Er, no, you're really not understanding this. There's only so much I can do. If - if - moral values are made of my valuings, then if I value something necessarily it is morally valuable. — Bartricks
First, there is no 'to me' at the end of my premise, so stop putting it in. — Bartricks
Or do you think it won't be? You think, do you, that if I value something then necessarily it is morally valuable? So, if I value raping someone, then necessarily it is good for me to rape someone? — Bartricks
MY premises, as written by me, not you - you disagree with. — Bartricks
Good - so you think that if I value raping someone, then necessarily it is morally good for me to rape them. — Bartricks
So if Steve rapes Jane and we subsequently find out that Steve valued raping Jane, then we have found out that Steve did nothing wrong. — Bartricks
Steve's act of rape is morally bad regardless of Steve's attitudes towards it. — Bartricks
Yes it is. — Bartricks
And arguments can't be stupid. People can be, however. Really, really stupid in some cases. — Bartricks
Subjectivists about moral values believe that moral values exist as subjective states, if or when they exist.
I think moral values are demonstrably subjective. Here is my simple argument:
1. For something to be morally valuable is for it to be being valued.
2. Only a subject can value something
3. Therefore, for something to be morally valuable is for it to be being valued by a subject. — Bartricks
So 'pain' would be a classic example of something that is subjective in this sense of the term. Pain is a feeling and feelings are subjective states - they exist in subjects and nowhere else. So, if you feel in pain, then necessarily you are in pain. — Bartricks
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