CIN wrote: ↑Sun Jul 16, 2023 5:28 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Jul 16, 2023 2:04 pm
Nor am I saying that I think the word "wrong" itself has no meaning -- because under objectivism, it certainly does, and I've said already what meaning I believe we should want to associate with it.
I've only just joined this discussion. Could you repeat what meaning you said 'wrong' has, or link to where you said it?
Sure.
To catch you up a bit, I'm an objectivist, myself. And I'm a Christian. That means I ground morality in
the nature, character and revealed will of God, who is the Supreme Being and the grounds of reality of all things. So that's the short answer to your question. That's what makes things "right" or "wrong."
Now, perhaps you get that, and perhaps you have a different view. But this you would have to recognize rationally, either way: that IF what I was saying WERE true, then I would have adequate grounds for objective morality. You may, of course, reserve the right to insist that I am simply wrong about the existence of God; but if I were right, I would be grounding morality in the only Source adequate to the task. That's obvious, I'm sure; because what would be a higher referent than that?
Clear enough?
I'm saying IF ONE THINKS AS A SUBJECTIVIST then one cannot simply invoke the word "wrong" and run away as if one has said something. One has not.
Given subjectivism, and thinking as if one were a subjectivist only, there is no
objective meaning to the word "wrong," --- and that's by definition of "subjectivism," so that
has to be the case for any subjectivist. In subjectivist parlance, the word "wrong" then becomes nothing but a placeholder, and "X." It has no known or justified content.
Consequently, if one predicates "wrong" of "killing," one is (according to subjectivism), saying nothing more than "killing is X." In other words, one has said nothing specific at all.
What I simply would like to know from Flash is, what is the "X" is that Flash is wanting to predicate. His/her usage of "wrong" as if it means something is denied by subjectivism itself. It means "X." No more. (That is, it means "X" to subjectivists.)
But one can't say, "I don't want you to kill because of X." One can say, "I don't want you to kill
because it causes pain," or "I don't want you to kill
because it makes me feel bad." (People may not have sufficient reason to agree, but at least they know what you're trying to say.) But as a subjectivist, you can't just say, "Killing is
wrong," because "wrong" does not have any specific meaning.
All I want Flash to do is to fill out "X," to say what it is actually supposed (by Flash) to convey to us. Because right now, by way of subjectivism, it means nothing at all.
As I think Flash keeps telling you, none of this is true of an error theorist, and since an error theorist is a subjectivist, you should stop implying that this is true of all subjectivists.
Well, Flash would then be wrong.
Flash would, once again, be mistaking epistemology for ontology...or in this case, for morality...if Flash appealed to error theory. For
what people know about what exists (epistemology) does not change what acutally
does exist (ontology). Gravity existed before people ever thought of it. America existed even before its discovery by aboriginals migrating across the alleged land bridge. Early man's errors about the edge of the world didn't make the world flat.
In short, things that exist do not depend for their existence on the fallible judgments of mankind. And if morality exists as an ontological reality, which I insist it does, then Flash's resort to noting errors, Mackie style, doesn't add any light to the question at all. Flash has simply misunderstood the problem, not answered it.
And Flash also cannot provide a single syllogism rationalizing any moral precept, apparently, without resorting to taking objectivism for granted by gratuitiously pulling in a term from objectivism, like "wrong."
What Flash is going to have to say is that morality's not worth thinking about because it's a delusion, or to put it more awkwardly, merely a sociological phenomenon that is utterly uncorresponding to any values inhering in reality. But this is a gratuitious assumption that Flash has not demonstrated in any way at all.
In appealing to error theory, therefore, Flash is making yet another erroneous assumption.