Being subjective is dependent upon thought/belief. — Mww
Us evaluating something and us valuing something, our personal perspectives, our perceptions, etc. aren't properties of the action itself. If the moral property is a property of the action itself, it has to be in the action itself whether anyone evaluates or values anything at all. — Terrapin Station
That question seems to raise others:
What is meant by "valuable" in the context of the question? If to be valuable does not entail actually being valued, then does it at least entail the potential to be valued? And then, valued by whom, by how many and so on? — Janus
What scientific test can be performed to determine whether something is immoral, if I don't feel such that I judge it to be immoral? Immoral as per what's customary or popular? Sure. A survey could be conducted, I suppose. An anthropologist could conduct research. It'd be immoral relative to what's customary or popular, but not relative to my judgement. I'm okay with that. — S
So the issue is that we can fail to value what is valuable. For example, Alice owns a diamond ring but thinks it is cubic zirconia. — Andrew M
What scientific test can be performed to determine whether something is blue, if I don't feel such that I judge it to be blue? — Banno
Similarly if human life and well-being is valuable independently of being valued then actions can be morally right or wrong. — Andrew M
Well it's quite like my showing you a blue cup and you saying "But where is your evidence that it is blue?" — Banno
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?
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
Who said anything about 'moral properties'? — creativesoul
Really now. So you don't believe what you write? — creativesoul
Not that moral utterances are really beliefs about something else (something external to the individual in question) anyway, and they're not true or false. — Terrapin Station
but re the above, (logically problematic) contradictions — Terrapin Station
So the issue is that we can fail to value what is valuable. For example, Alice owns a diamond ring but thinks it is cubic zirconia.
— Andrew M
Valuable in what sense? — S
You're supposed to be telling me how the action itself has moral value. — Terrapin Station
An action is right or wrong if there is a natural standard of value that it is measured against. I've specified what I think that standard is. — Andrew M
So Joe's action can be measured against the value standard applicable to human beings. Whether his action is moral or not is a logical consequence of applying that standard. — Andrew M
Even if you see green? — Banno
You just agreed that the standard is not in the action itself.
If the standard is necessary for determining whether the action is moral or not, then the action being moral or not is not in the action itself. — Terrapin Station
But could something be valuable if it was never valued in the past, is not valued now, and will never come to be valued in the future? — Janus
it needs to be the same exact claim, in the same respect, etc. that's being both asserted and denied at the same time — Terrapin Station
You just agreed that the standard is not in the action itself.
If the standard is necessary for determining whether the action is moral or not, then the action being moral or not is not in the action itself.
— Terrapin Station
Fair enough. — Andrew M
It is clear my claim for X being immoral is true relative to one ground of belief and false relative to another. — Mww
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