I don't either. Rather it's the complete lack of evidence of any other relevant phenomena that means that the preferences are all that's going on. — Terrapin Station
What type of 'society' could you and I build where you may have your way and where I must agree to it, or not? — gloaming
I don't see how you can resolve a moral dispute by preferences because then that ends up as morality by brute force or survival of the fittest. — Andrew4Handel
Is it not based then on preexisting moral ideas. — Andrew4Handel
I think a possible difference between preference and morality is that you could change someones moral ideas by argument but you are unlikely to change someones dislike of pork or their sexuality through argument. — Andrew4Handel
Sorry, were you the person I was talking to about the hammer?
I think you are right in noticing preference is often soley present, but I think there are also instances where there is objective utility as well. A ball is objectively good at rolling, as opposed to a box. Whether a preference for rolling exists or not, whether a mind is there to categorise/notice or not, the ball still rolls and the box does not.
It doesnt seem like your view here is accepting there are exceptions to your observation about the presence of preference. — DingoJones
whether a mind is there to categorise/notice or not, the ball still rolls and the box does not. — DingoJones
Let me just clarify, first, what an example would be in your view of resolving a moral dispute? — Terrapin Station
What I was getting at is that we're naming a limited set of things "morality," and one of the criteria for limiting the set there is that we're talking about interpersonal behavior. — Terrapin Station
I see, using “good” differently. I had in mind something like “well suited”. — DingoJones
All morality depends on action. — Hallucinogen
Morality can mean and probably usually means not acting. — Andrew4Handel
I would say that the word "moral" means "feels good" or "will lead to feeling good" in however many ways you can fathom it, and "immoral" means "causes pain". So the very dichotomy comes from the dichotomy of the pleasure-pain axis. — Hallucinogen
Say that you have two ball-like objects.
One is so round, so smooth, with so little friction, that we can just tap it lightly and it will roll for a mile.
The other is so bumpy, with so much friction, that it takes a tremendous amount of effort to roll at all. It will roll, but it takes a lot of force to barely get one revolution out of it.
Which one is more "well-suited" to roll? — Terrapin Station
The one that has the most traits that are well suited to rolling. In your example it sounds like the smooth, mile rolling one. These traits are mind independent. — DingoJones
Okay, so the next question is, why is rolling via less force, further, with less friction, more distance etc. "more well-suited to rolling"? You're claiming that's objectively the case. What makes rolling via less force, etc. the "well-suited" rolling versus rolling via more force, less distance, etc.? — Terrapin Station
However, “rolling” is something that happens objectively, and however you define the term “rolling” there are going to be traits better suited to it — DingoJones
Hence me asking why is rolling via less force, further, with less friction, more distance etc. "more well-suited to rolling" versus rolling via more force, less distance, etc.? What's the answer to that? — Terrapin Station
I need to know what you mean by “rolling”. — DingoJones
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