The second trap is the naturalistic fallacy , (which is the inverse of the moralistic fallacy), which assumes that what is natural must be moral or desired. The naturalistic fallacy is the idea that what is found in nature is good. It was the basis for social Darwinism, the belief that helping the poor and sick would get in the way of evolution,.. — Matias
Basically we desire to be better people. Even those that believe there is no ‘better’ deem such a position ‘better’; even if due to ignorance of ignorance.
A baby can learn to walk. We struggle onward - seems dumb not to doesn’t it? Who am I to say though, a conceit unto myself! — I like sushi
Even those that believe there is no ‘better’ deem such a position ‘better’; — I like sushi
This a but a variation of a theme consistent with many of your posts. I should like you to define your terms so that your claim makes sense. I think it doesn't, and you can't.There is no objective "better," — Terrapin Station
In order for your claim to be true it seems to me it must be that there is no "objective." As to "better," if there is a better, it must have some basis for being better. But I think you deny the basis, and thus the better.
The only defense of your position that I can see lies in your denying even the possibility of the proposition - which is just smashing the pottery and then claiming there is no pottery. — tim wood
It's very simple. "Better" is a judgment of preference, or a valuation of two or more different things being compared, where one (or more) of the different things is valued more than the others.
That judgment, that valuation (or indeed any judgment or valuation), does not occur in the world outside of minds. — Terrapin Station
But do the things judged?
I acknowledge that inasmuch as a judgment requires a mind, then absent mind there is no judgment. Is that your criteria for "objective," that to be objective it must be absent mind? — tim wood
Subjective/objective are location terms. Objective things occur in locations other than minds (that is, locations other than brains functioning in mental ways).
The hammer the clerk shows you is objective. The location of it is not a brain functioning in a mental way. The location is the hardware store). The hammer, all of its properties, etc. are objective. The judgment whether it's useful, whether it's a better tool whatever job you have in mind (than other possible tools), etc. are subjective. The location of those judgments is a brain functioning as a mind.
The distinction is a lot like saying whether things are inside or outside of a refrigerator, a cabinet, etc. — Terrapin Station
Perhaps we should discriminate between the activity of judging and the content/substance of the judgment. The activity in every case belongs to and comes from the mind that makes it - the actor. But the judgment as judgment - even the word is suggestive - judges. What does it mean to judge? I offer, to assess according to some appropriate criteria. Even "appropriate" suggests something "outside."
Maybe less absurdly and more simply, 2+2=4, as a judgment, is always already in the mind that thinks it. But, it is not true just because it is thought; rather, as a theorem of a system of reasoning, arithmetic, it is true in virtue of the criteria of that system. The mind that judges, then, merely records what is an objective fact. The fact objective, the recording subjective. So far so good? — tim wood
If you're merely recording an objective fact, then there needs to be an objective judgment, right? Otherwise you're not merely recording an objective fact, but you're doing something unique, something not found in the extramental world with respect to objective facts. — Terrapin Station
I agree. If you and I and a bunch of other folks agree on something, then either there's something "out there" we agree upon, or there's a coincidence. Too many agreements for coincidence. — tim wood
So if you believe there are objective judgments, what is any evidence for them? — Terrapin Station
Before we go there, consider whether it may become a disagreement over how this or that is defined or understood: are you interested in digging through that layer? — tim wood
I use "subjective" to refer to mental phenomena (which again, in my view is a brain functioning in mental ways).
"Objective" is the complement of that ("complement" in the set theory sense). So everything that's not in the set of mental phenomena (that is, in the set of brains functioning in mental ways). — Terrapin Station
Allow me to attack it: How do you know the difference between subjective and objective? — tim wood
There is no objective "better," — Terrapin Station
If you like - but it does not follow that one thing is not better than another. — Banno
You really are stuck on that objective - subjective hangup. — Banno
You observe the external brick. — Terrapin Station
Just when people say wonky things in relation to it. And they often do. It's one of the more common confusions. — Terrapin Station
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