When one says “X is immoral” he is not stating his belief. He is stating a conclusion from the fact he must know what is moral given necessarily from his own constitution, which makes explicit he must know the negation of it as well. — Mww
It seems a logically coherent possibility. It just requires it to either not be recognized as valuable or always disvalued. Do you disagree? — Andrew M
It seems a logically coherent possibility. It just requires it to either not be recognized as valuable or always disvalued. Do you disagree? — Andrew M
What is it a property of/what properties is it? — Terrapin Station
The standard is necessary for us to determine whether or not the action is moral or not... that is... it is necessary for us to acquire knowledge of the morality of the action. It is not necessary for the action to be moral/immoral.
What it takes for us to acquire knowledge of what's moral is not the same as what it takes for something to be so.
Good things existed in their entirety prior to our coming to that realization. Such things are not existentially dependent upon our report/account of them. It only follows that those particular good things are not equivalent to linguistic conceptions. We can be mistaken about such things. — creativesoul
That which already exists in it's entirety prior to our account/report of it, is not existentially dependent upon our recognition of it's existence.
Goodness is one such thing. — creativesoul
The problem I see here is: imagine that something no longer exists, and was never valued while it existed, so no one knows that it ever existed. In this hypothetical scenario, could we coherently say that the thing could nonetheless have been valuable?
Or look at it another way: if to be valuable is only to be potentially valuable, even if never actually valued, then that would seem to apply, given suitable circumstances, to almost anything we could imagine. — Janus
So if the moral property/judgment/whatever-we-want-to-call-it isn't in the action itself, but requires a standard for determination, we need to ask just how/where the standard obtains. What is it a property of/what properties is it? — Terrapin Station
If I am the one who claims, and I claim it is immoral for the Engineer Tom (person B) to maintain the Empire Cascade’s speed (behavior X) approaching Lady Jane (person A) tied to the tracks up ahead, while Boris waits in the bushes for Dudley to rush to the rescue. Poor ol’ Lady Jane certainly believes it truly immoral that Tom refuses to slow down. But Tom, on the other hand, with a train full of passengers trailing behind and a 7% grade he absolutely must ascend or he will roll backwards and wind up in the river, truly believes it sucks to be Lady Jane for sure, but he isn’t about to scatter 14 cars and 67.5 people over 1/2 mile of river bed for her, so he truly believes my claim is false, that is, it is not immoral to maintain speed.
It is clear my claim for X being immoral is true relative to one ground of belief and false relative to another. — Mww
As I mentioned earlier, right or wrong is a property of human actions, the value standard is a property of human beings (certain things are universally valuable to humans) and that standard is also implicit in the action (since an action is done by human beings). — Andrew M
Even if you see green? — Banno
It doesn't make sense to feel such that you judge it to be blue, because, unlike moral judgement, that sort of judgement isn't typically made based on how we feel. That would make you very peculiar.
Your turn. 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?
Answer the question, please.
The only possible contradiction will arise when I derive congruent moral *and* immoral judgements simultaneously, which is quite impossible. But never from making a claim of morality *or* immorality with respect to observation of a determination I did not myself make. — Mww
I missed a bunch of posts, but re the above, (logically problematic) contradictions require that we're not equivocating --it needs to be the same exact claim, in the same respect, etc. that's being both asserted and denied at the same time. Different people having different beliefs is not a (logically problematic) contradiction. — Terrapin Station
In other words say the claim is "The cat is on the mat (and necessarily at time Tx, in regard y, from perspective z, etc.)" We can call that claim P.
A contradiction only obtains when we say both P and not-P. The claim, P, can't change, it can't be equivocated in any regard. We need to both assert (P) and deny (not-P) the same claim (the claim is P), at the same time, in the same regard, etc. — Terrapin Station
If someone were to come to me, in some hypothetical scenario, and tell me that what I'm seeing is not green, but red, I'd tell them that what I am seeing is green even if the nanometers of the wavelength of light happened to roughly correspond to what most people call red. — Moliere
Monetary. Alice values the ring at a few dollars but it is worth thousands. — Andrew M
Perhaps this is a difference between "in principle" and "in practice". Certainly a mountain of diamonds on a planet in another galaxy has no practical value for us.
But for a practical and potentially life-or-death example, a valuable water supply might be readily available to a community, but they never searched for it, or disvalued it when they did find it (e.g., wilfully polluted it). Thus something valuable was lost. — Andrew M
Perhaps it be better put a bit differently.
That which already exists in it's entirety prior to our account/report of it, is not existentially dependent upon our recognition of it's existence.
Goodness is one such thing. — creativesoul
Goodness is just a concept... — S
I would just add that I don't think the good is a brute fact - we can seek a deeper explanation of those good things. — Andrew M
Tom would believe as Lady Jane believes, that not slowing down would be immoral, iff he had no sufficient reason to believe something else was of greater moral import and thus made a counter-action necessary. — Mww
On the context of others and their perspectives with respect to “the good”.......under those conditions, how do we distinguish an act of morality from an act of mere civility? Even if they are both predicated on some sense of “good”, can it be the same sense of good for both? — Mww
So where do we look to check what the things are that are universally valuable to humans, where that value is independent of human opinion? — Terrapin Station
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