Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
iambiguous wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 9:38 pm
Here on this thread [for me] Mary aborting Jane. If some do believe that their own argument regarding either the morality of abortion or their own take on free will, determinism and compatibilism reflects the most rational manner in which
to think about the existential relationship between Mary choosing an abortion and her moral responsibility, well, if not an objectivist, what would you call them?
How about 'someone who thinks they are right on an issue, but who does or doesn not have enough support for their position.' Or 'someone you disagree with.' Then you go about arguing why they are wrong or why their evidence or argument is insufficient.
But what I am reacting to is the extent to which I conclude subjectively that, given my own understanding of an objectivist, someone seems
to me to be one. It's a judgment call. I'm certainly not arguing that others given their own frame of mind derived from what might be very different lives are obligated to to think and feel the same. Besides, in a determined universe as I understand it, how any of us act or react to anything is objectively...wholly...in accordance with brains wholly in sync with the laws of matter.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pmYou have a somewhat rare use of the word. Your version fits moral objectivist, though it is much more common to call them moral realists.
"Moral realism is the view that there are mind-independent moral facts in the universe, and people can make statements about them that are true or false. For instance, a moral realist might claim that 'killing a defenseless person is wrong' is a fact in the same way that 'two plus two sums to four' is a fact."
"Moral realists are those who think that, in these respects, things should be taken at face value—moral claims do purport to report facts and are true if they get the facts right. Moreover, they hold, at least some moral claims actually are true."
Okay, in regard to Mary and Jane and the morality of abortion [in a free will world] how might a moral realist weigh in?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
It's usually associated with Ayn Rand, that is someone who believes in what she called objectivism. I don't think that fits most of the people you label that way. Sometimes, though more rarely, it is used to mean a kind of moral realist. But it seems like it gets applied to anyone who believes anything with too much certainty to you. Even if their certainty is about deteminism or free will without focusing on moral ideas.
With Rand, it wasn't enough to be a moral Objectivist. You had to completely concur in turn with her own moral prescriptions and proscriptions. Or be "excommunicated" from the "collective". How is that different from the moral objectivists here? How is it different from BigMike's own "my way or the highway" assessment of determinism?
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
But more importantly it's just plain assumed that you must label them and in this case with a term you consider pejorative and make that clear, sometimes, by adding negative adjectives and then connecting the people you call objectivists here with gulag makers and the Taliban for no good reason.
Again, when particular moral objectivists gain power in any community, they can become a threat to those who refuse to toe their line. If that doesn't describe the moral objectivists here, that's good to know. But I can't help but wonder what my own fate would be here if some had the power to ban me. I'm still reminded of Postmodern Beatnik who "banned me for life" over at The Philosophy Forum. No warning, no nothing. Just simply flat out banned me for posting much the same as I post here.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
AND NOTE the inherent hypocrisy. You paint them as associated with what you obviously consider evil. Moral realism or what you would clal objectivism is a part of your examples of the Taliban and gulags. Your smearing them does not make sense without your clear implicit condemnation of gulag makers and the Taliban as objectively immoral. The problem with objectivists is that they include these evil people. Without that implicit objectivism, bringing up these groups you consider evil makes no sense.
This is, once again, your own description of me here. I don't call people good or evil. Either because one person's good behavior is another person's evil behavior, or because certain moral nihilists and sociopaths can rationalize any behavior in a No God world or because in a determined universe good and evil are interchangeable.
How about you? What is objectively evil? How would you demonstrate that?
Flannel Jesus asked: But I think a better concern is: why label them at all? Why use a term that is obvious a pejorative one for you, instead of simply disagreeing and challenging their justifications?
I don't agree. I am fractured and fragmented in regard to both the morality of abortion and in regard to free will.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
But that's not his point. His point is that you don't seem at all fractured and fragmented in labeling them negatively. Calling them fulminating fanatics. Associating them with people who not only is it clear you think are immoral, but who have committed what many consider to be mass scale crimes against humanity.
Back again to my own entirely existential, subjective reaction to those reacting to me...and your reaction to them. Fine, we can just agree to disagree regarding that. After all, what can we possibly know about each other such that we truly could grasp how and why we react to others as we do?
Again, for me, it comes down to how "for all practical purposes" someone has the actual capacity to harm those who refuse to share their of value judgments:
...down through history there have been any number folks [God and No God] who, once in power, acted out their own rendition of "right makes might". Think sharia law, the Inquisition, the Crusades, fascism, Communism and on and on.
For example, what would you call these folks now in power:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/20 ... e-divorce/
"Divorced and remarried, these Afghan women are outlaws under Taliban rule
Taliban law has voided thousands of divorces, experts say, and many remarried women are now considered adulterers"
Though, sure, given free will, if you deem it ridiculous to call these religious fanatics objectivists, fine. Use your own name.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
Many of them were probably (ontological) realists also - believing in an external reality. But we don't hear about fanatical fulminating realists. Some were surely dualists. But we don't hear about fanatical fulminating dualists..and so on.
Here I'll wait until I come to grasp more clearly how you distinguish between a moral objectivist and a moral realist in terms of particular contexts.
Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Sat Mar 04, 2023 11:20 pm
Perhaps you might consider that being a moral realist isn't insufficient to create mass murderers and sexist monsters. You know this in relation to nihilism and what some of those fringe versions are capable of.
Would the Taliban construe Allah as the font that makes them moral objectivists or moral realists? What "mind independent moral facts in the universe" can they provide to justify what they do?
Take this from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy...
"Moral realists have here been characterized as those who hold that moral claims purport to report facts, that they are evaluable as true or false in light of whether the facts are as the claims purport, and that at least some such claims are actually true."
...and note how it is applicable to the Taliban.