But all of this is predicated on a desire to promote human flourishing in a context of social harmony, so again we can say 'If we want to promote human flourishing in a context of social harmony then we should value some acts and dis-value others, and cal the former morally correct and the latter morally incorrect. There is no contradiction then if others who do not value social harmony do not agree with our moral assessments, even though it certainly seems to be the case that the vast majority of people will agree that social harmony is of primary importance. — Janus
Thanks. We do seem to share a position, or at least they're very close...
Goodness is not a fact on my view either. Rather it is something discovered and aspired towards. — creativesoul
Your talk of a "natural" standard here is obviously inappropriate, as it is the opposite of that. It is an artificial standard. — S
Oh dear. What's he gone and done this time? First that thing with the bus, now he's been messing with trains. I predict that Theresa will make him the new Transport Secretary once failing Grayling has been given the boot. — S
Consistently acting on those values erodes or destroys the social foundation on which any values at all can be pursued including their own. Which is to say, it is parasitical on what is truly valuable. — Andrew M
Yup. You're all three mistaken. — creativesoul
Let me know when you find a way out of the pickle? Yes? Do you remember where you ended up contradicting yourself if you gave an answer? I'll remind you...
"X is moral relative to A" is false if A does not believe that X is moral and true if A believes that X is moral.
And...
A's belief can be false.
How is that possible if the truth of "X is moral" is relative to A's belief? — creativesoul
But suppose one values murder and theft. Consistently acting on those values erodes or destroys the social foundation on which any values at all can be pursued including their own. Which is to say, it is parasitical on what is truly valuable. — Andrew M
Contrast to those who say good is subjective.
If goodness is subjective, then you can be right and I can be right, even if our views contradict one another.
Hence a subjectivist cannot claim their moral view is true. — Banno
And in so doing you moved to a preference instead of an imperative. — Banno
One says what Michael likes. The other, what everyone should like.
And in so doing you moved to a preference instead of an imperative. — Banno
In both cases, evidence is available; in both cases, an opinion is required. — Banno
You just have to look at what the basic needs of human beings are. For example, food and water are universally valuable for human beings. — Andrew M
Moral judgements are mental by definition — Janus
They're not the same sense of good — Andrew M
Not all conceptions of goodness can account for that which exists prior to our conceptions. — creativesoul
Goodness, on my view, does not requires our awareness of it. — creativesoul
No, it's a natural and pragmatic standard. It's hard to get much useful work done when people keep randomly dropping in to pop you off and take your stuff. — Andrew M
Well, there was a point there, but it did not strike home. As I recall it, folk were suggesting that one difference between subjective and objective beliefs was that objective beliefs had evidence, while subjective beliefs were expressions of opinion; or some such.
Now just to be clear, my view is that the objective/subjective distinction is misguided. My aim is not to show that moral judgements are objective, nor that empirical judgments are subjective.
We were comparing judging a cup to be blue - presumably an objective quality - with judging kicking a pup to be bad - presumably a subjective quality.
In both cases, evidence is available; in both cases, an opinion is required.
I think it clear that this way of distinguishing objective and subjective beliefs falls to my examples. You might think otherwise. — Banno
You derived the conclusion that the subjectivist cannot claim their view to be true from the premise that two contradictory views can both be right if subjectivism is true. I just replaced the word “goodness” with “the taste of liquorice“ (and removed “moral” from “moral view”). — Michael
And in so doing you moved to a preference instead of an imperative.
— Banno
Do moral subjectivists claim that moral statements are imperatives? If not then this critique on the internal consistency of moral subjectivism doesn't work in principle. — Michael
A better foil might be the Will to Power: conscientiously acting so as to achieve power for oneself. How consistent could such an approach be? Could this lead to one flourishing?
And this presents neatly the problem with the open question argument. Is it good to conscientiously acting so as to achieve power for oneself? "No, but I don't care". — Banno
What sort of evidence would there be for anything being morally wrong, though? — Terrapin Station
Where's evidence of any moral properties there?Here is the broken pup. Here is the crying owner. — Banno
Do moral subjectivists claim that moral statements are imperatives? If not then this critique on the internal consistency of moral subjectivism doesn't work in principle. — Michael
A moral statement is one that says what ought be the case. Hence, it is an imperative by definition. — Banno
If objectivism is the thesis that moral statements are true — Moliere
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