Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 8:04 am
CIN wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 12:18 am
attofishpi wrote: ↑Mon Sep 16, 2024 11:33 am
The entire argument I have with you - is that you think that subjective (opinion) within the realm of ethics has NO value (no yardstick as you previously mentioned)
I am merely stating, that where it comes to what HUMANS consider as 'ethical' or NOT 'ethical' - DOES have a yardstick - a measurement value and it is based upon those upon the BANDWAGON (not a fallacy where they CANT comprehend a value to what is rationally ethical)- social humanity has a measurement value.
It is theoretically possible that societal ethical opinion could have some limited value, in the sense of being a pointer to correct ethical views. This could happen in one of three ways:
1. Someone in the past produced sound arguments and/or weighty evidence in favour of correct ethical opinions, and society has been influenced by their thinking. In other words, societal ethical opinion happens to be largely correct because of an inherited 'folk ethics' which, because it was originally derived from a sound evaluation of argument and/or evidence, is itself largely correct.
2. A majority of people in society are capable of arriving at correct ethical opinions by a process of reasoning which, while generally sound, is not overt, i.e. not fully conscious and articulated.
3. A combination of 1. and 2.
The point to note here is that in both 1 and 2, reference is made to 'correct ethical opinion'. Even if you managed to establish that one of the above three theories about societal ethical opinion is correct, you would still be required to show that the ethical opinions arrived at by any of the above processes are themselves correct. You could not rely on societal opinion to show this, because that would be circular reasoning. Irrespective of what goes on with societal opinion, therefore, the burden of proof is still on the objectivist to show by some method other than reference to societal opinion that there are in fact correct objectivist beliefs, and what these beliefs are. The only available method is to look for sound arguments and/or weighty evidence that would support some particular objectivist ethical theory. So by all means use societal ethical opinion as a preliminary indicator of where to look for ethical truths, but don't expect societal opinion to be the arbiter of what is true in ethics; it can't do that.
I think this analysis is confused. The issue is the possibility of moral 'correctness' or 'ethical truths'. So to say they can't be established by reference to 'societal opinion' is to beg the question.
The question is this. Can an assertion such as 'eating animals is morally wrong' be true or false? In other words, is it a factual assertion with a truth-value which is independent from opinion? If it is or can be, then morality is objective. And
I say it isn't and can't be, which is why morality isn't and can't be objective.
PH: "
I say it isn't and can't be."
Wow! you commanded as if you are God.
WHO ARE YOU to claim that morality isn't and can't be objective?
Whatever is true or false is contingent upon a specific human-based framework and system.
As such, whatever is claimed to be true or false must always be qualified to a specific human-based framework and system [FS].
You cannot be an ultracrepidarian to insist, it is true or false because
I say it is or isn't.
Thus, while the claim, 'water is H2O' is often stated without qualification, to be rigorous, the actual situation is 'water is H2O' because the science-chemistry FS said so.
So the objective fact 'the oughtnot_ness of humans killing humans' is true as qualified to a credible and objective moral FS.