But if, as the moral anti-realist claims, value is entirely a mental illusion... — darthbarracuda
I think that the answer to this would be that this kind of behavior requires an element of counterfactual fiction. If we both believe in the same basic principles (such as the value of pleasure, the disvalue of pain, the power of logic, and the susceptibility of moral claims to logical analysis), then we can dismiss wrong beliefs as wrong within the fictional framework. We have to pretend that our normative beliefs correspond to reality, as if objective morality is actually there.
Yet anti-realism denies the existence of morals independent of our minds - there is no correspondence to some actual moral property. — darthbarracuda
This of course has a surface of dualism to it, which may or may not be sustained under further development. Where does the mind end and the rest of the world begin? — darthbarracuda
At what point does something become moral within a mind? More importantly, why does something become moral in the mind, and why does this morality not correspond to the world in some way?
Other answers would likely try to criticize any apparent teleology in the world:
The latter argument is definitely dualistic in the sense that only the mind has value,
So, if we're moral anti-realists, does this change how we do ethics?
When we do substantial normative ethics, we seem to operate under the belief that further moral beliefs can be right or wrong.
Even a non-cognitivist, who ultimately believes that moral beliefs have no truth-aptness, still would operate under a kind of fictional representation of morality - i.e. an as if belief, as if morality was actually objective (but really it isn't).
I believe it was Moore who argued that no matter the reality of morality, we still have to make decisions. The moral nihilist doesn't suddenly just not make decisions - anyone of sound mind clearly makes rational and articulated decisions, based upon what is perceived as value:
For example, surely anyone would pick a world in which the population is happy vs a world in which the population is sad.
There's an implied value to this comparison that allows us to make a decision.
But if, as the moral anti-realist claims, value is entirely a mental illusion,
how could we possibly come to a conclusion on a normative problem, except by pragmatic necessities?
How are we able to condemn other people for being immoral, or affirm the value of our own personal moral beliefs?
I think that the answer to this would be that this kind of behavior requires an element of counterfactual fiction. If we both believe in the same basic principles (such as the value of pleasure, the disvalue of pain, the power of logic, and the susceptibility of moral claims to logical analysis), then we can dismiss wrong beliefs as wrong within the fictional framework.
We have to pretend that our normative beliefs correspond to reality, as if objective morality is actually there.
Without this framework, anti-realist normative debates would seem to be destined to be quite short indeed, as there would be no way to legitimately evaluate two different claims.
True, however in many (or most) normative ethical debates, there are appeals to things outside of our minds, like states of affairs or persons or whatnot. How do cognitivist anti-realists decide what interpretation of the data is right without pretending there is value in the external world? — darthbarracuda
So how are anti-realist statements ever truth apt? — darthbarracuda
If there is no correspondence to some actual moral property in the world external to our minds, the what does the statement correspond to which could make it true or false?
That is why I said anti-realist normative debates would seem to require some element of fiction or as if discussion.
I don't think feelings are illogical. That would suggest that they are in conflict with logic. Hume demonstrated convincingly (to me, at least) that there cannot be a conflict between logic and feeling, as logic is the servant of feeling and has no values of its own to set in opposition to the values inherent in one's feelings.if feelings are notoriously illogical — darthbarracuda
In moral reflection, one can use logic to work out the best way to satisfy one's moral feelings. — andrewk
This sounds simply to me like you're coming from a perspective of seeing, or having previously seen, at least aspects of ethics/morality as objective, and from under that ideological umbrella, you're trying to understand anti-realism/subjectivism/noncognitivism.What worries me with some forms of anti-realism is that we seem to (or at least I do) find many normative beliefs to be true, and true in virtue of something external to our minds, i.e. an objective aspect of reality. But if we come to the conclusion that there nothing external to us is actually moral, or actually valuable, outside of our projections on them, then that seems to dampen our commitment to these beliefs. If there really is no difference between A and B besides how I feel about A and B, and if how I feel about A and B is at least in part dependent on my belief that A and B are objectively valuable, then my belief that A and B are not objectively valuable is incompatible with the belief that A and B are, which in turn threatens the motivational aspect of morality in general. — darthbarracuda
Which, of course, makes it mind-dependent.I think anti-realism would be better expressed as 'a matter of individual judgement or opinion'. — Wayfarer
If they're mind-dependent, and we're defining "real" as "not mind dependent," then they wouldn't be real. That's fairly simple, no? It's just a matter of how we're defining "real." Typically in philosophical discussions realism/anti-realism is the distinction of mind-independent/mind-dependent, where using the term that way stems from scholasticism by way of platonic ideas about the "real."The expression 'external to our minds' is problematical, as (for example) language, logic, and indeed philosophy are in an important sense 'mind dependent' but are no less real for that.
If they're mind-dependent, and we're defining "real" as "not mind dependent," then they wouldn't be real. That's fairly simple, no? It's just a matter of how we're defining "real." — Terrapin_Station
has no real sense in such a standpoint.Where does the mind end and the rest of the world begin? — darthbarracuda
would, I guess, be answered by the anti-realist in terms of the mere relativism of doxa. Thus something does not "become moral, but is merely thought to become moral. And no morality corresponds to the world or anything in the world because there is no world but only the idea of a world. So, there is only the idea of morality and the idea of a world. And an idea of morality may correspond to an idea of the world; there would seem to be no mystery in what is merely a matter of stipulation for the anti-realist.At what point does something become moral within a mind? More importantly, why does something become moral in the mind, and why does this morality not correspond to the world in some way? — darthbarracuda
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