Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Nov 01, 2023 11:10 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Nov 01, 2023 9:35 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Wed Nov 01, 2023 8:30 pm
But an "objective moral truth", or at least the claim of one, is subject to the same failing.
It's not.
IF (note the hypothetical here, in deference to your view) morality is objective, then it's obligatory for everybody. A justice system can be oriented to respond to it. Disputes can be arbitrated with reference to it. We can design laws from it....and so on. Moreover, our changing feelings do not disturb or destroy such a code: it's independent of feelings.
I can see how this might be hypothetically the case, but I am not well enough informed to be able to know if it is the case.
Oh, come on...just think about it. You're a smart guy, and it's dead simple.
If somebody says, "The reason you shouldn't murder is that murder is intrinsically, objectively, always wrong," that's one kind of statement. But subjectivism requires any honest subjectivist to say only this: "Murder feels wrong to me...for the moment. So I'm hoping it feels wrong to you. But if it doesn't, I'm not more right than you are, and have no business condemning your murders."
Would any subjectivist articulate his view so frankly? Of course not; because if it he did, it would expose subjectivism for the wimpy, useless kind of thing it actually is. So what he has to do instead is imaginatively invest his subjectivism with the authority of an objective truth. Otherwise, it's just powerless to address any situation, no matter how reprehensible or laudable, at all.
Could you give some examples of justice systems that are oriented to respond to objective moral facts,
Originally, all of them.
If you go back to the most ancient sources, such as the the Justinian Code, or the Laws of Hammurabi, or the
Torah, you see this in abundance. Objective morality is always tied to the authority and sacredness of the gods or God. If you even go to more recent codes, such as the English Common Law or the Declaration of Independence, you find the same thing: the reasoning behind the laws is tied to reverence for the Creator.
And today's codes, while they have purged that language from their texts, in some cases, such as (for example) the United Nations declaration of human rights, retain the conclusions of those codes, even while undercutting the whole reason that made those codes possible in the first place.
And given that these objective moral truths never change, how do we account for the fact that laws often do?
That's easy. That's because human laws, at their best, are attempts to reflect the objective moral principles in code form. At their worst, they turn out to be merely subjective and arbitrary dictates of men who wish to represent their will as objective, whereas they are only asserting their subjective wills. But the whole reason we can judge such forgeries at all is with reference to the standards they ought to have reflected, and have failed to do; that is, by reference to the concept of an objective, universal, ideal code of moral truth.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:There are two issues here: The first is that of being able to establish that something is a moral truth, and the second is the problem of it not being universally accepted as such.
Only one issue. The first one. The second one is not a fault of morality at all. It's a fault with human nature or human behavior or human choice, if your prefer.
So this morality that was designed and created by God, specifically for human beings to follow, is not actually suitable for human beings,
It's ideal for human beings. It instructs them when they go wrong, and when they go right.
But again, you're misunderstanding what morality is: it's not something that forces people to do things; it's the "thermometer" that lets them know when they do or don't do the right thing.
Objective morality doesn't mean that everybody becomes suddenly moral, anymore than any other moral theory does. It just means that if they don't, they're doing wrong -- objective wrong -- and we can know it.
But we can only know it for sure if we are sure that the morality in question is, indeed, of the objectively true variety. And it is the problem of discerning what is genuine moral truth, rather than false moral truth, that concerns me.
It concerns us all...and rightfully so.
IF there is an objective truth about morality (Such as, "Murder is wrong," for example) then it is wrong to murder whether or not people agree that it is wrong to murder. In fact, if they disagree with the objective moral truth, then they will be in the wrong themselves; and we shall have an objective basis for indicting them for murder and putting them in jail.
I'm not sure that murder is a good example for the purposes of clarity.
It's excellent. Because regarless of the sophistry with which we may try to evade it in vexed cases, everybody realizes that if something is genuinely "murder," then it's evil. But we can switch to "rape," "torture" or "slavery," if you prefer: though you'll have to remember that subjectively, people have sometimes
liked to rape, enslave, torture and even murder.
So pick your favourite gross evil. Slot it in. The case is the same.