Are you saying that social behavior has nothing to do with the mental or that cultural attitudes have no actuality? — Janus
Inter-subjectively shared attitudes to murder, rape etc. are not merely a matter of 'popular opinion', they are matters of life and death for communities and the individuals who comprise them. — Janus
A community is obviously not an "extramental world" ( whatever that could even be!) — Janus
yet there are obviously objective facts about whether it is healthy. thrives and so on. — Janus
There is obviously an objective 'what is the case' when it comes to what is good for community, — Janus
It would be absurd to claim that these acts could be generally approved — Janus
You do understand that wrong-to-you and wrong are two different things, that murder-to-you is not the same as murder, yes? And again you confirm that to you, and presumably to your fellow relativists,murder is not wrong! — tim wood
Is murder wrong? — tim wood
I understand that you're wrong. — NKBJ
Does your answer mean that the murder that murderers do is wrong? — tim wood
Great! What wrong does the murderer do, by your lights? — tim wood
Here:
You can't write a book about the moon and actually be writing about WW2.
— NKBJ
You can't per whom? It's up to individuals to decide. There's nothing that would prohibit anyone from any interpretation should they have it. — Terrapin Station
It would be nice if you could stop contradicting yourself. But then you couldn't make your argument, so I guess I understand why you feel compelled to do so. — NKBJ
You want it both ways, Terrapin. But it doesn't work that way. You can't both say that an interpretation is about something and then say it doesn't have to be about that thing. — NKBJ
You can't write a book about the moon and actually be writing about WW2. — NKBJ
My point is, or at least my question: does a realisation of the absurd not constantly dampen our instinct to feel? Our thoughts inform our feelings and if our thoughts negate the inclination towards meaning then what is the result? Apathy. — Edward
But why do you think you weren't satisfied with initial answers? — Edward
Well, then you DO think that interpretations are bound to the actual words on the page. — NKBJ
No one lives like this though (or at least very few). You're mixing theoretical philosophical debate with practical social existence. Everyone does agree that, for society, we should not murder. No one debates this in government. — Edward
I guess, if this was condensed into a single question:
How does one reconcile being human and emotional with being in a relative and free world, while feeling authentic and self-realised? — Edward
who have made it explicitly clear that while they, personally, are not inclined to murder you, still though they deny that the murderer does wrong. — tim wood
It's the difference between being called "good" and being so, and we can most certainly be mistaken in that regard. — creativesoul
Like everyone else in the world I've given this some thought. For the most part, what we consider right and wrong is considered wrong for a reason. Many moral questions are surrounding the topic of sex, incest is considered immoral due to it corrupting the gene pool and homosexual relations are often deemed undesirable due to its inability to produce offspring, much like most Christian views on pornography, essentially any discharge not for the purpose of reproduction is considered wrong or a sin. Many other moral questions go fairly without saying such as not murdering your fellow man and not stealing. The way I see it, morality is a concept that exists to protect humanity from itself. Without morality and a sense of right and wrong, the human race would collapse in a matter of days. — nsmith
All rules of acceptable/unacceptable behaviour are first adopted via language acquisition. — creativesoul
Well, you haven't said why that is, not that I'm particularly interested. — S
Or, in other words : How can the outside logically be considered possible when your subjective viewpoint always comes first and is technically subjectively created? What gives the possibility of the outside world possibly being real valid credibility? — gsky1
