So, they can still call themselves moral objectivists as long as they believe that what they permit or do not permit is accepted by those in the community?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am Actually, they don't even need a community's support to be considered moral objectivists. Would you call people who think that X should be permitted and is fine or good and Y should not be permitted and is bad a moral objectivist. All he's doing is using rules of permission as a way to look at objectivism.
So, each individual in the community can be a moral objectivist? Every time an individual bumps into someone new in situations that involve conflicting goods, they have to exchange permissibility rules in order to arrive at a set of behaviors that are the least objectionable to all parties?
Again, given the manner in which I have come to understand moral objectivists [existentially], it hardly ever works that way at all. Objectivism for them is more or less encompassed here:
https://knowthyself.forumotion.net/f6-agora
A moral consensus equals moral objectivism? For them?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am No, again, they don't need moral consensus to be moral objectivists. The could be lone wolfs who have permissability RULES and be if they have these they are moral objectivists. That part of his argument is NOT saying that if they have permissability rules, their morals are correct. He is saying that if you have permissability rules you are a moral objectivist. IOW you believe that certain things are objective morals.
Then we simply think about moral objectivism in very different ways. And then the part where permissibility rules fiercely clash -- gaza, ukraine, the abortion clinic, etc.
How would Silver go about explaining his point of view to the folks there? Some on both sides of these conflicts are even willing to kill those who do not accept their own rules.
Thus...
Okay, how would such an assessment be applicable in regard to abortion, gun control, homosexuality and the like?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am The people who think abortion should be permitted and have this as a rule are objectivists. The people who think it is wrong and should not be permitted are objectivists.
Exactly! And then the "or else" part for many. And my own point that just as important as what you believe is how existentially you came to believe it: Your indoctrination as a child, your own personal experiences as an adult. The Benjamin Button Syndrome.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am This part of his argument is does not disagree with your assessments. He is putting the issue of who is a moral objectivism in terms of permissability rules. One reason he does this is to make it easier for people to see if in fact they are moral objectivists.
Okay, and others ground their permissibility rules in God or in ideology or in deontology or in biological imperatives. For me, however, what matters is not what you profess should either be permitted or prohibited but how you go about demonstrating why others ought to embrace your rules as well. Otherwise, it's a "you're right from your side and I'm right from mine" world.
Which, again, in my view, is far more applicable to democracy and the rule of law than to right makes might.
As long as a set of permissibility rules does not require impossible actions (cure cancer, fly to Mars, eat your cake and have it, never die), or posit non-existing entities (the tooth fairy, the Devil, the eternal incorporeal commander), there are no epistemic or practical reasons for rejecting or it, just as there are none for accepting it. Hume famously, and correctly, said that you cannot derive ‘ought’ from ‘is’. It is equally important to note that you cannot derive ‘ought not to accept oughts’ from ‘is’. The rejection of all permissibility rules has no more justification than the acceptance of a specific permissibility rule. The consequences of accepting or rejecting permissibility rules are another matter entirely; but whatever they are, by themselves consequences cannot constitute a justification.
If within any particular community citizens agree to permit some things and to prohibit other things, sure, they might convince themselves that they are moral objectivists.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am It does depend on how they think of the rules. If they think there are merely agreements, then no. But if they think they are permissability rules as he defines them, then they are objectivists.
Well, how others define moral objectivism in a philosophical argument is one thing, how they deal with those who define it differently given particular sets of circumstances that precipitate conflict another thing altogether. At least for me.
But: that is not at all the manner in which I construe the meaning of moral objectivism.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am If someone thinks that X should be permitted and it is wrong to not permit it, they are a moral objectivist. As with the opposite in something should not permitted.
Joan thinks that abortions should be permitted and that it is wrong not to permit them.
Jean thinks that abortions should not be permitted and that it is wrong to permit them.
Now, I would call them moral objectivists only to the extent they insisted all others should think and feel as they do. Then those who insist that all others
must think and feel as they do.
Or else.
But how should the world around us be understood? Understood such that no matter what community is visited, mere mortals in a No God world can always come up with, what, the optimal behaviors?
Also, given his assumptions, would not the best of all possible worlds be one that revolved around democracy and the rule of law? Whereas from my frame of mind, moral objectivism is far more likely to revolve around "right makes might". Then the "or else" part.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am He does address that issue. And I do think democracy likely fits with his particular moral objectivism.
It definitely is more conducive to my own political philosophy. Only I am no less fractured and fragmented.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am And again you are moving into the argument that moral objectivism causes harm argument which he rebutted.
His rendition [to me] seems to revolve more around the assumption that different people think up permissibility rules and call themselves objectivists, while others think up their own very much conflicting rules of behavior and call themselves objectivists.
Again, from my frame of mind, that might work to the extent they
are willing to practice moderation, negotiation and compromise in a democratic political process. Or if they live in separate communities. But objectivists as I understand them invariably embrace "right makes might" and seem far more intent on sustaining their own One True Path. Often by heaping contempt on all the other objectivists on the wrong paths. Those who become "one of them". We see that all the time here.
In fact, I believe the reaction of the moral objectivists here
as "I" understand them reflects this crucial distinction. They come here defending their own One True Path against those defending conflicting One True Paths. But what they both share in common is the conviction that there
is but one and only one One True Path. And they're on it. Whereas I suggest that all of these "objective" assessments are derived from the manner in which I construe human interaction at the existential intersection of identity, dasein, value judgments, conflicting goods and political economy. As articulated in my signature threads.
However, even granting the relativist/ nihilist assessment of the empirical effects of all and any objectivism, without a permissibility principle requiring avoidance of those effects, the relativist/nihilist has provided no grounds for rejecting objectivism. Railing against objectivism for the harms it causes is like protesting that the Constitution is unconstitutional.
Again, it's not a question of justification in my view. It's merely a reflection of the fact that one way or another each and every community must have rules of behavior. Thus, historically, given various combinations of might makes right, right makes might or moderation, negotiation and compromise, the political agenda can go in any number of conflicting directions.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am That's not really responding to his points.
So you say. I say that I am attempting to note the manner in which we construe objective morality differently. Thus I would be curious to know how Silver might respond to my own set of assumptions.
The article is "a defense of moral objectivism".
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 6:52 am Yes, the part of the article you were responding to about permissability rules, the parts in your quotes is not arguing that. He does come up with a defense of moral objectivism. I haven't seen you quote those parts of respond to them.
Try again?