Ok, so what you're looking for is the 'that' in 'that's morality', right? And for you, it's what? A brain state? Can you be very specific in pointing to the 'that' you think is morality and then maybe we can get to the bottom of our difference. — Baden
The binary approach in question here, is the subjective/objective dichotomy, which is not required for *obtaining* individual morality. It is required to *demonstrate* the morality already obtained.
I understand subjective to mean in me, objective to be outside me. If that’s a misunderstanding, or inappropriate, somebody outta tell me. — Mww
For example, if fighting over access to the puppy reduces the amount of time that they would otherwise spend kicking it, then aggression for puppy control can be framed as an objectively immoral act in that situation because it directly disservices their moral values. — VagabondSpectre
As is hopefully clear from the puppy example, the point I'm making is indeed a meta-ethical one (which may or may not relate to yours and Baden's disagreement or miscommunication). The truth of specific normative content is transitory, like the next optimal move in a given chess game, but the relationship between our desires and our lousy environment is not: achieving our own goals in a populated environment means considering the goals of others along with the environment we are in. In other words, morality isn't just and greedy hedonism, it's socially responsible hedonism in a world where intentions, methods,and outcomes can be fact-checked. (We could split semantic hairs regarding the "consideration" component, but when individuals extend no moral consideration whatsoever, no useful moral discussion with them can take place (they're a moot point). I prefer to describe the failure (or inability) to consider the needs of others as a breakdown of morality. Informally, it's as if morality itself is an ad hoc system of categorizing the various ways in which we might fail to consider the needs/values/goals/desires of others). — VagabondSpectre
Yes, it's a brain state. — Terrapin Station
I acknowledge the objectivity there, but I don't think that it's necessarily right to call that "immoral". — S
In other words, if an alien came to earth and asked me what morality is, I would point to instances of moral behaviours / interactions rather than brain states to explain it. — Baden
would you say brain states can be moral / immoral? — Baden
Still, as written, it is all hypothetical. What needs to be done now is turn that into a theory. Nobody’s gonna give a crap about a theory without sustainable grounds for it. In science, sustainable grounds are the natural laws; it follows that a possible moral science should have laws. — Mww
I've been around philosophy long enough to never assume that anyone might not be claiming something that seems insane to me. — Terrapin Station
So in your view nonmental things can treat something with attention and kindness? — Terrapin Station
The bright pixels of my monitor aren't treating my eyes very kindly right now.
Not very kindly at all...
Bed time for me! — VagabondSpectre
I don't, because it actually requires a bunch of additional "shoulds." "One should act in accord with one's moral views." "One should act in the most direct, efficient manner." Etc. There's nothing objective about an of that. — Terrapin Station
Ok, so what you're looking for is the 'that' in 'that's morality', right? And for you, it's what? A brain state? — Baden
Yes, it's a brain state. — Terrapin Station
would you say brain states can be moral / immoral? — Baden
I'd not call them moral/immoral. — Terrapin Station
Nahhh... the easy stuff is done; morality is subjective, mentally located, if that is how one thinks of it. Philosophy, never one to leave well enough alone, still wants to ask, how is it that it is (However it is thought) and why should it be that way.
Otherwise, we talk about what we accept without sufficient explanation as to why we accept it the way we do. — Mww
Ok, so what you're looking for is the 'that' in 'that's morality', right? And for you, it's what? A brain state? — Baden
Yes, it's a brain state. — Terrapin Station
would you say brain states can be moral / immoral? — Baden
I'd not call them moral/immoral. — Terrapin Station
So, the brain state is morality but there is no moral / immoral to brain states? Where can you find the moral / immoral then?
Just trying to clarify here. — Baden
And in your conception, is a brain state a subject or an object? — Baden
But there are states of living persons that don't amount to mental phenomena, too. — Terrapin Station
The last point that we got to was trying to make sense of his assertion that the objective/subjective dichotomy "fails" — S
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
First, I use "subjective" to refer to mental phenomena, and "objective" to refer to the complement--"nonmental phenomena" so to speak. — Terrapin Station
Ok, so what you're looking for is the 'that' in 'that's morality', right? And for you, it's what? A brain state? — Baden
Yes, it's a brain state — Terrapin Station
Morality doesn't occur elsewhere, in the objective realm. — Terrapin Station
In other words, "It is morally wrong to murder," ontologically, is a brain state. — Terrapin Station
I'll try a poem next time. Anything to alleviate the boredom of watching a bunch of folks make desperate efforts to not think in a remotely interesting way.
It's at least amusing that the two criticisms of the idea of problematizing the subject(ive)/object(ive) distinction re morality are:
1) That's ridiculous!
2) That's trivially obvious! — Baden
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