iambiguous wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 11:45 pm
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 am
iambiguous wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 10:38 pm
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?
No, if someone believes that something is permissable, period, or something is impermissable period, they are a moral objectivist. It is a way of defining what a moral objectivist is.
Exactly!
Well, that's not what you said in the quote above.
One merely has to believe their own definition of all the words used in arguments pertaining to permissibility rules and objective morality are by default the starting point for those who wish to be thought of as serious philosophers.
No idea what you're talking about.
Again, take this to the folks at a Planned Parenthood Clinic. Those inside acting on their permissibility rules and those outside protesting those rules with an entirely differnt set of permissions.
Yes, people's permissability rules clash.
Ironically enough, the six Christians on the Supreme Court today granted Donald Trump permission to place himself above the law. Apparently Trump's definitions here are wholly in sync with God's definitions.
According to Silver, me...?
Again, given the manner in which I have come to understand moral objectivists [existentially], it hardly ever works that way at all.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amWell, you made it up. It's not what Silver's saying.
What Silver is saying -- what he believes -- is of less interest to those like me than the extent to which they can demonstrate how "for all practical purposes" their moral philosophy would play out in regard to things like the abortion wars, Gaza, Ukraine, Biden/Trump. Back to Maia and those Pagans.
Well, you could write him and ask him. We can't figure that out from the article.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amSo, if someone said to you abortion is not permissable, period, you wouldn't consider them a moral objectivist.
OK, well you could respond to Silver's take on what he focused on, or not.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amAnd note they are not talking about the law, they are talking about morality. And if someone on the other side said abortions are permissable, period. Woman should be allowed to make that choice. You wouldn't consider them an objectivity.
Right. What on Earth does the law have to do with morality?!
It was 100% the Constitution and 0% the Bible that prompted the Supremes to revoke Roe v. Wade.
And, as I elaborated here --
https://www.ilovephilosophy.com/t/back- ... lity/30639 -- permissibility rules in regard to abortion can either be anchored in God or ideology or deontology or genes...or far more precariously attached to "I" through dasein and the Benjamin Button Syndrome.
Yes, that doesn't contradict the Silver article at all.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amSo, you're not an objectivist if you go about trying to convince others in a nice way?
No, from my frame if mind, you are an objectivist if you have convinced yourself that one can discover the Real Me and that this Real Me by discovering the One True Path can embody The Right Thing To Do.
That criterion and the one I mentioned are not mutually exclusive.
Then those moral objectivists among us who insist further that all others are obligated to think as they do. Apparently, one can only Know Thyself like these "serious philosophers" do:
https://knowthyself.forumotion.net/f6-agora
Or else.
And, of course, for some of them, their own permissibility rules are not even applicable to those of the wrong color, the wrong gender, the wrong sexual orientation. Or else here permitting the extermination of Jews.
Sure, that doesn't contradict the Silver article either.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amHe's not talking about how one goes about trying to get others to accept one's permissability rules.
Then he's not talking about the real world, in my view.
Of course he is. It's an article on a specific topic. He's coming up with 1) a way to define moral objectivism or a way to look at it in general - which is looking precisely at how real people in the real world conceive morality. Then 2) he makes an argument using that way of defining it. So far, I can't see any response on your part to the argument he makes.
His article does not claim to solve all the problems of moral objectivism or conflicting goods.
After all, we don't exactly live in a world where all that matters is what "here and now" we believe should be permitted at Planned Parenthood. Instead, it always comes back around to the law, to government policies. To consequences. Then "my" moral objectivists who do embrace a one size -- their own -- fits all dogma.
Yes, I am pretty sure I have known for years what you are concerned about.
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.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amSure, that's a valid issue. But you're reacting to Silver as if his idea of looking at objectivity as permissability rules is an argument about that topic. And you haven't responded to the parts of his article that actually you and he disagree on.
Again, as with the Tallis article, I reacted to Silver's arguments given my own set of assumption regarding the existential [historical, cultural] parameters of human consciousness, of human morality.
Yup, though it's as if what they actually wrote and wrote about wasn't what you were responding to.
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.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amBoth objectivists according to Silver.
Okay, let's suppose both Jean and Joan become pregnant. Then let's suppose hypothetically they are both top-notch attorneys and are arguing their entirely conflicting moral/legal/political philosophies before the Supreme Court.
John Roberts: "Having determined that the definitions given to us by Jean are clearly more in sync with the Bible than Joan's..."
Yes, objectivists have conflicts and this is a huge problem.
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.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amI don't think you understand what the word 'should' means.
Indeed, that's why any number of moral objectivists insist on attaching "or else" to their own political agendas.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amSo, if you are a moral realist and you use, say, democratic processes to affect the law so it reflects your morals, you aren't an objectist?
What I keep waiting for in regard to moral realism are those who claim there are "moral facts" to be found in regard to conflagrations like abortion in the Ethical Theory forum but won't actually note their own facts in the Applied Ethics forum. Let alone explore the extent to which dasein might be pertinent in explaining their own value judgments.
Which doesn't need the Silver and doesn't really react to the Silver article.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 7:15 amYou're reacting to him as if he is saying: people should just come up as individuals with their own permissability rules and tell each other them and that's make things better and that's how we do things.
We'll need a context, of course.

OK, not a response to what you quoted me as saying.
OK, I've tried to communicate what Silver is actually saying. What he is saying about permissability rules, which you respond to as if he is failed in some other task and was making normative statements about how it's fine to come up with your own permissability rules, despite that section of the essay being a suggestion for description.
You do have a major difference from Silver, but despite my quoting that section, you haven't responded to that section.
Yes, all the issues you raise are important ones, but despite quoting Silver repeatedly you haven't actually responded to his essay.
It inspired you to say things you have said many times before.
I don't know why you quote people here and philosophers if you aren't actually going to respond to what they write. You get inspired to repeat things you have said before. But then that doesn't need a new article.
I know you may well think this is merely another
hegemonic attempt on my part to create false certainty over the article's interpretation, which is why I started with my own quotes from the article with explanations.
I did my best, clearly failed.
Those few people, here, who read your posts may well assume that what you quote is what you are responding to. They may, as I did, read the quotes, and then be confused by your responses. Then may think using quotes as meaning that what is quoted won't merely remind you of things you have said before, but be responded to.
I think it would actually have created new things if you had responded to what Silver wrote. It wouldn't have solved the problems you raise, but it did raise a new argument related to moral objectivism and your main interest, one I haven't seen you respond to earlier, and would have added a different way to discuss conflicting objectivisms. But, so it went...
I'll leave you to it. I did my best.