Well, my meta-ethical position is moral nihilism. — BrainGlitch
The charge against what you'd said was that you applied naturalistic epistemic standards in one case of a reported religious experience, but rejected naturalistic epistemic standards as insufficient for other cases, which you judged to be authentically religious. I understand what naturalistic epistemic standards are, but I don't know what standards you employed in your judgment that certain cases really are authentically religious. — BrainGlitch
This may be the case, that we can make such subjective judgements without the need for an absolute, but that's not "all that really matters". What really matters is the capacity to make objective judgements, and it is the absolute which allows such judgements to be objective rather than subjective. — Metaphysician Undercover
So take, for example, temperature. We can subjectively judge something as warm or cold, but not until we produce a scale, which is an absolute, do we have an objective judgement of temperature. Likewise with any measurement, we make a subjective judgement of big or small, but when we produce a scale, we have an absolute which acts to give us objectivity. — Metaphysician Undercover
How would you know whether one good is really higher than another, unless you assume a principle for comparison? Such a principle is an absolute, and it is the assumption of the absolute which allows you to know that one is higher than the other. Otherwise it is just your subjective opinion that one good is higher than the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
If they're authentically religious, then they're not amenable to a naturalistic explanation, right? And the example I provided was the case of the Vatican examinations of purported miracles, which proceed by attempting to discredit the miracle by providing a naturalistic explanation for it, and, only when that fails, declares that 'supernatural intervention' has occured. Now you may think Catholicism a crock, but that is not the point; these are clear cases of 'judging spiritual experiences according to both naturalistic and supernatural explanations'. — Wayfarer
Yeah, most creationists seem to subscribe to scientific realism, hence the conflict. I'm just saying it's not mandatory, and you can resolve the conflict another way - subscribing to scientific instrumentalism.
So, being a creationist you'd take religious accounts to be true/false. Whereas you wouldn't take scientific theories to be true/false descriptions of reality. Therefore there's no conflict. — dukkha
Isn't that what morality is all about, consequences? I think it would be odd to attempt to base moral principles on something other than an appeal to consequences. Don't you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Ah, OK - so it can't be an epistemic standard, because it's Catholic, and you're a nihilist, therefore it doesn't make sense!
I can follow your reasoning, but please do not condescend by saying that a perfectly sound argument is a non sequitur simply because it offends your anti-religious sensibilites. — Wayfarer
No, that isn't what really matters. It doesn't really matter if it can't be knowingly applied, and it can't be knowingly applied if all you know is that there is an absolute good, or that there is an objective standard, without knowing what it is, or how to make comparisons to it. — Sapientia
Yes, if you can produce such a scale. But that is a big if. The temperature scales we use are scientific, and, the last time I checked, ethics wasn't. So this analogy of yours only goes so far. — Sapientia
Another point is that the concept of an absolute can form part of a scale, but need not exist in actually. In fact, it can even be the case that, not only does it not actually exist, but cannot possibly exist. Consider a perfect circle, for example. Perhaps God, like a perfect circle, doesn't actually exist - even if we can use the concept as part of an objective scale. — Sapientia
And, like Brainglitch rightly noted, and which should not be glossed over, the desirability or benefit that having recourse to such a scale would bring about cannot be a reasonable basis upon which to judge the truth of a proposition. It is a known fallacy. — Sapientia
No, such a principle need not be absolute. It can be fallible. And the assumption of the absolute does not allow you to know that one is higher than the other. That would be begging the question. It only really allows you to assume that one is higher than the other. — Sapientia
Consequentialism is a normative ethical theory for determining the moral value of an act, whereas you were talking about the truth value of meta-ethical theories. — Sapientia
It's an empirical argument, because it is based on data and observations of recorded cases, over several hundred years. In each of those cases, the very same question was asked which you are asking me: is there a natural explanation for this observed apparent religious phenomenon?
So it doesn't violate any rules of logic. What it challenges is your meta-ethical nihilist sense of what is possible, because, according to you, no such thing ought to be possible. In fact you're prepared to say that without even considering the evidence — Wayfarer
There might still be a conflict of a different kind: between professed belief/disbelief and behavioural expectation. In other words, there might be a performative contradiction at play. If you believe creationism, then act like it, and if you don't believe scientific theories, then act like it. Otherwise, it is suspicious, and might understandably lead to accusations of disingenuity. — Sapientia
Each time the devil's advocate concluded that since there is no known naturalistic explanation for the healing, then the healing was a confirmed miracle, he committed the logical fallacy, becasue it does not logically follow that if we don't have a naruralistic explanation for something, then, therefore Goddidit — Brainglitch
Huh? How does that relate to what I said? Are you saying that the thermometer is useless if you don't know how to read it? I think that's kind of obvious, and it's equally obvious that ethical standards are useless if you don't know the language which they're communicated in. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see the basis of your claimed difference. Scales, codes, and rules are produced by human beings as principles to be followed. Why would you say that we should follow scientific rules, but not follow ethical rules. Your insinuation, that rules for measuring temperature are somehow better than ethical rules, because they are "scientific", doesn't make sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, the ideal, or absolute, doesn't exist in such a limited sense of the word "exist", it only exists through definition, but this doesn't make the absolute any less necessary. Pi is defined as the ratio of the circumference of the circle to the diameter of the circle. It cannot be given in its exact numerical form, because it is an irrational ratio, but that doesn't mean that it is not necessary. This point you make does nothing to deny the necessity of God. — Metaphysician Undercover
And as I replied to brainglitch, we are not judging truth here, we are judging justification, so this point is irrelevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why do you think that an absolute is necessarily infallible? That doesn't make sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
What about being absolutely fallible? — Metaphysician Undercover
But if absolutes help us reduce fallibility, why deny them? — Metaphysician Undercover
And, yes the absolute does allow you to know that one is higher than another, just like you can know that 3 is higher than 2, by means of knowing number, which is an absolute. When there is an absolute, then if any given good is described, it can be known by means of that description to be higher or lower than another described good, just like the number which is described as 3 can be known to be higher than the number described as 2. When there is an absolute, then each good receives its definition, and description as "good", by being related to the absolute, like 3 receives its definition by being related to the absolute. By your argument, the absolute of number only allows you to assume that 3 is higher than 2, and it is begging the question to say that 3 is actually higher than 2. — Metaphysician Undercover
Each time the devil's advocate concluded that since there is no known naturalistic explanation for the healing, then the healing was a confirmed miracle, he committed the logical fallacy, becasue it does not logically follow that if we don't have a naruralistic explanation for something, then, therefore [God did it]. — Brainglitch
I don't think there would be this conflict because for the scientific instrumentalist, scientific theories are simply not truth-apt. He doesn't not 'believe' in evolution because he thinks it's false, rather he doesn't believe in it because for him scientific theories are simply not the type of thing one believes (or not) in. There is no particular way the creationist here ought act in respect to what scientific theories he takes to be true or not, because for him they are not the kind of thing which are truth apt.
A tool is neither right or wrong so there can not be a contradiction with something which is. — dukkha
You have misunderstood, and then attacked your own misunderstanding. I am not saying that we should not follow ethical rules. — Sapientia
Please stop with these straw men. — Sapientia
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. — Sapientia
Justification for what?! It is just as fallacious as a justification for reasonable acceptance over an alternative, even if we put truth to one side. So, basically, if you're trying to be reasonable, then no, it isn't irrelevant at all. It is very relevant. — Sapientia
I have just suggested that there is reason to believe that in at least some cases, such as that of a perfect circle, they might not actually exist, and that the same might be true of God, if conceived of in this way. — Sapientia
I don't really care whether or not God is necessary if God is just a definition or a concept. I care whether or not God actually exists. — Sapientia
At least you're not accusing me of straw manning.
Oh, I take that back. — Metaphysician Undercover
Science is objective, and ethics is not. Could you justify that assertion? — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so explain to me, how truth, which deals with "what is", is relevant to ethics, which deals with what ought to be. — Metaphysician Undercover
All you are doing is defining "exists" in such a way that things like circles, squares, numbers, and all concepts in general, immaterial things, do not exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since God is known to have the same type of existence as these things which your definition of "exists" excludes, i.e. immaterial things like concepts, then I think it is quite clear that God does not exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
That is, unless you are ready to change your definition of "exists", to allow that things like circles, squares, numbers, and other concepts actually exist. If you're ready to change your definition of existence, then the question of whether God actually exists might become meaningful. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. If not science, then what else? Because human judgement varies considerably on this, unlike with regards to temperature via temperature scales. A 'moral scale' equivalent to, or even comparable to, the temperature scales that we use has not, to my knowledge, been produced — Sapientia
As I just said, I don't think we were discussing truth values at all. This claim of "truth value" is a diversion from the subject. — Metaphysician Undercover
But I think the issue is whether or not there is an absolute good, not exactly what such a good would be. If we are of the opinion that there is an absolute good, we can forever seek higher goods, always in pursuit of that absolute good. But if we are of the opinion that there is no absolute good, then the good determined today, or yesterday, as the highest good, might be continually forced upon us, into the future, as the highest good, denying the possibility that we could discover higher goods, And if we allow that there are higher goods, how would we create any hierarchical system without any direction toward an assumed absolute good? — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, so explain to me, how truth, which deals with "what is", is relevant to ethics, which deals with what ought to be. — Metaphysician Undercover
If that means that I won't have to read any more of your ad hoc hypotheses to prevent your failing explanations from being falsified, then good riddance.You don't seem to have the slightest familiarity with the discipline of philosophy, otherwise you would understand that the concept of 'uncreated creator' has been part of the subject for millennia. You will understand why I'm no longer going to reply to your posts. — Wayfarer
You don't seem to have the slightest familiarity with the discipline of philosophy, otherwise you would understand that the concept of identity has been part of the subject for millennia. You will understand why I'm no longer going to reply to your posts.
Miracles and magic are entirely possible, but they are always only "nature": the world acting how it does. What logically follows is that if a "naturalistic"explanation is not accurate (e.g. it's a hallucination), then a different "naturalistic" explanation will be (e.g. an experience which is an ad hoc reduction of the world to a concept of "God," an entity of God speaking to someone, etc., etc.).
You see?! You've just done it again! Why would you ask me to justify an assertion that I haven't made? — Sapientia
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. — Sapientia
Let's take a look, for example, at the first post of yours that I replied to, which began our discussion: — Sapientia
Now, let's compare that to your own claim about what truth deals with: — Sapientia
Furthermore, I already said that this criticism about appealing to the consequences stands - even if it isn't about truth, but instead about a reasonable means of accepting one over the other, in the meta-ethical context of our discussion - but you haven't addressed this counter point. Either your intention is to be reasonable, in which case you would have failed, or your intention is not to be reasonable, but instead go with whichever one you prefer based on how appealing you find the consequences, which you're free to do, but which would be no good reason for any reasonable person to do likewise. — Sapientia
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. — Sapientia
I don't see how truth is related to goods. — Metaphysician Undiscovered
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