Not trying to speak for Banno, but absolutely agree with him it fails. If the moral subject is both constituted of/by social relations and embedded in social relations, and the term 'objective' in terms of morality is that which applies equally to all moral subjects i.e. the complete world, or set of worlds, of social relations then the dichotomy fails. The 'objective' is in the 'subjective' as much as the 'subjective' is in the 'objective'. i.e. For the subject to function as moral agent, it is necessarily a socially constituted entity, in some sense both 'objective' and 'subjective'. — Baden
Not trying to speak for Banno, but absolutely agree with him it fails. If the moral subject is both constituted of/by social relations and embedded in social relations, and the term 'objective' in terms of morality is that which applies equally to all moral subjects i.e. the complete world, or set of worlds, of social relations then the dichotomy fails. The 'objective' is in the 'subjective' as much as the 'subjective' is in the 'objective'. i.e. For the subject to function as moral agent, it is necessarily a socially constituted entity, in some sense both 'objective' and 'subjective'. — Baden
If the moral subject is both constituted of/by social relations and embedded in social relations, — Baden
So, because lots of people share moral feelings, and thus moral judgement, on certain issues, then if we stick two people in a room together, then they'll probably agree over these issues, in a normative sense. — S
So what's the problem, right? Well, the problem is that this is supposed to be a discussion about meta-ethics, not a discussion about normative ethics. — S
I think it boils down more to finding a better way to talk about morality than fundamental disagreements about what it is. — Baden
(“It” being the subjective/objective dichotomy)Not trying to speak for Banno, but absolutely agree with him it fails. — Baden
For the subject to function as moral agent, it is necessarily a socially constituted entity, in some sense both 'objective' and 'subjective'. — Baden
Personal moral values exist as brute facts, and they're inexorably relative; "moral truth" is something more than mere personal preference. — VagabondSpectre
Let me put it this way, I'm claiming there is only social relations, which when packaged in individual bodies, we call 'persons' or 'subjects'. — Baden
You're both talking past me. — Baden
Have a look at the schema and go from there. Where is the error? Let me put it this way, I'm claiming there is only social relations, which when packaged in individual bodies, we call 'persons' or 'subjects'. And there is no moral agency, no persons or subjects, without this constitution. So, I'm not just saying this or that, I'm saying the whole binary approach is wrongheaded and prevents a full view of where and how morality obtains. That doesn't mean the subject/object distinction is useless in every field but it's much more useful for scientific enquiry than philosophic / moral enquiry. — Baden
so you're saying that if we took one person and every other person but that one were to die or disappear, that one person would no longer exist? — Terrapin Station
I think it boils down more to finding a better way to talk about morality than fundamental disagreements about what it is. — Baden
So where would you say moral truth occurs aside from personal preference? — Terrapin Station
Of course not, because they would have already been constituted socially before you removed the others. Isn't that obvious? — Baden
I'm not asking you to care. I suppose you replied to my post by accident. Keep your fingers under better control next time. — Baden
I'm saying the whole binary approach is wrongheaded and prevents a full view of where and how morality obtains. — Baden
That doesn't mean the subject/object distinction is useless in every field but it's much more useful for scientific enquiry than philosophic / moral enquiry. — Baden
where and how morality obtains has no need of the binary approach, o — Mww
Note though that others, while they might not agree, are actually engaging. I hate to say it, but I think you're being a tad... unreasonable. :wink: — Baden
Note though that others, while they might not agree, are actually engaging — Baden
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