Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2023 9:00 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2023 7:57 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2023 6:41 pm
Neither is right nor wrong objectively, but both could be either in the eyes of different people.
That answer won't work when you are neighbours...as really, you now are. Rotherham's in the UK.
What do you mean, it won't work? I am not offering a solution to anything, I'm just saying how it is.
And what is this obsession you have with bloody Rotherham?
"Obsession"?

Seriously, dude.
Hey, they're your countrymen. It's your country. You decide what laws should pertain.
No the point is simple: there are different opinions about what morality should be; but the days when an Englishman could sit smugly in his cottage and imagine that these different opinions would stay on their own shores are long gone. Now they come as near as Rotherham, or Birmingham, or Manchester, or Bradford...coming soon to your neighbourhood.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:It does not tell us there is no obective moral truth, I admit, but it does show that moral issues are dealt with subjectively.
Not even that much: it only shows that some people TRY to deal with moral issues subjectively. But since they always fail, that's too low a bar to accept.
I am saying what I think morality is, and you are talking about what it ideally should be.
Actually, you're talking about what morality can never be...private, solipsistic and subjective. Whatever that is, it ain't morality.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote: Different people make different moral judgements on a given issue, so how can you deny that those people are exercising their own subjective morality?
Some do. I don't deny that they do it. I just say that the fact that they do it, if they do, is trivial. The real question is, "Are they right to do that?"
Are they right in whose opinion?
Objectively.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:But there is no God.

What's your evidence for that?
I am not going to be swayed by any moral argument because someone claims it has the backing of God, because I don't believe there is a God. So it isn't my job to provide evidence, it is the job of anyone who wants me to change my mind.
But you say you can't premise morality on God because "there's no God." If you can't substantiate that defense, then your defense falls.
I think the rapist is wrong, you think the rapist is wrong, but the rapist doesn't think he is wrong.
So what makes us right, and him wrong? If the answer is "nothing," then watch out for your daughter.
IC wrote:Harbal wrote:That's a poor analogy. What if the court gets it wrong? And the court has men in uniforms on hand to enforce the sentence, so the criminal can be observed having no say in the matter; whereas no such enforcers are likely to turn up just because you say I have commited a crime against God's moral law.
We'll see, of course.
What sort of argument is, "We'll see"? In order to accept something I consider to be unbelievable, I'm going to need more than, "We'll see", as persuasion.
God's moral law will be enforced. If you don't think so, just wait and see. I can't convince you against your will to be convinced.
IC wrote:Ah. Then analytically speaking, you're not talking about "morality" at all. One of the most fundamental features of morality is that it governs relationships between people: your view stops short of being able to do that.
What on earth are you talking about?
This has never occurred to you? Well, let me help you out, then.
Take a basic precept like, "Thou shalt not steal." Is that just for you? Or just you and the missus? Or is it for your neighbour, too, and for his wife and kids? Is it for your mortgage lender? Is it for your credit card company? Your landlord? The justice system? The housebreaker scoping out your neighbourhood...
Do you see the problem, yet? If its just for you, it doesn't do anything at all, except amount to a gratuitous limitation you're putting on yourself. It won't help establsh a community, inform a justice system, secure your possessions, or even provide protocols for treating each other well. And it will never constitute evidence of you being a "good" person, because there's no common standard that anybody else has to accept in assessing your moral standing. So all you know is that you are self-pleasing. But that's as far as it can go, unless there's some external standard you're actually up to.
IC wrote:Well, because the phrase "every bit as good" is what we call a "comparative." It compares two things, in relation to a common moral standard. In other words, if you don't think his view is both "as good" and "as bad" as yours...in other words, just an indifferent matter...then you're summoning him to a standard...which as a subjectivist, you have to believe is nothing but a figment in your own mind.
There is no common moral standard if we disagree.
Then you cannot ever call your morality "every bit as good" as his. Because it's not comparable by any criteria. He has his view, and you have yours; that's all that can be said. Niether is ever "better" or "worse," or "equal" either -- they're just different. And according to subjectivism, "Thou shalt not rape" is neither better nor worse than "Thou shalt rape thy neighbour."