I probably do have it wrong. But in trying to pin down what your getting at I just couldn't see what exactly was true about the moral statements anymore. It seemed like the statements were truth-functional, as you admit, but then they had a different kind of truth -- a subjective truth. So that "P" is true in F, where "P" refers to some moral statement and F refers to some frame of reference, usually the moral actor.
But I am unable to differentiate this from the notion that moral statements are just whatever we happen to feel is right -- which seems to me to fall squarely in with non-cognitivism.
So I just feel confused in trying to parse your account, I guess. — Moliere
Now, why say "just" whatever we happen to feel is right? Is that supposed to indicate that it's trivial or that there's a credible alternative or both? — S
Because I would argue that there's no credible alternative in light of the logical consequences of these proposed alternatives. And I'd also argue that moral judgement isn't trivial.
And why non-cognitivism here?
For why I think it's natural, see my earlier comment on natural focal points here.
The diamond ring example was just to show that there can be a distinction between perceived value and actual value (by some metric). — Andrew M
And I can't make heads or tails out of the notion of a subjective truth so non-cognitivism is about where I land in making sense of your view. — Moliere
Not a big fan of the term 'scientism' but certainly the very human need to neatly box up concepts to make them more understandable. Unfortunately, in this case, it makes a coherent position on morality impossible. — Baden
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
No, please just clarify what you meant. — S
What I'm really looking for is evidence of any moral property (or whatever we want to say moral 'stuff' is) being anywhere other than in our judgments, our feelings, our preferences, etc. — Terrapin Station
Which begs the question.....is there a principle “good”?
— Mww
I think eudaimonia, per Aristotle. — Andrew M
I agree, but I think that conditional is simply "If life has value then ..." in an ordinary sense. If so, then that value constitutes a universal standard for measuring one's actions against. Everyone having their own arbitrary preferred standard is no standard at all. — Andrew M
Absolutely - Why add this? Too much baggage.
And yet, as S said...
Do you realise that only a moral nihilist and sickos would deny that conclusion... — S
(sic.)
So we all agree, and yet we rant on for page after page.
Something is astray here... — Banno
The moral feelings are what's fundamental. — S
The 'absolutely' is there to indicate that I think you seem to be claiming that goodness is some human-independent, quasi-empirical quality analogous to, for example, a wavelength of the electromagnetic spectrum. — Janus
Exactly. Yet ethical subjectivism erases just that distinction by treating morality and the Will to Power as categorically equivalent. — Andrew M
S and I have been arguing, on the other hand, that what we call goodness is what accords with the most common, cross-cultural human feelings of communal life. There is no justification for our ideas of goodness beyond that. — Janus
Then you acknowledge that goodness is human-dependent, dependent on human moral sensibility, human dependent in ways that empirical phenomena are not? — Janus
Now the Open Question Argument would have us look to this and consider, could something be what accords with the most common, cross-cultural human feelings of communal life, and yet not be good?
And the answer, it seems to me, is No. — Banno
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