Hu? — Banno
Odd, it seems, if we agree that kicking puppies is wrong, that so much energy was expended in demanding evidence... — Banno
So you think that I think that I am wrong to say that moral statements are used to say what ought be the case, because you think that this excludes statements about what is good, because... you think that saying what is good is not the same as saying what we ought to do? — Banno
So, you look at the broken pup and crying child and don't see the moral import.
— Banno
So, this should be "So, you look at the broken pup and crying child and don't feel any compassion?"
Of course if you feel compassion then your moral feeling is engaged. If you don't then you may well be what is commonly referred to as a sociopath or a psychopath. — Janus
I suppose I can't get over the notion that the subjectivist accounts wants to claim that such and such statements are true subjectively.
The way I parse that is to say that the subjectivist thinks that all moral statements are in some way reducible to or are really saying something other than what they are saying on their surface. So that
(1) "Kicking the pup is wrong" is true
is reducible to or is actually saying
(2) "I feel that kicking the pup is wrong" is true
But these sentences do not mean the same thing. One is referring to the action "Kicking", and the other is referring to the speaker's state of mind or attitude towards the action.
We can set up some rules around subjective truth, I suppose, but then it seems to me that we're not talking about truth anymore. Truth is a property of statements. And (1) does not mean the same thing as (2). I could say that if a speaker says (1) then (2), but I could not say that the truth value of (1) is the same as the truth value of (2).
In the case where someone says, just to make it easier to see, that kicking the pup is right for instance -- (1) would be false, yet (2) would be true. — Moliere
↪Banno They may feel and think it is right. It's not a matter of being right or wrong; it's a matter of whether it is more or less universally felt and thought to be wrong. — Janus
That is as close as you can get to objectivity when it comes to morals.
We disagree over other issues, like the issue of how moral statements should be interpreted. — S
To my knowledge, no one has demanded evidence that kicking puppies is wrong. — S
the answers to moral questions are never going to be found in the near-infinite complex of worldly examples. — Mww
Not all conceptions of goodness can account for that which exists prior to our conceptions.
— creativesoul
Like what? What do you mean? Give an example. Rocks existed prior to our conceptions, but they don't seem relevant in this context. — S
Sure. But it seems that we agree, at least most of the time, as to what we ought do.
And isn't working out what to do the point of ethics?
We blow our points of disagreement out of all proportion. — Banno
You missed it. Terrapin Station was most insistent. — Banno
Let us simplify by performing the following operation...
Not all conceptions [snip]of goodness[endsnip] can account for that which exists prior to our conceptions.
...and we'll all see that we're left with the following...
Not all conceptions can account for that which exists prior to our conceptions.
How do we know if something exists prior to our naming and describing it? — creativesoul
Or does this juxtaposition of objective and subjective fall on analysis? — Banno
Could moral statements... also be somewhere between objective and subjective? — Banno
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