Is morality objective or subjective?

Should you think about your duty, or about the consequences of your actions? Or should you concentrate on becoming a good person?

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Harbal
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

Post by Harbal »

henry quirk wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:48 pm
Harbal wrote: Wed Nov 01, 2023 2:30 pmMoral subjectivism exists
It does, yes. Opinions about morality, and moral opinion, exist. They exist in the same way opinions about fire exist.

Francis hates fire and gets his sneakers up around his ears at the mere mention of fire. Does his hatred -- his opinion -- change fire? Louis respects fire. He knows its power and he knows how to harness it. Does his respect -- his opinion -- change fire?

Fire is fire. The wood fire in the fireplace does what it does whether Francis hates it or Louis respects it.

Morality (moral fact) is no different. You can bridle at it or align yourself with it and it remains the same. You can violate it or respect it and it changes not one bit.

So, yeah, you can, and do, have your opinion. That's a trivial observation.
Yes, it is a trivial observation, but still needs pointing out to some people, and continues to be denied by some people.

We can observe the fire to see if our opinions affect it, but we can't do that with morality, because morality consists of our opinions; morality is our opinions.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:22 pm Then maybe we need to establish what you mean when you say you want a "principle." For in ordinary language usage, such as I have given would fit the bill; but if you have something different in mind, I should wish to provide it.
A premise from which it is possible to evaluate any moral dictate. In other words; it is not enough to say X is wrong, we also need to know what, exactly, is wrong with X.
I'm just not seeing how my answer doesn't meet that demand. If, as I suggest, "moral" means "conformable to the will and nature of God," then what's wrong with X is it's not "conformable to the will and nature of God." In other words, it presents a lie about the Supreme Being. For man was made, as Genesis says, "in the image of God," meaning that man should bear the reflection of His existence and nature faithfullly, rather than misrepresenting God. And immoral things are a sort of deception, lie or slander against the Creator, implying that He is not what He says He is; because as God's rightful "image bearer," man has the duty to bear faithful witness to the Creator.

You may not accept that that is true, since you don't believe there is a God. But if I'm right, there's nothing I can see wrong with that explanation, and no way it fails to explain adequately what makes X wrong. It just so happens, though, that it depends on ontological suppositions you perhaps don't share with me: but that's been the problem all along -- not our differences about particular actions, but our different assumptions about the grounds for judging particular actions.
IC wrote:
Harbal wrote:It is also dependent on belief in God
Don't be surprised. I have been saying that all along. There is no knowledge of morality unless one first gets one's ontology straight. So says the Bible, as well.
Why should I care what the Bible says?
If it's wrong, you shouldn't. If it's telling you the truth, you should.
God exists, and He exists as the whole basis of morality; so to reckon without that fact is actually to obscure the entire field of moral philosophy,
What kind of dreamt-up-out-of-thin-air statement is that supposed to be? What philosophy is involved in simply obeying a commandment?
It's a mistake to think that's what ethics really are.

There is an ethical theory known as "Divine Command Theory." And there are some ideologies and religions that have that view of how ethics should work. They think it's simple: God gives you commands, and those who obey them are good, and those who don't are bad. They think "try harder" is the fundamental ethical obligation, and that a balance of good and evil deeds will ingratiate people to God. In fact, many skeptics and Atheists also believe that that is how Christian theology is arranged, and not surprisingly, they dismiss the whole thing as too simple, too arbitrary and too demanding...possibly even an unwarranted incursion on human freedom, or an impossible list of demands from an angry Creator.

Christians don't think that at all. While there are certainly some commands within Christian theory, they are far from being the core, the essence of the substance of it. They're actually peripheral to the main substance. The substance is the question of one's personal relationship to God, in which the commands are merely signposts toward the relationship. This is all made very explicit, for example, in Galatians 3:23-25.

"...before faith came, we were kept in custody under the Law, being confined for the faith that was destined to be revealed. Therefore the Law has become our guardian [the Greek word here literally translates as "tutor" or "child-instructor"] to lead us to Christ, so that we may be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a guardian [i.e. an instructor for children]."

So what the Bible says is that following mere "commands" of the Law, even though they are good, is childish. To be mature in the faith is to move beyond that to the actual relationship with God that the commands are designed to "instruct" us to seek and direct us to locate.

That's all theological. I apologize for involving you in it, because I know it's not directly what you're interested in entertaining. But it is impossible to correct your errant supposition about commandments without giving you some reason to think I'm actually reflecting proper Christian belief. So there's your evidence, if you find you want it.
I can see why you are constantly trying to steer the conversation towards attacking the viability of subjective morality.
Well, I'm not sure you can. The reason I'm doing it because unless a person realizes that the house they're living in is on fire, they're unlikely to leave its comforts. And moral subjectivism is such a 'flaming shack' that I can't feel very bad about depriving you of its comforts, if I can thereby give you reason to seek a better shelter.
...your position merely rests on two assertions; there is a God, and he is the source of morality.
Exactly so. It rests on an ontological claim...as all ethics always do. This is what philosophers formally call "the metaethical level" of discourse. It means getting beyond the mere statements about what right and wrong are, and even beyond the mere floating of different theories, to the only grounds upon which one may judge between and among ethical theories: their ontological basis.

So I'm performing sound analytical practice, in that. And if you follow me down, then follow me back up, you'll see a remarkable thing: that while objective morals can be reconciled with particular ontological suppositions, that subjective ethics cannot be reconciled with any ontological suppositions at all. :shock:

And that, if nothing else, should give you a fair and impartial basis to realize you've got to reject moral subjectivism as incoherent. You may not agree with my ontological suppositions, or with my ethical conclusions; but any rational, calm, impartial and logical observer ought to be able to recognize the inherent faults of subjectivism.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:47 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:28 pm
Dontaskme wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:58 pm

So again, what empirical evidence does an all knowing God test his moral theory against?
Ugh. :roll:

God doesn't "test" anything. God knows everything (ominiscience). There's no "theory" he has to hold, only knowledge, and no "test," only certainty.

How simple do I have to make this? :shock:
Perhaps you have made it too simple. I think some of us were expecting you to have something a bit more sophisticated up your sleeve.
I can't see anything even remotely sophisticated, or even sensible, in DAM's question. If you think it has some profundity I'm missing, then perhaps you can explain that profundity.
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Lacewing
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:22 pm God exists, and He exists as the whole basis of morality
I can see why you are constantly trying to steer the conversation towards attacking the viability of subjective morality. As futile as that endeavour is, it is nowhere near as difficult as putting up a convincing argument for objective moral truths. In fact, there is no argument for them; your position merely rests on two assertions; there is a God, and he is the source of morality. Since you don't have the means to establish the truth of those highly contested assertions, you basically have nothing.
Brilliantly demonstrated.
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Harbal
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 5:50 pm
Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:47 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:28 pm
Ugh. :roll:

God doesn't "test" anything. God knows everything (ominiscience). There's no "theory" he has to hold, only knowledge, and no "test," only certainty.

How simple do I have to make this? :shock:
Perhaps you have made it too simple. I think some of us were expecting you to have something a bit more sophisticated up your sleeve.
I can't see anything even remotely sophisticated, or even sensible, in DAM's question. If you think it has some profundity I'm missing, then perhaps you can explain that profundity.
Actually, it was your lack of profundity I was drawing attention to. Dam asked a reasonable question, and all you had in response was the get out of jail free card that you've granted yourself: "Whatever I say about God is true because it just is."
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henry quirk
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Walker wrote: Sun Nov 05, 2023 12:02 amGod is the ineffable, which is the very definition of 'Nuff said.
👍

The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao.

The Way is to man as rivers and lakes are to fish,
the natural condition of life.
with apologies to venerable and wizened old sages everywhere
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:01 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 5:50 pm
Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:47 pm Perhaps you have made it too simple. I think some of us were expecting you to have something a bit more sophisticated up your sleeve.
I can't see anything even remotely sophisticated, or even sensible, in DAM's question. If you think it has some profundity I'm missing, then perhaps you can explain that profundity.
Dam asked a reasonable question...
Great. I'm sure you can explain it to me, then.

How can she suppose that God, if He does exist (shall we say, for argument's sake) would "test theories against" anything? People "test theories" when they don't know stuff. And they "test" them against reality. But reality is grounded (by definition) in the Creator Himself -- nothing pre-exists Him, and He made it what it is.

So how is her question even remotely sensible?

Maybe you can save her line of argument for her. By even the most generous principle-of-charity, I cannot. It looks like she doesn't even understand the meaning of the word "God."
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Harbal
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 5:48 pm
Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:22 pm Then maybe we need to establish what you mean when you say you want a "principle." For in ordinary language usage, such as I have given would fit the bill; but if you have something different in mind, I should wish to provide it.
A premise from which it is possible to evaluate any moral dictate. In other words; it is not enough to say X is wrong, we also need to know what, exactly, is wrong with X.
I'm just not seeing how my answer doesn't meet that demand. If, as I suggest, "moral" means "conformable to the will and nature of God," then what's wrong with X is it's not "conformable to the will and nature of God." In other words, it presents a lie about the Supreme Being. For man was made, as Genesis says, "in the image of God," meaning that man should bear the reflection of His existence and nature faithfullly, rather than misrepresenting God. And immoral things are a sort of deception, lie or slander against the Creator, implying that He is not what He says He is; because as God's rightful "image bearer," man has the duty to bear faithful witness to the Creator.
If all that is acceptable to you, and you feel that believing it is right for you, then I wouldn't try to talk you out of it even if I thought I could, but it is useless to me, because I don't believe any of it. You, on the other hand, are trying to talk me out of something that works just fine for me, and propose it be replaced by something that wouldn't work for me at all.
IC wrote:
Harbal wrote:I can see why you are constantly trying to steer the conversation towards attacking the viability of subjective morality.
Well, I'm not sure you can. The reason I'm doing it because unless a person realizes that the house they're living in is on fire, they're unlikely to leave its comforts. And moral subjectivism is such a 'flaming shack' that I can't feel very bad about depriving you of its comforts, if I can thereby give you reason to seek a better shelter.
As the one living in the shack, I feel I am far better placed to judge whether or not it is on fire.
IC wrote:
Harbal wrote:...your position merely rests on two assertions; there is a God, and he is the source of morality.
Exactly so. It rests on an ontological claim...as all ethics always do. This is what philosophers formally call "the metaethical level" of discourse. It means getting beyond the mere statements about what right and wrong are, and even beyond the mere floating of different theories, to the only grounds upon which one may judge between and among ethical theories: their ontological basis.

So I'm performing sound analytical practice, in that. And if you follow me down, then follow me back up, you'll see a remarkable thing: that while objective morals can be reconciled with particular ontological suppositions, that subjective ethics cannot be reconciled with any ontological suppositions at all. :shock:

And that, if nothing else, should give you a fair and impartial basis to realize you've got to reject moral subjectivism as incoherent. You may not agree with my ontological suppositions, or with my ethical conclusions; but any rational, calm, impartial and logical observer ought to be able to recognize the inherent faults of subjectivism.
What can I say other than I reject all that? I incorporate morality into my conduct, yet I don't believe in God, and morality means something to me, so I can't be a nihilist. Telling me that that is incoherent won't change anything, I'm afraid.
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Harbal
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:22 pm
Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:01 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 5:50 pm
I can't see anything even remotely sophisticated, or even sensible, in DAM's question. If you think it has some profundity I'm missing, then perhaps you can explain that profundity.
Dam asked a reasonable question...
Great. I'm sure you can explain it to me, then.

How can she suppose that God, if He does exist (shall we say, for argument's sake) would "test theories against" anything? People "test theories" when they don't know stuff. And they "test" them against reality. But reality is grounded (by definition) in the Creator Himself -- nothing pre-exists Him, and He made it what it is.

So how is her question even remotely sensible?

Maybe you can save her line of argument for her. By even the most generous principle-of-charity, I cannot. It looks like she doesn't even understand the meaning of the word "God."
I can't blame her for not understanding the meaning of the word, "God", because I don't understand it either. Maybe that's why I can't see anything wrong with her question.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:22 pm How can she suppose that God, if He does exist (shall we say, for argument's sake) would "test theories against" anything?
Why would anything -- even a god -- not grow and expand and change?

A rigid, stagnant god playing with dolls makes no sense.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:49 pm ...it is useless to me, because I don't believe any of it.
That is absolutely true. And that's why it's so important to get the metaethics, the ontology, sorted out. Otherwise, no ethical theory leads you anywhere but nihilism, which is a place you're determined not to go.

I see the problem. But there's no cure, if you stay with what you don't believe.
IC wrote: Well, I'm not sure you can. The reason I'm doing it because unless a person realizes that the house they're living in is on fire, they're unlikely to leave its comforts. And moral subjectivism is such a 'flaming shack' that I can't feel very bad about depriving you of its comforts, if I can thereby give you reason to seek a better shelter.
As the one living in the shack, I feel I am far better placed to judge whether or not it is on fire.
Rationality shows it is. You're living in a theory that has no metaethical basis, no ontological warrant at all. That means it's not durable...not for anybody else, but also not for you, because you can abandon it at any moment that subjective feelings make you want to.

How then can we ask the question, "Am I being a good person," or "Am I doing the right thing?" Subjectivism cannot tell you those answers...and surely, they're the least we should expect of any credible moral theory, no?
IC wrote:
Harbal wrote:...your position merely rests on two assertions; there is a God, and he is the source of morality.
Exactly so. It rests on an ontological claim...as all ethics always do. This is what philosophers formally call "the metaethical level" of discourse. It means getting beyond the mere statements about what right and wrong are, and even beyond the mere floating of different theories, to the only grounds upon which one may judge between and among ethical theories: their ontological basis.

So I'm performing sound analytical practice, in that. And if you follow me down, then follow me back up, you'll see a remarkable thing: that while objective morals can be reconciled with particular ontological suppositions, that subjective ethics cannot be reconciled with any ontological suppositions at all. :shock:

And that, if nothing else, should give you a fair and impartial basis to realize you've got to reject moral subjectivism as incoherent. You may not agree with my ontological suppositions, or with my ethical conclusions; but any rational, calm, impartial and logical observer ought to be able to recognize the inherent faults of subjectivism.
What can I say other than I reject all that?
Well, if I'm right about subjectivism (and a rational observer can surely see I am), then that would be to reject rationality. Some people do that; but if they do, what they loose in addition to any justification for their moral claims is that they also lose the warrant to argue for it. Because argumentation depends on rationality.
I incorporate morality into my conduct,
I'm certain you're a good person, so far as your own subjective opinion may convince you. I have no reason to think you're also not a good person by relative standards set by society. Heck, I have no reason to believe you're not innately a much better person than I.

Yet what is that to the point? If true, it's only accidental, and not the fruit of your moral theory. For your moral theory allows that you might do anything at all, and still believe yourself "moral."

More importantly, the righteousness of man is nothing to God. Why should He be impressed with our shady moral conduct, when He's perfect? What is it to Him, if I'm a little better than I am worse? Can a righteous judge overlook all my failures and sins, and still be a righteous judge? So the outcome is predictable: compared to the moral standard inherent in the nature and will of God, none of us measure up: and if you're slightly better than me, we're still bound to both end up well short of the mark of real goodness.
..morality means something to me, so I can't be a nihilist.
I accept that. You don't seem capable of that kind of callousness, and honestly, not many people are.

So then, I'm afraid, you'll have to give up rationality. There's no way to keep subjectivism and rationality together.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Iwannaplato wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 3:57 pmDid you really need an argument to be against slavery?
Not for myself, no. Nor do I need a codification of natural rights or deism.
Did you need to reason your way to that position?
No, I had no need to.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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FlashDangerpants wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 4:16 pmNothing prevents you owning yourself and owning somebody else too
So, when I say a man, any man, every man, any where or when, has a natural, exclusive, moral claim to his, and no others, life, liberty, and property I'm not really sayin' that, right?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

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Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 7:05 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:22 pm
Harbal wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 6:01 pm
Dam asked a reasonable question...
Great. I'm sure you can explain it to me, then.

How can she suppose that God, if He does exist (shall we say, for argument's sake) would "test theories against" anything? People "test theories" when they don't know stuff. And they "test" them against reality. But reality is grounded (by definition) in the Creator Himself -- nothing pre-exists Him, and He made it what it is.

So how is her question even remotely sensible?

Maybe you can save her line of argument for her. By even the most generous principle-of-charity, I cannot. It looks like she doesn't even understand the meaning of the word "God."
I can't blame her for not understanding the meaning of the word, "God", because I don't understand it either. Maybe that's why I can't see anything wrong with her question.
Oh. Well, that's possible, I suppose. But the cure's not hard to find. God is the First Cause and ultimate Designer-Creator of all things. He's the only perfect and supreme Being. And His attributes include that He has all knowledge, supreme power, consummate goodness, and dwells beyond time and space, which are also His creations. He is also the self-revealing God, and the final Judge of all the Earth.

Now, you may say you are confident no such Being exists. Okay. But if we are going to make statements about "God," especially to a Christian, then these are the terms we're going to have to understand the Christian as asserting. DAM can't ask me a question that presumes the existence of somebody else's conception of God, because I cannot defend their misconceptions, and have no interest in so doing.

So I was right: the question doesn't make sense. It's just that DAM doesn't know it doesn't make sense.
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Re: Is morality objective or subjective?

Post by henry quirk »

Sculptor wrote: Mon Nov 06, 2023 5:06 pmFire is more than just an idea, or set of ideas.
And so is morality.
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