His explanations have been met with many objections that he hasn't really addressed. — Terrapin Station
No conflicting statements implies subjective infallibility...
All of which seems to indicate a problem with “conflicting statements” with regard to what is in conflict with what.
Such problem with statements reduces to a problem with relativism, in which case the question becomes, what is it actually that is relative, and what is it relative to.
Do you not worry about equivocating and/or self-contradiction? — creativesoul
Correspondence to what has happened. — creativesoul
Can moral statements be true? — creativesoul
Is it helpful to parse morality in such terms? "Moral" not being a synonym for right, acceptable, and/or approval, but rather as a kind of thought/belief that everyone has; a kind that is determined the same way that all kinds of thought/belief are determined... by the content of their correlations. — creativesoul
Can moral statements be true? — creativesoul
What’s a moral statement? — Mww
So, the idea is simply this. Normally, we say that something like "Man first landed on the Moon in 1969" can be true or false. Can "One should not murder" likewise be true or false in some way? — Terrapin Station
Morality is relative, but it is relative to what is good for community, not what is good for the individual. There is obviously an objective 'what is the case' when it comes to what is good for community, and this is all the more obvious when it comes to extreme acts — Janus
Can moral statements be true?
— creativesoul
What’s a moral statement? From the agent’s perspective, is it a declaration of an interest (hunger is detrimental to good health), or, is it the representation of an interest in the form of an action (I go to the gospel mission every Tuesday to feed the hungry)? I don’t make linguistic moral statements when the occassion arises to formulate my morality (I can see it in my head) so the truth of that kind of statement is moot. If my action is considered a moral statement, and it derives explicitly from my moral law, then it is a true representation of a moral interest but not a linguistic statement. If I just outright tell you something I consider implicit in my moral agency, then that statement I make to you must be a statement about a true moral interest of mine. But you wouldn’t know if I actually held the moral principle from which the interest came anyway, so, again, the truth of that statement is moot.
Truth or non-truth is not sufficient for moral statements, but only for actions in compliance with a subjective principle. Only then is an agent is morally true to himself.
My answer would be its morally wrong because it causes damage to humanity. A humans fundamental goal is to preserve their life, and to preserve the life of future generations. Thats why suicide is an interesting thing to look at as it goes against all reason. — nsmith
I didn't come here to debate at all and thats why I chose to use those phrases. I came here to discuss and hear the opinions of others. I use phrases like "I believe" because my ideas of morality are not set in stone by any means and if my ideas of morality can be changed I'm open too it. — nsmith
True, for the morality of the individual is already determined, so what is good for him is given. The differences in already determined moralities of separate individuals, assuming there are any, and the matter and degree of those differences, is where the relativism resides. By association, what is good for the community is determined by the relative moralities of its individual inhabitants and how those differences manifest in public.
The obviously objective “what is the case” of the good of the community is given by how well it performs as a community. It is the case objectively that the community gets along well when the members do, and vice versa.
That which is thought but never expressed is an opinion. That which is opinion expressed is a belief. That belief of which a single instance of its natural occurrence is met in experience, is knowledge. Ever been in a community where some people exhibit moral differences but the community gets along? All righty then......thesis validated far FAR beyond mere opinion. — Mww
I am a moral relativist in a sense apparently not too different form the sense in which you also seem to be. — Janus
endless talk-pastfest, which is a complete waste of time. — Janus
I think it means something if I can say my moral interests would change dramatically if I was forced to inhabit a community I didn’t like. If that is true, the influence of culture can explain the occassion of my moral relativism, but it can’t explain the relativism of my moral disposition itself. — Mww
The correct second positive reply to me should address what I said and nothing else whatsoever. If it doesn’t......I’m out. — Mww
I go by the Lincoln-Douglas style. I take the first negative in opposition to whatever first positive I’m responding. The correct second positive reply to me should address what I said and nothing else whatsoever. If it doesn’t......I’m out. Patience is not my thing. Right before wasted effort. — Mww
Do you think that the most obvious forms of harm that members of a community could inflict upon one another would mean anything, ethically, absent the way we feel about it? — S
The good of the community consists of the good you judge of it, and that he judges of it, and that she judges of it, and that they judge of it, and nothing more. — S
Is a healthy community a good community? Well, a healthy community is just a healthy community, unless we judge it to be good, in which case we naturally say that it is so. — S
Yes, of course, they would have a detrimental effect on the life of the community. — Janus
You might say that is because of how everyone feels about it; — Janus
and of course this is a part of the overall true picture. — Janus
Everyone dislikes being murdered, raped, stolen from, deceived and so on, and that is an objective fact about human nature. — Janus
So I disagree with this:
The good of the community consists of the good you judge of it, and that he judges of it, and that she judges of it, and that they judge of it, and nothing more.
— S
because it ignores the actual functionality or dysfunctionality of the community. — Janus
No, this is nonsense. — Janus
Of course a healthy community is a good community... — Janus
just as a healthy body is a good body or a significantly damaged hammer is a bad hammer. — Janus
If your life is a harmoniously functional life then it is a good life, if it is a conflicted and dysfunctional life, then it is a bad life. — Janus
Insofar as we are and want to be social beings functioning well in relationship is an integral part of what constitutes a good life. — Janus
And there are objective facts about what kinds of acts will and won't sustain your ability to do well in relationship. — Janus
Of course a healthy community is a good community... — Janus
Yes, of course it is, obviously so long as we judge healthy to be good, and obviously not otherwise. — S
What’s a moral statement? From the agent’s perspective, is it a declaration of an interest (hunger is detrimental to good health), or, is it the representation of an interest in the form of an action (I go to the gospel mission every Tuesday to feed the hungry)? — Mww
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