Where's the evidence of any blue in "the light is of such-and-such a frequency"? — Banno
It assumes that any deception or exploitation of others will be self-defeating; — Janus
This still stands, I think. — Banno
That's what we're referring to with the term "blue"--light of that frequency. — Terrapin Station
Richard Brandt in Ethical theory; the problems of normative and critical ethics says "[Objectivism and subjectivism] have been used more vaguely, confusedly, and in more different senses than the others we are considering. — Michael
The apparent implicit premise – that "goodness" is concerned with imperatives – isn't one that many subjectivists would agree with — Michael
Yep. So leave that language aside. It leads to bad philosophy. — Banno
Either way, they cannot claim that imperatives have a truth value. — Banno
What I think is irrelevant. — Michael
What matters is whether or not your argument about the internal consistency of moral subjectivism is valid, — Michael
My argument is that moral subjectivism leads to an inability to make moral claims. — Banno
If you want to see what moral subjectivism leads to then you have to assume that moral subjectivism is true, and if moral subjectivism is true then moral statements are about one's attitude. — Michael
Firstly, we used the word "blue" with great success before we knew that definition. — Banno
Secondly, why not say that this is what we are referring to with the term "good" - actions that avoid broken pups and crying children. — Banno
Blue is an electromagnetic frequency. — Terrapin Station
That's a pretty gross oversimplification. — Banno
Subjectivists don't deny that moral statements have a truth value. Moral subjectivism is a cognitive meta-ethics, not a non-cognitive meta-ethics. — Michael
It's more just annoying. I wish that one time someone who argues objective morality would follow through and present what they take to be evidence of objective moral whatevers, where they don't turn out to just be speaking so loosely that they're not actually claiming objective morality at all after all (while not wanting to admit that) or where they don't just snake off once you critically press them at all (and especially where they snake off to start the same rigamarole from the start later, in another context) — Terrapin Station
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