate is true. They don't live it out. They just talk about it.
So what does that prove? If we feel that something is morally wrong, then it is morally wrong as far as we are concerned, so it is perfectly consistent to behave as if it is morally wrong.
But Peter says that's a subjective matter. So you may subjectively choose to "behave as if" it is morally wrong. But objectively, it isn't, according to Peter. So he is saying you're just plain wrong: you've mistaken the situation. You're acting as if something is morally wrong when, in fact, it's only subjectively something you don't like. And for him, it cannot go deeper than that, without him drawing on objectivism.
If we are logical and honest,
Wait: "honest"? Are you saying we have an objective duty to be "honest"?

But you're a subjectivist. We cannot possibly have that duty. So you have no grounds of complaint if you and Peter, or if I, do no such thing. In fact, if we are totally dishonest at all times, what can you say about it? It's only something you find personally unpleasant, but cannot possibly be objectively wrong.
And that's the point here. Paradoxically, your desire to condemn my objection as "dishonest" or "a distortion," or "underhanded" merely bespeaks your moral objectivism. You think I
ought to recognize what you are saying. You think others
ought to agree with it. But there is no "ought" in your subjectivist world.
Maybe you
ought to give it up.
we have to acknowledge that something is only morally wrong because it offends something within us.
Then it is not "wrong" at all. It's only "offensive to Harbal's personal preferences." And we don't even have an objective axiom that tells us it's wrong to offend Harbal's personal preferences, because that would also be an objective moral imperative.
You see? Even you can't do it: you can't be a consistent subjectivist. What you clearly want to say is that your assessment is at least objective enough that I should concede it, and that others who are reading should think it's appropriate. In other words, you want it to be compelling independent of your subjective feelings. You want an objective moral condemnation to attach.
So if I am morally offended by your behaviour, then it is an objective fact that you are behaving immorally?[/quote]
No.
All that tells us is that you are subjectively offended. It does not allow us to decide anything about the moral status of the offence, because objectively it is not decidable in any moral sense.
That is what your argument amounts to; otherwise I would be unable to feel you were behaving immorally. How could moral offence be caused when no moral fact exists to justify it?
You could "feel" anything. You could "feel" you were a helicopter, and spin around until you are dizzy. Feeling is not the issue. The question is, "Is IC behaving in a way that is
objectively immoral, or merely annoying Harbal's delicate sensibilities?"
Doesn't work.

In what way do your moral pronouncements "work", where mine fail to work?
Consistency.
If a moral objectivist says, "IC, you are behaving objectively badly," then at least he's being rationally consistent with his own beliefs about morality. You may say, "Well, he's consistently wrong." Okay; I know you want to say so. But at least he's not being irrational and inconsistent in his "error," right?
But if a subjectivist says, "IC, you are behaving subjectively unpleasantly," then it's no longer evident at all that anybody has any reason to care, or that any moral indictment attaches to the incident. If he insist that IC is actually behaving in a morally-bad way, " then he's an objectivist.
So in point of fact, not only is it false that I have been misrepresenting, or "tricking" or "distorting" or "being dishonest" or "underhanded," as you have demanded we all should believe, but the very fact that you use such moral-indictment claims proves that you do not yourself consistently practice subjectivism in moral matters.
Nor does Peter. And all that is now evident, I trust.