For me, in the ethical context, to be right simply means being effective in promoting what nearly all of us want; to live in harmony, and being wrong simply means being defective in promoting it. — Janus
If the person making the promise does not think doing so confers a duty to keep their word, then either they are ignorant of what a promise means, or it is an insincere speech act. — creativesoul
I'm simply pointing out what making a promise means, and then further pointing out how just simply understanding the language use causes expectation that is only taken into proper account with an ought. — creativesoul
The biggest problem I see with the crudest form of moral relativism ( morality relative to individual preference only) is that it is really a symptom of our modern, self-centred, exploitative culture. Is it really sensible to think that everyone should be ruled by their passions? — Janus
but what of those whose moral feelings are underdeveloped, atrophied or whose feelings are just not moral at all? — Janus
So, the descriptive gives a phenomenological account of how people's moral beliefs and dispositions are mediated by the community — Janus
According to Richard Garner and Bernard Rosen,[1] there are three kinds of meta-ethical problems, or three general questions:
What is the meaning of moral terms or judgments? (moral semantics)
What is the nature of moral judgments? (moral ontology)
How may moral judgments be supported or defended? (moral epistemology) — Wikipedia
A promise is when one voluntarily enters themselves into an obligation — creativesoul
There is an actual distinction between making a promise and making a statement about that promise. — creativesoul
I'm not arguing that a promise means that what it says ought to be done. — creativesoul
I am not arguing that one ought keep their promise. — creativesoul
ou know...the human complement system: Yes, no; left, right; front, back; up,down.....mores, taboos.
But you think of a taboo more as a negative more? That’s fine. I can do that, if it ever comes up again. — Mww
So you use enculturation that way, from a child-rearing perspective. I was attributing more to it than that, looks like. It relates because I treat morality from the perspective of a fully developed rational system. As such, I don’t think morality is given to me by parents or society or environment. I figure if I’m responsible for my actions, I get to say what they’re going to be. — Mww
I am a relativist in the common sense only insofar as my moral interests are certainly not going to be identical to everybody else’s, I’m a subjectivist simply by nature, and I’m a deontologist because the idea of moral law appeals to me. — Mww
The C.I. is the formula for a moral law, it says act strictly in accordance with a principle and whatever that principle is, which I am free to choose, treat it as if it were a law on which everybody else acted the same way. Although this is not a realistic “ought”, it is a very substantial guide to private conduct, to being morally disposed. And that’s all it was ever supposed to be. Murder is a moral interest of mine, because from it I can hold with a principle (murder is contrary to the purpose of life), therefore I ought to act (never commit murder) as if it is indeed a fact murder is contrary to the purpose of life.
All my above is in relation to your assertion here. I voted it true, because I agree with that assertion in itself. I bring it up to exemplify the difference between your “morality is relative” with respect to the good of a community, and my “the relativism of morality” which I assert has nothing to do with community.
Is there any common ground? — Mww
Imagine that a guy owes some very unsavory characters a large amount of cash that he does not have. He cannot pay. He knows that these are dangerous people:Eyewitness style. Further envision a promise being made to the guy from the unsavory ones to harm the guys family if the guy didn't pay up.
If the guy doesn't pay, then his family ought be dead. I'm not condoning the act. I'm saying that knowing the meaning of a sincerely made promise creates expectation.
I am not saying that all promises ought be kept. — creativesoul
It just occurred to me that, in a way, the C.I. is a reformulation of the Golden Rule. — Janus
Could you explain some more how you see the difference between ""morality is relative" with respect to the good of a community" and ""the relativism of morality" which has nothing to do with community"? — Janus
Imagine that a guy owes some very unsavory characters a large amount of cash that he does not have. He cannot pay. He knows that these are dangerous people:Eyewitness style. Further envision a promise being made to the guy from the unsavory ones to harm the guys family if the guy didn't pay up.
If the guy doesn't pay, then his family ought be dead. I'm not condoning the act. I'm saying that knowing the meaning of a sincerely made promise creates expectation.
I am not saying that all promises ought be kept.
— creativesoul
I think I would call that a threat rather than a promise — Janus
To me a promise is something you sincerely state and sincerely intend to act upon... — Janus
...and it also must be something that will be of benefit to the other, such that if you don't hold to it the other will be let down, and feel deceived or betrayed.
So, I would say that, in principle at least, promises should be kept and threats should not be carried out, which would mean that they are kind of opposites. Perhaps threats could be classed as "negative" promises. — Janus
The problem I see is one of logical irrelevance. He wants to refute Hume, but he is missing the target. Even if we were to grant his point, it misses Hume's point. It actually just tries to unphilosophically reinforce the pre-Hume sort of thinking. — S
Hume has been refuted. — creativesoul
Hume has been refuted. — creativesoul
You also conflate belief and truth, but I do not expect you to see it. Keep on riding shotgun with one who does not care about truth. Confirmation bias feels good. — creativesoul
it would become a valid argument if we included the premise that you should always keep your promises, but I don't think that that's true without exception, and if there's a single exception, then the premise is false, which would make the argument unsound. — S
A promise is when one voluntarily enters themselves into an obligation
— creativesoul
A promise, in and of itself, or any affirmative token with a moral interest, regardless of it’s object, implies something a whole lot more fundamental than mere intentionality. Without these fundamentals, the object might as well not even be included in the predicate of a promise proposition. — Mww
There is an actual distinction between making a promise and making a statement about that promise.
— creativesoul
Certainly. Statements, at least explications about promise, should include those aforementioned fundamentals. Any decent meta-ethicist is already well aware of them.
I'm not arguing that a promise means that what it says ought to be done.
— creativesoul
Agreed.
I know you would rather attack a straw man. That is perfectly clear... — S
Hume has been refuted.
— creativesoul
Really. What is the point in you posting if all you're going to do is just tell us what is and is not the case? — Isaac
What do you care for? You do not have use for truth, or what's true, or what can be true, or how true things become so... — creativesoul
When a sincere speaker says "I promise to plant a rose garden on Sunday", then it follows that there ought be a rose garden planted on Sunday. — creativesoul
I was thinking more along the lines of existential dependency. — creativesoul
I cannot agree with saying that all promises ought be kept. — creativesoul
I was thinking more along the lines of existential dependency.
— creativesoul
Ok. Promise has it, sure. Promise is existentially dependent on some a priori abstract concepts the understanding thinks as belonging to it necessarily, re: in descending order of power, obligation, duty, respect. No promise as the meaningful subject of a synthetic proposition is possible without these a priori conditions.
We don’t think a promise to ourselves alone. Knowledge of those necessary fundamentals is given a priori in a subject, therefore he has no need to represent them to himself in the form of a promise. Thus, promise has the existential dependency of being represented in the world by the subject who understands the a priori conditions for it.
What does existential dependency mean to you? — Mww
I cannot agree with saying that all promises ought be kept.
— creativesoul
Under the assumption that all promises have moral implications, can you agree with thinking that all promises ought to be kept? — Mww
An interest which is the object of desire is an interest of empirical reason and is subjectively pathological; an interest which is the object of will is an interest of morality and is purely subjectively practical. It is here that it becomes clear objective examples, re: external to the moral agent, of moral conditions are not sufficient for moral judgements.
In the former it is the object itself that is good because it satisfies a desire, in the latter it is the willful determination of a volition in order to attain to an object that is good because it satisfies a moral disposition.
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