Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 am
But I would certainly not argue today that moral nihilism reflects the most rational ethical assessment.
Well, that wouldn't make any sense. It would contradict itself as a position. So, I can understand why most moral nihilists wouldn't argue that.
On the other hand, I'm sure there are any number of moral nihilists who actually do believe that moral nihilism does reflect the most rational moral philosophy. I've come upon a few of them myself over the years.
Instead, I am far more intrigued with those here who espouse a No God frame of mind but still manage to embrace one of another objective morality themselves. How, given a particular set of circumstances, are they not "fractured and fragmented" in turn?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am I do know that you do this sometimes. That you point out that people on 'your side' are also objectivists. But that's what I was responding to here. It seemed like, in that previous post, the objectivists were on one team. Again, I know that is not your overriding position, however if you have any tendency to focus on the objectivists with positions you like less while leaving out the objectivists whose positions fit with your preferences, then you are undermining your point.
Does that work for you in, what, exposing me? Fine.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amI was pointing out what I think undermines your message elsewhere with posts like that. Perhaps you agree, perhaps you disagree. I don't think of it as exposing. I suggested that if the point is what you said it was, it could be undermined by posting, on occasion, just like a member of one of the various objectivist teams.
I suspect here we will just have to agree to disagree regarding my own assessment of moral objectivism. Left or right, to the extent a moral or political or religious objectivist gains actual power and attempts to stifle or repress or eliminate those who don't toe his or her line is my chief concern. The end often justifies any and all means for them. Cue, for example, the fanatics in Gaza and Israel. Or, for that matter, the amoral "show me the money" crony capitalists who own and operate the global economy.
Now, again, given an issue like abortion or capitalism or animal rights or gun control...how close do you come to believing that morality here is objective?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amNot close at all.
Okay, then how close are you to being "fractured and fragmented" morally? To what extent are the points I raise in the OPs here...
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=176529
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/viewtop ... 1&t=194382
...applicable or not applicable to your own value judgments? Given an issue that is of particular importance to you.
For example, I was an objectivist for years myself. And even when I abandoned one [Christianity] for another [Unitarianism] for another [Marxism] for another [Democratic Socialism] I was still able to convince myself that morality itself could be grasped objectively...God or No God.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amWell, you're certainly focusing on yourself. I was more interested in the point I made about...well, I said it above and in the post before.
I focus on who I know best. I articulate my own moral philosophy. Others who know themselves best will either agree or disagree with my assessment of morality in a No God world. All we can then do, given a particular context, is to exchange our views.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amYes, I am pretty sure you have mentioned this...let's say more than a hundred times.
Hey, you responded to my post here, Chuck.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amSure. But instead of responding to the point I made you wrote something you have mentioend...more than a hundred times...and not direclty connected.
These things get tricky. What some might insist are others here not responding to the points they make are actually more a reflection of the fact that the points others make are not in sync with that person's own moral and political prejudices.
Just as I've moved on from you here because from my own rooted existentially in dasein frame of mind you are basically just one more "serious philosopher": ever and always exchanging definitions and deductions up in the intellectual clouds. Even in regard to conflicting value judgments.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amNow this is making me the issue. I did not do that in my previous posts. I made a suggestion about how posting the way you did undermined the point you said you had.
How about this: you're right from your side, I'm right from mine.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amIOW can they come up with the right objectivist position?
What on Earth is that given all of the One True Paths there are to choose from:
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 amThat's why I asked the question.
But it's not a "position" that interest me nearly as much as a demonstrable proof that what they do believe, all rational men and women are obligated to believe in turn. Given a particular set of circumstances.
And my point still revolves less around what one's moral system is and more around how one comes to acquire it given the historical, cultural and interpersonal parameters of their uniquely individual lives. Given that human interactions have managed [so far] to produce quite a few One True Paths:
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am Then it seems to me it is much clearer if in any discussion of a specific moral issue, here whether homosexuality is bad or not, you should point out that objectivist positions can be on any side of an issue. If we look at the post I responded to it doesn't seem to reflect your point, but rather seems like a weighing in on the morality of homosexuality: those bad conservatives who have mean objectivist positions on homosexuals. I know you did not say this, but again if you just present one side's objectivism and seem critical of that and do not mention the positions that are objectivist but which you are more aligned with, it doesn't aid your point. The point you mention here.
Again and again and again...
Based on my own rooted existentially in dasein personal experiences and the political prejudices I have come to accept over the years, "I" think what I do about, say, same sex marriages. I support them. But that doesn't make them objectively moral. There are, after all, intelligent men and women who are able to offer arguments both for and against it:
https://www.google.com/search?q=arguemn ... s-wiz-serp
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amYes, I made it clear that I understood that. I mentioned, more than once, precisely so we needn't go over this ground that you do state this and that it is your position.
My point was about whether posting as you often do ALSO, might undermine the point you are making.
Well, in that case I am confused regarding what your point is here. From my frame of mind, what would undermine my point is a point from someone that manages
to undermine how "I" think about human morality at the existential intersection of identity, value judgments, conflicting goods, and political economy.
Yes, and why is that? How is that not the embodiment of daseins living vast and varied lives interacting in a world bursting at the seams with contingency, chance and change? Historically, culturally, socially, politically and economically.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am Precisely, so if your point as you say above it to reveal these kinds of things and how they lead to all objectivisms, pointing out one side's objectivisms is misleading. It's not a great way to make your point. It comes off as using your ideas of objectivism to hit the people who have positions you don't like, while remaining silent on the ones you do like. And again, I know that you do call out the objectivism of positions you are sympathetic with. But here you did not and this is not rare.
Precisely from your frame of mind...not even close to it from mine.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amOK, so you don't see that the post I responded to, for example, just pointed out the objectivisms that you are less sympathetic with.
But even here I am acknowledging that my reaction to objectivism is no less embedded/embodied existentially in dasein. Yes, I have any number of left-wing political prejudices. Why? Because, again, I spent over 20 years as a radical left-wing political activist. I don't exclude myself from my own assessment here.
Why, say, a liberal prejudice rather than a conservative prejudice? And since there are many, many others who think many, many very different things about human sexuality, what's a philosopher or an ethicist or a political scientist to do?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am I think that's an odd way to word this. But then you seem to be a subjectivist looking for a way to finally find an objectivist position that can be demonstrated to be the right one.
Not only that, but an objectivist truth I can embrace that will also result in immortality and salvation.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amGreat, OK, then I wasn't incorrect.
Correct and incorrect in regard to discussions like this are ever and always profoundly problematic from my own "drawn and quartered" moral perspective. Again, what matters most to me are those folks -- both liberals and conservatives -- who insist that not only are their own beliefs about human sexuality correct, but that others had damn well better toe their line. Or else. That's why, "here and now" I believe moderation, negotiation and compromise [democracy and the rule of law] reflects the "best of all possible worlds".
Look, if IC or any other religionist here is able to convince me that their God does in fact exist and that their God judges homosexuality to be a sin, then, well, what can I say, it's a sin. I'll be against it. At least if the alternative really is oblivion or eternal damnation.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amI'm crankier than that. I wouldn't accept it even from God.
Right. There you are at Judgment Day. IC's Christian God has the power to send you up or down. You boldly defy Him and defend homosexuality.
Well, not me. If God does exist and He is both omniscient and omnipotent, how can I not assume that His views on homosexuality are more pertinent than mine? I'd certainly reject moral nihilism if He is the real deal.
Though I'm sure there are homosexuals among us who are able to reconcile homosexuality and Christianity:
https://elcvienna.org/wp-content/upload ... .-2016.pdf
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am I'm not sure why I have to assume that a deity is a good one or never confused or doesn't need to develop. For example, I think Abraham messed up being ready to kill his son. And I would hope any deity was disappointed with his robotic response to God's demand. But if God wasn't disappointed, I'm still not stabbing my son to death on command. I find it odd that people think that if God tells them to do something, they are relieved of any responsibility. How is that not like following the orders of an earthly dictator, like a Hitler, say. I mean there you are thinking it's horrible to do X, but you do it because an entity tells you, however powerful. But that's all tangential.
That's bold talk here and now. But Bob Dylan looked at it another way:
God said to Abraham, "Kill me a son"
Abe said, "Man, you must be puttin' me on"
God said, "No, "
Abe said, "What?"
God said, "You can do what you want Abe, but the next time you see me comin', you better run"
Abe said, "Where do you want this killin' done?"
God said, "Out on Highway 61"
After all, He works in mysterious ways. Ways that no mere mortals can even begin to grasp. But He
is God. He
does have the capacity to toss you into the abyss that is oblivion...or send you to Hell.
So, if IC can in fact convince me that his God is all that he claims He is then, hey, I'm born again.
As for Hitler, to the best of my knowledge he was not able to assure his Nazis that defying him would deprive them of immortality and salvation. There's no way one can realistically compare any mere mortal with God Almighty. The stakes are enormously different.
From either end of the moral and political spectrum. With you it's always in regard to my own "fractured and fragmented" frame of mind in the is/ought world. How are you not drawn and quartered yourself in regard to homosexuality? How are your own value judgments here not a manifestation of dasein?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amAnd just to be clear the focus is on me again. Not my posts but me. That said I don't know why I am not drawn and quartered. It's hard to know what one is not experiencing what another person assumes one must experience, when I don't have that assumption, nor obviously the experience I lack (of feeling drawn and quartered). I certain have felt torn in many situations, where things I value would lead me to opposed decisions and I can only make one decision or already have. But that's not what you are focused on.
What I am focused on is how we acquire our value judgments existentially...given the particular world that we are thrown into at birth. And then given the experiences we have given all of the vast and varied historical and cultural parameters we might live out our lives in.
All I can do here is to note this...
If I am always of the opinion that 1] my own values are rooted in dasein and 2] that there are no objective values "I" can reach, then every time I make one particular moral/political leap, I am admitting that I might have gone in the other direction...or that I might just as well have gone in the other direction. Then "I" begins to fracture and fragment to the point there is nothing able to actually keep it all together. At least not with respect to choosing sides morally and politically.
...and then, given a particular context, explore with others why it is or it is not applicable to them.
Okay, Mr. Moral Objectivist, sift through them all and come up with the optimal frame of mind.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 7:55 am What?! Man you make weird assumptions.
Huh? Conflicting arguments are made [morally, politically, philosophically, scientifically, etc.] and any number of objectivists assume that in fact there is an optimal frame of mind. There must be. Why? Because they've found it.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Fri Oct 27, 2023 6:03 amSure, that wasn't the assumption or set of assumptions I was reacting to. But anyway, I understand better that your posts in response to me (and others) are aimed generally. IOW you write things for other readers, for objectivists, for example, even though that writing isn't really a response to what I and others have written.
As I once noted to Maia and gib, in one sense I construe myself here as being in a win/win situation.
Either someone is able to convince me that morality is in fact objective [and derived from God] and I am able to yank myself up out of the hole I have dug myself down into, or I am able to convince them that my frame of mind is reasonable, and they come down into the hole with me.
Salvation or empathy.