Harbal wrote: ↑Tue May 07, 2024 1:54 pm
Skepdick wrote: ↑Tue May 07, 2024 1:49 pm
Harbal wrote: ↑Tue May 07, 2024 1:43 pm
As far as I am concerned, "objectively moral", is a contradiction in terms.
Objectivity is the default position. Everything's objective.
My desires. Your desires. The fact that your desires conflict with my desires.
Objective facts everywhere.
There's no contradiction until you make up the notion of "subjectivity".
I have said all along that the terms, "objective" and "subjective", and the various interpretations of them, are what is causing the main problem here. But those terms are in the thread title, so I am just trying to work with them as best I can. And you are not helping.
The terms are quite harmless and fairly straight forward, the problem lies elsewhere. In reality it is the people unironically trying to have their own special version of what objectivity means who are continually muddying those waters.
If a piece of information, or some declaration, or some claim, is objective, you can check it for truth or falsehood by looking at something which is available for other people to also check. If a claim is subjective, you cannot check it against anything, and that subsequently brings into question whther it can have a truth value at all. But it's the external property that makes it the objective thing.
If the claim is that "Paris is further away from London than from San Francisco", we can check navigational charts, Google Earth, and the ticket office at St Pancras International train station, all of which sources will confirm that it is an objectively untrue claim. But if we choose to distrust those sources and do our own research, this is something that we can do. That is true because the distance between two objects is an objective thing, if I look at the distance between those two things, and you look at the distance between those two things, we are both looking at the same thing, give or take some quibbling about which bit of Paris to measure against which bit of San Francisco, and whether to measure round or through the globe etc.
If the claim is "Paris is better than San Francisco, but not as good as London", that is subjective. If I, a londoner who gets confused by all that green stuff beyond the M25, look at what I mean by the betterness of London, and you look at your Yorkshireman view of the 'betterness' of that same place, we are not looking at the same thing, nor could we ever under any circumstance do so. My aesthetic experiences are private and internal, so are yours, we cannot look at the same thing, so we cannot find any meaningful way to measure.
People here keep confusing magnitude for type and it's this slovenliness that gets them into a state of confusion. Phyllo is just the latest in a long line of them with VA at the front of the queue. The fact that everyone agrees that Paris is smelly cannot make it and objective fact, it just makes it a commonly held subjective belief. This is because the difference is of type, specifically the location of the properties under consideration.