According to that reasoning you must then have to accept the existence of Zeus and Apollo.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Oct 14, 2023 11:38 pmWell, you don't find it "rationally impossible." That would require some sort of evidence, or some sort of rational argument. And for sure, you've offered no reasons or evidence for anybody to believe that morality (assuming such exists at all) is "subjective."Harbal wrote: ↑Sat Oct 14, 2023 10:06 pmYou are making a claim that I find rationally impossible, so I am obviously not going to accept it as true without very compelling evidence from you to support it.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sat Oct 14, 2023 4:18 pm
What's your evidence that leads you to that conclusion? Or are you only stating what you prefer to believe, regardless of any evidence?
Everyone knows there is such a thing as subjective morality, even if they also believe in objective morality. We all know it because we all have moral opinions, at least some of which we recognise as being a matter of personal judgement.
No moral opinion can be either true or false, because there is no actual referent by which to confirm it, so what is objective about it?So it's certainly rationally possible that morality is objective. There's no rational reason it couldn't be
A figment of the imagination is a belief in something that does not exist, so to believe in an objective moral truth would be such a figment. To recognise one's moral opinions as subjective feelings is not a figment, because those feelings do exist.And it's not at all more plausible to jump to the conclusion that it's subjective -- especially when, downstream rationally of that position, you'd have to conclude that morality does not exist at all. For that is exactly what "subjective morality" amounts to: that all morality is a mere figment of a personal imagination. It's subjective unicorns.And that's just redundant.
If the thing appeals to them, they are likely to accept it, but if it doesn't appeal, they probably won't accept it. For instance: your view of homosexuality does not appeal to me, so I don't accept it.IC wrote:No, that's not all you need; you also need a method of promotion. And that means you need to offer the people to whom you are "promoting" a thing a reason to accept it.Harbal wrote:In order to promote your latest book or movie, all you need is a book or a movie.
But I am not saying that if enough people believe a thing, it must be more likely to be true, so how can I be "capitulating to the fallacy called bandwagon fallacy"? What I am saying is that the wide range of moral views on any given moral issue suggests that morality is not fixed, but is relative to personal perspective.IC wrote:Not at all, actually. That's a non-sequitur. Once again, you're capitulating to the fallacy called "bandwagon fallacy," namely that if enough people believe a thing, it must be more likely to be true. But that can be demonstrated false very easily.Harbal wrote:I think the fact that there is a vast variation in what different people -and groups of people- consider morally acceptable supports my case much more than yours.
Exactly. It can only be better or worse in my -or your- opinion.It's not about merely the objectivism; it's about the morality. If "being honest" or "not deceiving" is not an objectively good thing, then your adjuring of people to choose it is totally arbitrary. One is not better or worse for ignoring it completely.
My comments about your conduct on the forum were my opinion, and you, or anyone else, should take them as such.But if that's the case, it's very hard to see how you hoped to shame me by choosing those accusations. Why should my purely subjective morality be duty bound to allign with yours, or to please you? But if those accusations were that I was doing something objectively wrong, then your accusation would make sense.
But then, your accusation would also be manifestly false.
So what do you want your (allegedly subjective) accusation to be: empty, or plain false? I'll take either one.
It doesn't matter how objectively true any moral principle or precept seems to be, there is nothing out in the universe to which you can point and say, "here is the fact that shows X is morally wrong". If something seems morally wrong to you, you just tend to respond to it as though it is morally wrong. I don't think many of us will then go on to wonder, "ah, but is it subjectively or objectively wrong"?IC wrote:That's a big admission, on your part. Thank you for your honesty.Harbal wrote:I don't know that it is impossible for anybody to live as a moral subjectivist,but I certainly think it would be very difficult to do it completely and constantly. Our moral opinions, especially our strongly held ones, do feel like objective truths to us, and I have never denied that,
But it's quite true: most people do resort to moral objectivism, at least intermittently, in their lives. And perhaps this should alert us to a problem with subective morality. Really, it's the third such problem. To reiterate, we've already seen that...
1. Nobody lives as a consistent moral subjectivist...which is strange, if moral subjectivism were true. Why should 100% of the people in the world be unable to live out a belief that was true?