Your lack of taking any time to actually understand what people say to you before you argue back is amazing. That is exactly my point, they are not equivalent. But if there is no underlying truth in the choice then it is just a preference. I say there is some truth that murder is or is not bad. There is no truth statement beyond mere preference if vanilla is better than chocolate — Rank Amateur
You can only have it your way if you tell me that you believe that there is no truth statement you can make about murder
— Rank Amateur
By "truth statement" I'm presuming you mean something like "murder is..." where this corresponds to reality, yes. In which case I can say "murder is unpopular", "murder is the intentional killing of another in illegal circumstances", "murder is a six letter word"...
All those are truth statements about murder. I'm really not sure what you're asking for.
You are asking me make an argument to prove 2 + 2 = 4 without using math.
— Rank Amateur — Isaac
So your view of the source of the near universal commonly held belief that murder is wrong is pure biology, It is a sneeze. — Rank Amateur
If we don't believe there actually is a truth. It is just preference. — Rank Amateur
Human nature please? — Rank Amateur
I thought we'd pretty thoroughly established this. Asking whether murder is right or wrong non-subjectively is like asking whether walking is right or wrong, or whether Birmingham is right or wrong. It's just not a question that makes any sense. — Isaac
Human nature was first and this is your 4th dodge on the question. — Rank Amateur
It just turn all such judgments to preference. Murder or not murder is the same as vanilla or chocolate. — Rank Amateur
ok, so there is no truth, my thought is as valid on any moral subject is as good as yours? — Rank Amateur
5th dodge — Rank Amateur
The commonality in our moral feelings are just a result of human nature, like many other commonalities. But human nature includes variance, so naturally there is a variance in moral feelings.
And none of that does anything at all for moral objectivism. — Rank Amateur
So we all as humans, by our very nature, have some near universal moral views, but that has nothing at all to do with that being to a high degree objective.
We are getting semantic now. — Rank Amateur
So we all as humans, by our very nature, have some near universal moral views, but that has nothing at all to do with that being to a high degree objective. — Rank Amateur
And you have not commented on this yet. — Rank Amateur
6th dodge, I will be back later take your time for number 7 — Rank Amateur
So we all as humans, by our very nature, have some near universal moral views, but that has nothing at all to do with that being to a high degree objective.
We are getting semantic now. — Rank Amateur
So if there is no truth value in any relative moral judgment, why make them? It just turns all such judgments to preference. Murder or not murder is the same as vanilla or chocolate. — Rank Amateur
That is exactly my point, they are not equivalent. But if there is no underlying truth in the choice then it is just a preference. I say there is some truth that murder is or is not bad. There is no truth statement beyond mere preference if vanilla is better than chocolate. — Rank Amateur
It isn't "just" a preference. It isn't "mere" preference. That's back to square one again!
Obviously an emotivist like Terrapin already accepts that both are preferences, and that there is no truth to them, so you are not doing anything logically relevant by pointlessly pointing that out. Like some of the others in this discussion, you struggle with logical relevance.
That is why he replied with, "And?".
What else could there be to that pointless point, unless, as suspected, you are suggesting something fallacious beyond a fallacy of irrelevance, like a false equivalence or an appeal to emotion by using loaded language in a superficial attempt to trivialise or smear your opponent? Are emotivists guilty by association with murderers or something? What's your bloody point? It still seems like you're dancing around the truth that you don't have a relevant or valid point. — S
Yes, and so what? (That's a rhetorical question - you shouldn't actually answer it unless you want to continue this digression and be exposed). The word "objective" obviously doesn't normally mean "near universal", and this is very easily demonstrated with examples. It wasn't the case that it was objectively true that the Earth was at the centre of the solar system, even when that was nearly universally believed. — S
Not to speak for S, but I don't know what there would be to say to that. Is anyone disagreeing with it? — Terrapin Station
Interesting to counter a claim of semantics by making yet another semantic argument. None of that addressed the concept addressed and you know it.
Maybe instead of making up rules for this forum, you should find a debate site, you are very good at it. Or if that falls through Trump may need another press secretary soon, he can use someone who never gives an inch and has no interest in answering questions, is always right, and has an indifferent attitude about the nature of truth. — Rank Amateur
Not to speak for S, but I don't know what there would be to say to that. Is anyone disagreeing with it?
— Terrapin Station
That was my answer to s, that he has yet to answer. — Rank Amateur
I just said, "Thoughts are the only things that have truth values." Obviously I think there is truth, then. It's a property of some thought. (But not moral stances (at least not when we're keeping this simple, when I'm avoiding what would have to be a huge tangent on truth theory).) — Terrapin Station
Validity has to do with truth value. So no one's moral stance is valid on my view. Again this is because moral stances do not have truth values. — Terrapin Station
And no, almost no one--and definitely not me, would say that any arbitrary person's moral stances are just as good as other person's moral stances, because "just as good" is itself a value judgment that individuals make, and people--again including me--do not happen to judge all stances equally. Hence why I asked you earlier, "Equal from what perspective?" — Terrapin Station
You are extremely predictable. Do you know that? You have chosen to respond with denialism and evasion. Who would've guessed? Well, at least you have now been well and truly exposed. — S
— Rank Amateur
I think I speak for both myself and Terrapin when I say that we object to your lack of explicit acknowledgement that you made a point which lacks logical relevance. You made a point which preaches to the choir, and does nothing else, except suggest a fallacious false equivalence, whether that was truly your intention or otherwise. Making that equivalence is either careless or deceptive. — S
And you have yet to actually make a coherent point in opposition. — Rank Amateur
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