So X's being wrong is determined solely by virtue of being contrary to one's belief.
:yikes:
If that were the case no one could ever be wrong, and everybody would be wrong all at the same time, in the same sense, and by the very same standard.
Moral relativism conflates belief and truth. — creativesoul
You are aware that this is not the open question mentioned in the title, which is an argument against naturalist ethics presented by Moore?
Though it worth asking. — Banno
The Open Question argument claims to show that being good is indefinable - what he would have called a simple, but what we might be more inclined to call fundamental. — Banno
What's the difference between believing that X is immoral, and X being immoral? — creativesoul
"X is immoral".
Person A agrees. Person B does not.
According to S, neither person can be mistaken. That would require the statement to be both true and false at the same time. True for person A. False for person B.
Clearly that cannot be the case.
The problem is a conflation of truth and belief. More precisely, a conflation between truth conditions and belief conditions. — creativesoul
But a moral relativist has to ask that question. They do not accept a simple, absolute "wrong".
If someone can't understand that, then they'll never understand moral relativism. This is the fundamental basis of moral relativism. — S
All you've done is overstate the case regarding the fact that different people have different moral belief.
So what?
Yes, person A holds that behaviour X is immoral. Person B disagrees.
When person A says "X is immoral" they are stating their belief. When person B says "X is moral" they are stating theirs. The two contradict one another.
So what? — creativesoul
That's never been a problem. It's a problem if one claims that "X is immoral" is both true (relative to person A's belief) and false (relative to person B's). — creativesoul
Well it's quite like my showing you a blue cup and you saying "But where is your evidence that it is blue?"
What your request has shown is that you either are blind or do not understand what blue is.
But you don't see this, it seems, and hence you have missed the rather good discussion going on around you in this thread an the language of morality thread.
So be it. — Banno
All you've done is overstate the case regarding the fact that different people have different moral belief.
So what?
Yes, person A holds that behaviour X is immoral. Person B disagrees.
When person A says "X is immoral" they are stating their belief. When person B says "X is moral" they are stating theirs. The two contradict one another.
So what?
— creativesoul
Indeed, so what? I have no problem with that. I have a problem when someone suggests that there's an objective correct or incorrect, because I don't see sufficient evidence supporting that. — S
That's never been a problem. It's a problem if one claims that "X is immoral" is both true(relative to person A's belief) and false(relative to person B's).
— creativesoul
It's not a problem, because it's not a contradiction, and I'm done trying to get you to understand what a contradiction requires and why that doesn't count. Putting a relevant distinction in brackets does nothing at all. They're not the same. End of — S
We are talking about morality. Thus, it should be obvious that when someone says "X is wrong", the sense of the term wrong is a moral one... equivalent to unacceptable, for all morality is about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour.
Acceptable is good/moral and unacceptable is bad/immoral... — creativesoul
Are you claiming that "X is immoral" can be true/false as a result of agreeing with a person's moral belief? — creativesoul
We are talking about morality. Thus, it should be obvious that when someone says "X is wrong", the sense of the term wrong is a moral one... equivalent to unacceptable, for all morality is about acceptable/unacceptable behaviour.
Acceptable is good/moral and unacceptable is bad/immoral...
— creativesoul
What is your problem? Someone says "X is wrong". Okay. Under subjective moral relativism, that's false or at least unwarranted if interpreted as per moral objectivism, which is the interpretation which you seem to be stuck on.
Problem resolved. — S
Are you claiming that "X is immoral" can be true/false as a result of agreeing with a person's moral belief?
— creativesoul
Aren't you reading what I'm saying about "X is immoral" for the position of moral relativism? — S
My problem is that you do not seem to understand that "X is immoral" is a statement of moral belief, regardless of one's moral philosophy. In all cases, X is believed to be unacceptable behaviour. — creativesoul
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