Yes.
Depends on who's asking, what they are asking and how.
Still noted is your refusal to just answer, and clarify, here.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:42 amYes.
Depends on who's asking, what they are asking and how.
LOL you are, still, 'missing the point'. That is, 'the law' exists only within human beings, or what some of you people, in the days when this is being written, exists within 'minds', only. Which therefore, literally, means, 'remove human beings and/or 'minds', then so to 'the law' will not continue to exist. Although 'this' is contrary to what you believe, absolutely, here.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:27 amThe law in this example, beside being manmade, mutable and mind-independent, is also tied to specific entities, namely, to a specific numpad and to a specific screen. This means that, if one or both of these entities were removed from existence, the law itself would be removed as well. In a sense, one can say that the law is numpad-dependent and screen-dependent. So there are multiple way one can get rid of it: remove the numpad, remove the screen, remove the computer program, disturb the connection between the numpad and the machine, disturb the connection between the machine and the screen, destroy the machine, etc. But not all laws are like that, of course.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 12:29 am 2.
Consider a simple machine that maps the key pressed on a numpad to a text written on the screen. If the pressed key is an odd number, it shows the word "ODD" on the screen. Otherwise, if the pressed key is an even number, it shows the word "EVEN" on the screen. That law is implemented via a computer program stored in the memory of the machine.
Does that law cease to exist when no key is pressed?
Or does it cease to exist only when the computer program is erased or when the machine is destroyed?
This may seem irrelevant but I insist that it very much is.
On the other hand, the law determines what's on the screen based on the pressed key. The keys must be there for the law to exist but must there be a key that is pressed? Must it exist? If there are no pressed keys anywhere in the universe, does the law cease to exist? Of course not.
Specific laws apply to specific portions of reality. The above is an example of a specific law. There are other examples. For example, "If you greet this particular person, he will smile." Remove that person from existence and you also remove this law.
But there are also general laws that apply to many instances. An example would be, "If any human being A greets any other human being B, human being B will smile." Remove all human beings from existence and the existence of this law will remain unaffected -- if it existed, it will continue to exist.
I am not obliged to answer every single question -- only those that are relevant to the topic and that are asked by cooperative people.
If a human being does not drink water for more than a couple of days, he will die.Age wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:53 am LOL you are, still, 'missing the point'. That is, 'the law' exists only within human beings, or what some of you people, in the days when this is being written, exists within 'minds', only. Which therefore, literally, means, 'remove human beings and/or 'minds', then so to 'the law' will not continue to exist. Although 'this' is contrary to what you believe, absolutely, here.
Absolutely no one that I can see, here, ever said you were.
Another sign of those that can not elaborate on nor clarify their own rigidly held position.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:54 am -- only those that are relevant to the topic and that are asked by cooperative people.
LOL Before 'your recommendation' was to read your opening post, here.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:54 am You should realize that. The sooner, the better.
Right now, you're doing nothing but spamming in this thread.
My recommendation is: leave this thread.
Here 'we' have another Falsehood. But, which 'this one' believes is absolutely true and right.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 amIf a human being does not drink water for more than a couple of days, he will die.Age wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 5:53 am LOL you are, still, 'missing the point'. That is, 'the law' exists only within human beings, or what some of you people, in the days when this is being written, exists within 'minds', only. Which therefore, literally, means, 'remove human beings and/or 'minds', then so to 'the law' will not continue to exist. Although 'this' is contrary to what you believe, absolutely, here.
Am 'I'?Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 am You're literally saying that this law exists in human heads.
Adding an exclamation mark does nothing more for you, nor to your claim, here.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 am "Remove humans from existence and this law will cease to exist!
Again, the exclamation adds nothing more, here. Except, of course, it reaffirms and/or reinforces your own belief to "your" own 'self', here, only.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 am Suddenly, humans will be able to live without water!
So, where, exactly, did 'that supposed law' keep on existing, precisely?Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 am Unfortunately, by adding humans back to existence, we're also inadvertently bringing back that law!
So, are you 'now' 'trying to' suggest that if some thing exists only with in something else, and the 'something else' does not exist anymore, at all, then the 'thing', which exists only within the something else, will keep on existing?Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:01 am You see, it's in human heads! So when you add human heads back to existence, you also add the law! If only we could remove that law from human heads!"
That was in response to your question.
In a different sense of the word "objective", perhaps, one that has nothing to do with this thread.
Blah, blah, blah.Age wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:18 am Which obviously you are far too stubborn and far too rigid and closed in your own made up, subjective and personal, beliefs, here, that 'that ego' does not want to 'look at' nor 'discuss' absolutely any thing other than what it believes is already absolutely true and right.
Once again, 'we' have another one, here, who 'tries to' 'run away and hide' when its beliefs and claims are shown to be in contradiction, and are inconsistent, with each other. The fact that 'this one' can not stand behind and back up and support its own beliefs and claims, is why it is desperately wanting 'me' to leave, here.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:39 amThat was in response to your question.
As far as I'm concerned, you're free to leave this thread. You don't have to read anything.
In a different sense of the word "objective", perhaps, one that has nothing to do with this thread.
Either that or you're contradicting yourself.
Blah, blah, blah.Age wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 6:18 am Which obviously you are far too stubborn and far too rigid and closed in your own made up, subjective and personal, beliefs, here, that 'that ego' does not want to 'look at' nor 'discuss' absolutely any thing other than what it believes is already absolutely true and right.
I can very easily tell that you're butthurt by not being taken seriously.
Yes that's what the word really means.Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Jun 03, 2023 2:46 pm If it actually meant something like "a set of beliefs about what is right and what is wrong held by someone", then morality would clearly be subjective, since beliefs exist within minds, and if something exists within a mind, removing all minds from existence would also remove that thing from existence. But is that what the word actually means?
To avoid confusion, maybe think you could rename that to "morality-proper".The term "morality" means "the set of all laws that someone [ an individual, a group of people or everyone ] ought to obey in order to maximize their chances of attaining their highest goal".
Often but not always.
Yeah English isn't my first language either but this is just a mess. What made you think that a belief actually has to represent something objectively real? Wouldn't be much of a belief then, would it?Magnus Anderson wrote: ↑Sat Sep 13, 2025 2:38 pmOften but not always.
If the word "morality" denotes "what one thinks is right", what word, if any, denotes "what is right"?
If the word "morality" denotes "a set of beliefs concerning what's right", what word, if any, denotes what these beliefs represent? ( They must be representing something if they are truly beliefs. )
The commonly used term is "objective morality".
The simple word "morality" is also used. It's not a rare thing for words to have multiple meanings.
In your case, you seem to be using the term "morality-proper".
I can see that.
The statement "Beliefs represent an aspect of reality" means "Beliefs are about something in the world". It does NOT mean "Beliefs TRULY represent an aspect of reality". It's not saying that beliefs are necessarily true.