"X is immoral" is false if... — creativesoul
Do you hold that "X is immoral" can be true/false?
— creativesoul
...Yes, I do, in the sense I think is the best way forward for ethics, which is the moral relativism sense... — S
"X is immoral relative to A" is true if X is immoral relative to A, and false otherwise.
But that's obvious. — S
I don’t think belief has anything to do with morality to begin with — Mww
...morality can indeed be conceptually reduced further than mere belief. — Mww
"X is immoral" is not equivalent to "X is immoral relative to A".
You've answered how the second could be false.
The first?
Answer?
On your view, because it is the one being discussed, remember? — creativesoul
I see an issue, in the construction of the argument. I don’t think belief has anything to do with morality to begin with. To say as much is to say a false morality is possible if derived from a false belief, which just doesn’t make any sense to me. — Mww
Carne Asada can be conceptually reducible no further than beef; morality can indeed be conceptually reduced further than mere belief.
Acceptable/unacceptable behavior needs be no further reducible than to civil norms; morality must be reduced further than mere civil norms. — Mww
Again, I do not see what's so funny. — creativesoul
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
It's a yes or no question, that I would like to read. Care to answer it?
— creativesoul
Are you trying to be funny? It is an inappropriate question, so no. Clarify first, then we take it from there.
— S
Can "X is immoral" be true/false?
— creativesoul
I made a comment somewhere about moral feelings, because no one seems to attribute any important, or even relevance, to them. I’m not sure about reducible to, but they have to be accounted for somehow because they can be said to exist in a moral system. Feelings are not cognitions but only responses to them and then only varying degrees of pain or pleasure. We can’t have our morality predicated on pain or pleasure. — Mww
Is your priority getting truth and falsity from moral statements? Then I offer up moral relativism to you. It becomes more about what best suits you or I or him or her, rather than what's the case. I think they call this pragmatism. — S
The astute reader will note the conflation of truth and belief here. That is exactly what I charged moral relativism with. That charge is exactly what began this 'exchange' between S and I.
Seems I understood it a bit better than some gave me credit for. — creativesoul
Is your priority getting truth and falsity from moral statements? Then I offer up moral relativism to you. It becomes more about what best suits you or I or him or her, rather than what's the case. I think they call this pragmatism. — S
You know, Hume, 1740, insists our morality is based on emotion not reason. Slave of the passions and all that. Kant 1788, on the other hand....what else....insists the opposite.
But I will grant emotive moral statements are better than empty ones. — Mww
I know people attribute their morality to what they believe. I know I have no such inclination, because belief, while subjectively sufficient, has no objective validity, which is exactly what morality demands. — Mww
The above can besimplified... — creativesoul
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