I ask that you just substitute every instance of “moral” with whatever you would label something that is actually normative, because normativity is entirely what I’m talking about. — Pfhorrest
You are merely assuming that they are not, and on account of that refusing to address the contents of those normative opinions at all, focusing instead only on the facts about people having those opinions. — Pfhorrest
Conversely, scientism like yours responds to attempts to treat normative questions as completely separate from factual questions (as they are) by demanding absolute proof from the ground up that anything at all is objectively normative, or moral, and not just a factual claim in disguise or else baseless mere opinion. — Pfhorrest
it ends up falling to justificationism about normative questions, while failing to acknowledge that factual questions are equally vulnerable to that line of attack. — Pfhorrest
I think it is more parsimonious to consider moral statements to be no more than they evidently are until we have good reason to change that. — Isaac
apparently normative statements are actually just expressive — Isaac
Since there's no evidence of an objective 'ought' it makes sense to assume there's no such thing until we have reason to believe there is. — Isaac
Why do you caricature my position as 'demanding' whilst yours (which you are no less attached to, is painted as the more reasonable? — Isaac
Who said I'm falling to acknowledge that factual questions are vulnerable to that line of attack. — Isaac
Prima facie they are attempts at asserting that something actually ought to be some way or other. — Pfhorrest
I say to just take that appearance at face value. — Pfhorrest
The burden of proof lies on the one who's saying that something is different than it seems, and that something or its negation is not possible. — Pfhorrest
You instead cynically want proof from the ground up that it is even possible at all for any normative claim to be right in what they appear to be saying. — Pfhorrest
If you subjected factual questions to this same degree of cynicism, you would be a nihilist about reality too. — Pfhorrest
But that's not a problem for your approach to facts, so why is it a problem for an approach to norms? — Pfhorrest
What a thing is or is not prima facie is not an objective fact but another statement of your psychological state. — Isaac
At face value people who pray very much appear to be speaking to an all powerful God. People who put ivy over the door appear on face value to be sending messages to actual evil spirits. Neither can be disproven. Are you suggesting we take no further steps to assess the likelihood of each prima facie belief but simply presume they're true? — Isaac
Yes, and non-cognitivists feel they've adequately met that burden. The fact that they haven't convinced you personally doesn't damn the entire enterprise. — Isaac
Again, where have I asked for proof. The fact that I don't find the position plausible is not this obstinate demand you keep trying to caricature it to be. — Isaac
Yes. But I don't. Because I find the idea of an external reality more plausible than I find the idea of an objective morality. — Isaac
I don't know how many times I have the interest to keep saying the same thing... Because facts and norms are two different things. I'm not obliged to find arguments for realism in either case equally plausible. — Isaac
I quoted what you agreed was prima facie too. You said "apparently normative statements" yourself; they appear normative to you too, but you think that appearance is deceiving. And you know, we could always ask the speakers themselves what it is they're trying to do. I strongly doubt a majority of them will say they're just expressing their feelings. If so, then we wouldn't have moral arguments. — Pfhorrest
I can likewise check if supposedly bad things actually seem bad as far as my experiences go:...
If I tell you that it's bad for people to get punched in the face, and you disagree, you can try getting punched in the face, and I expect you'll agree that that sure seems bad!...
you getting punched in the face is bad, but it doesn't matter whether anybody else gets punched in the face -- but then we're back to the moral equivalent of solipsism, and you presumably reject solipsism about reality, you continue believing in things you can't currently see, so this isn't asking anything more than that. — Pfhorrest
You haven't put forth any of their arguments here — Pfhorrest
My entire argument here is just asking what's the relevant difference that makes one deserving of different treatment than the other. — Pfhorrest
None of this makes it not about psychological states. — Isaac
There's little point in continuing if you're just going to repeat stuff we've already been through. — Isaac
All of the above presumes that moral statements are merely statements about what feels bad to whom. — Isaac
So I cannot test, in any way, the moral claim "you ought not make another person feel bad". It simply stands as an assertion, in exactly the same way as — Isaac
there are no further tests we can carry out to check the objectivity of "god exists" — Isaac
To oppose that I only need point out the differences, not present arguments about the consequences of those differences. — Isaac
1. Moral statements appear to be statements assigning properties to behaviours, they make claims that behaviour X has the property 'morally bad'. — Isaac
2. As Moore points out, we cannot 'work these claims back' because we end up infinitely asking ourselves "but why is it bad to...?". - As in... "It is bad to punch someone in the face", "Why is that bad?", "Because it will make them feel bad and it is bad to make another person feel bad "Why is that bad?"... — Isaac
3. As such, the assignation of 'morally bad' to a behaviour must be either a brute fact of reality — Isaac
4. The latter fails to explain the otherwise unlikely coincidence of assignation across cultures (there's a universal sense one must 'justify' harming another whereas one need not 'justify' going for a walk - harming another seems to be a special category of behaviour). So we accept the former, behaviours being morally bad is a brute fact. — Isaac
5. So the question, whence the brute fact. Either it is of the physical realm, or it is of its own realm. Inventing realms just to hold propositions when they can be easily explained within the realm we already believe in is non-parsimonious, so we reject the latter. — Isaac
Basically, propositions about physical reality have an obvious candidate for the mechanism by which they are made true. An external physical reality. — Isaac
Normative propositions have no such obvious candidate for an external truth-maker. — Isaac
This view, commensurablism, is just the conjunction of criticism and universalism, which are in turn just the negations of dogmatism and relativism, respectively. If you accept dogmatism rather than criticism, then if your opinions should happen to be the wrong ones, you will never find out, because you never question them, and you will remain wrong forever. And if you accept relativism rather than universalism, then if there is such a thing as the right opinion after all, you will never find it, because you never even attempt to answer what it might be, and you will remain wrong forever. — Pfhorrest
I hold that there are two big mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive questions, neither of which is reducible to the other, and between the two of which all other smaller questions are covered. One is the descriptive question of what is real, or true, or factual. The other is the prescriptive question of what is moral, or good, or normative. — Pfhorrest
All that matters is whether there are any reasons at hand to prefer one answer over another. — Pfhorrest
In my view the changes of worldview are largely unpredictable and unstructured, but by constantly weeding out the untenable extremes, the chaotic swinging between ever-less-extreme opposites still tends generally toward some limit over time. — Pfhorrest
This is muddled. Criticism is not the opposite of dogmatism as a general approach and relativism is not the opposite of universalism. — Isaac
My core principles are:
- That there is such a thing as a correct opinion, in a sense beyond mere subjective agreement. (A position I call "universalism", and its negation "relativism".)
- That there is always a question as to which opinion, and whether or to what extent any opinion, is correct. (A position I call "criticism", and its negation "dogmatism".)
- That the initial state of inquiry is one of several opinions competing as equal candidates, none either winning or losing out by default, but each remaining a live possibility until it is shown to be worse than the others. (A position I call "liberalism", and its negation "cynicism".)
- That such a contest of opinion is settled by comparing and measuring the candidates against a common scale, namely that of the experiential phenomena accessible in common by everyone, and opinions that cannot be thus tested are thereby disqualified. (A position I call "phenomenalism", and its negation "transcendentalism").
[...] groups everything into four sets of two:
- Objectivism, which includes both universalism :up: and transcendentalism :down:,
- Subjectivism, which includes both phenomenalism :up: and relativism :down:,
- Fideism, which includes both liberalism :up: and dogmatism :down:, and
- Skepticism, which includes both criticism :up: and cynicism :down:) — Pfhorrest
As per Wittgenstein on certainty or Ramsey on truth, we cannot doubt everything, to even doubt requires a framework of hinge propositions which cannot be doubted, so dogmatism (belief held unquestioningly) is unavoidable. — Isaac
Relativism is not the opposite of universalism, especially when it comes to morals. That moral rights might be relative (to time, place and individual) does not prevent it from being the case that such rights might be universally so for every replication of that time place and individual. Since such a replication may never happen (or rarely so) a pragmatic relativism may be more realistic, but it doesn't contradict universalism. — Isaac
You need to support this. Why, for example, is there not also a question about what is beautiful, what is tasty, what is exciting...? — Isaac
As we've discussed before, this undermines your principle of avoiding the 'never find the right answer' state. There are always reasons. Data severely underdetermines theory and theory severely overdetermines confirmation. No-one who wants to hold a particular position is ever going to find themselves unable to produce reasons to prefer that position over another. As such they're going to be in no better a position than the dogmatist or the relativist. All that you've required of them additionally is the imagination to come up with a good post hoc rationalisation for their belief. — Isaac
If this were the case you should be able to produce evidence of it happening. — Isaac
We've had 300,000 years at least as modern humans, so in that time how does your theory explain the first 290,000 years of remarkably similar cultures and then 10,000 years of explosion into the chaos we have now? — Isaac
You're conflating the distinctions between the two different types of "fideism" and "skepticism" above. What you're saying here is an argument for "liberalism" over "cynicism", and I agree with it. That's different from an argument for "criticism" over "dogmatism". Correct, we cannot (and even if we could, must not) actively doubt to the point of rejection everything all at once, so we must hold some beliefs without having proven them from the ground up. That's "liberalism" over "cynicism". But we can (and must) remain open to the possibilities of each particular belief being wrong, not holding them above questioning. That's "criticism" over "dogmatism". — Pfhorrest
There are several different senses of "moral relativism", and the usual one in meta-ethics is (surprise) meta-ethical relativism, which very much is just the negation of universalism. Saying that what is right varies with context and circumstance isn't relativism in that usual sense and isn't anything I'm arguing against. — Pfhorrest
There are questions about those things, but they can be analyzed into some combinations of those big two, because there are only four possible directions of fit — Pfhorrest
there is pragmatic reason to dis-prefer positions that require jumping through elaborate hoops to maintain them like that, namely that of efficiency, which in the case of descriptive knowledge manifests as parsimony. — Pfhorrest
If this were the case you should be able to produce evidence of it happening. — Isaac
See the history of science for reference. — Pfhorrest
embedded in a culture and a language which we cannot shake (we cannot be culture-less) — Isaac
So your 'relativism' is the opposite of 'there is such a thing as a correct opinion, in a sense beyond mere subjective agreement' ie, that there is no such thing as a correct opinion other than mere subjective agreement? So where does just thinking one is correct fall? You seem to have divided the options into either thinking one is correct (and therefore everyone who disagrees is wrong), or thinking there is no correct (just more or fewer people agreeing with one). That seems to miss out entirely any form of ethics where one can be morally right in neither of those senses. If I feel it is right for me to refrain from punching you, I can feel that way without it being because I think it's 'correct for everyone', nor just that 'most people agree with me'. I can think it's right because it feels right to me. — Isaac
That seems a reasonable assessment, but says nothing of the universality of those beliefs. — Isaac
I agree, but this, then, is a subjective matter, not an objective one. What people personally find more or less elaborate, more or less efficient will depend on the extent, clarity and embedded-ness of their other beliefs. — Isaac
Sure we cannot be culture-less or language-less, but that doesn't mean we cannot change culture or language, just by "doing culture" / "doing language" differently ourselves, even if that doesn't change the culture and language of everyone around us. We have these unquestioned things that we start from, but we can in principle question them and change what we think about them.
This sounds very similar to the debate about the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. No doubt that what language we've given shapes our thoughts, but that's a far stretch from saying it necessarily constrains them; because language (and culture more generally) is something we make up, and we can make up new ones and discard old ones if we find we need to. — Pfhorrest
That sounds like it clearly falls on the "nothing is actually correct" side of things, if in thinking it feels right to you (and so is right, but only to you) you're not objecting to someone else thinking it (the same event) feels wrong to them (and so is wrong, but only to them).
My "universalism" is basically the position that if two people disagree about something -- the exact same specific thing, full context included -- at least one (but possibly both) of them is wrong; and my "relativism" is conversely the negation of that. — Pfhorrest
I'm just starting with rules that say nothing about direction of fit one way or the other, and then applying those rules equally to questions with opposite directions of fit. — Pfhorrest
I'm talking about the overall belief system, not any one particular belief in it. And there are objective measures of informational efficiency; compressibility, or something like Kolmogorov complexity. — Pfhorrest
You can't ignore the issue of how these brains work and the way in which that limits the things they can do, and the nature of the results they provide. — Isaac
Yeah, I get that, but you're not raising any argument against relativism, you're just appropriating terms to make your position sound stronger (or rather the other position sound weaker). To a relativist (in the sense I'm using it), there is a 'correct' answer. — Isaac
I could either help the old lady across the road or not, one of them is the correct answer. — Isaac
You stealing away the word 'correct' for use only when two people disagree — Isaac
Why? Having established that there are two directions of fit that are incommensurably different, why would the first thing you do be to assume (against all the evidence from our behaviour) that the rule applying to them would be (should be?) the same. Seems a really odd move. — Isaac
It could be that human brains just have insurmountable flaws in their ability to be completely rational, and I wouldn't be surprised at all if they did, but that doesn't change the nature of what a rational process is, or that we should do our best to follow it even if we're doomed to do so somewhat imperfectly. — Pfhorrest
The sense you're using doesn't even appear there; the closest technical term I'm aware of to the thing you seem to mean is "situational ethics", although that's a more specific, particularly Christian ethical view. I've sometimes seen people use "consequentialism" as though it means that (as though it's the antonym to absolutism), but that's not technically accurate. I am familiar with lay people using "relativism" in the way you are, but not of any professional philosophical source. — Pfhorrest
Briefly stated, moral relativism is the view that moral judgments, beliefs about right and wrong, good and bad, not only vary greatly across time and contexts, but that their correctness is dependent on or relative to individual or cultural perspectives and frameworks. — SEP
What I disagree with is the position that:
- if you think that you helping that lady cross that street there right then is the correct thing to do,
- and someone else thinks that you helping that lady cross that street there right then is an incorrect thing to do
- then you're both right relative to yourselves, or relative to your cultures (say the other person is on the far side of the world hearing about your situation), or something like that. — Pfhorrest
if one held that two people could disagree on their judgements of the exact same event and neither of them would be incorrect, that would mean also that one held there to not be a correct judgement of that event; that there's no particular right or wrong way to judge that situation, just different ways, none of them right or wrong. — Pfhorrest
that just pops out clear as day as soon as you formulate the problem right, that's hardly reason to call the whole project a fool's errand. — Pfhorrest
The sense in which I'm using 'relativism'
Briefly stated, moral relativism is the view that moral judgments, beliefs about right and wrong, good and bad, not only vary greatly across time and contexts, but that their correctness is dependent on or relative to individual or cultural perspectives and frameworks. — SEP
Note it specifically states that 'correctness' is relative to the perspective, not that there is no correct. — Isaac
The underdeteminism of data for models is quite a widely established principle now, you'll have a hard time convincing people otherwise. — Isaac
Being correct only relative to a perspective or framework is just the same thing as being thought correct by those who hold such perspective or framework. But the very thing at question is whether what they think is correct, so saying "it's correct according to what they think" is a non-answer. Everyone's views are correct according to what they think; the question is whether what they think is correct, regardless of whether or not they think so. "Relative correctness" is just opinion. Culture-relative "correctness" is just popular opinion. — Pfhorrest
Good issue, and a natural question here is what is correctness? What exactly do we mean by true? — j0e
what makes something true or not is its relationship to our experiences. — Pfhorrest
My argument is that it's transparently incoherent. Being correct only relative to a perspective or framework is just the same thing as being thought correct by those who hold such perspective or framework. — Pfhorrest
Everyone's views are correct according to what they think; the question is whether what they think is correct, regardless of whether or not they think so. — Pfhorrest
The underdeteminism of data for models is quite a widely established principle now, you'll have a hard time convincing people otherwise. — Isaac
Good thing I'm not trying to. — Pfhorrest
the changes of worldview are largely unpredictable and unstructured, but by constantly weeding out the untenable extremes, the chaotic swinging between ever-less-extreme opposites still tends generally toward some limit over time. — Pfhorrest
Is it 'correct' that 'Green' is the word for the colour of grass? It is if you're English. Not if you're French. It's clearly not only possible, but common, to have different answers constitute 'correct' for different languages in different contexts. — Isaac
'Correct' is a meaningless term without someone to think it. — Isaac
You have literally done exactly that. The only argument you've given for your approach is that the data (philosophical theories) fits your theory ("pops-out"). I could come up with a bookshelf-full of theories which fit the data (the whole point of underdetermining, which you claim not to be disputing). So why should we choose your, what are it's other advantages notwithstanding the easy 'qualifying round' of its actually fitting the data. — Isaac
Oh and since you seem interested in my motives for posting, this is another. You keep dropping off counter-arguments only for me to find they've been resurrected later. — Isaac
You claimed earlier that complexity of belief systems was an objective measure that could be analysed by Kolmogorov complexity. I asked for an example, but you've abandoned that. — Isaac
I asked for evidence, you proffered 'science', I suggested that if it were that case it would be the only such example... You seem to have dropped that too. — Isaac
You also claimed earlier that "we should do our best to follow [your methods] even if we're doomed to do so somewhat imperfectly". I argued that it's not always the case, gave several reasons why one would not want to follow a theoretically perfect, but pragmatically unachievable method. You seem to have dropped that. — Isaac
These are universalist claims about particular peoples and the things they say and do and think, and as such they are uncontroversial, as they do not constitute relativism. — Pfhorrest
What would be relativist is to say that there is nothing more to something being permissible than Alice or Bob or whoever's opinions about it. — Pfhorrest
Say you're judging someone else, in the third person, and trying to decide if they are forming their opinions in the proper way; if the things that they think are the correct things to think. Is the only standard you would ever appeal to that of whether or not you think likewise? Or whether a particular someone(s) else (specified how exactly?) thinks likewise? — Pfhorrest
If so, is that the case for ordinary descriptive facts as well? I know already you're going to say no, for those you can appeal to the standard of objective reality, which you know exists because you can't help but think that it exists, while there's no such thing as objective morality because you can (or because many do) doubt that there is, therefore there isn't. — Pfhorrest
it doesn't matter philosophically what how many people do or don't think. It's logically possible to doubt the objectivity of reality, as well as morality: at the extremes, solipsism and egotism are both well-known things in philosophy. — Pfhorrest
I was explaining why it seemed like a plausible thing worth considering, not trying to give a proof of it. — Pfhorrest
You don't respond to every argument I give you either — Pfhorrest
You surely don't doubt that the complexity of a mathematical scientific model of reality could be measured in such a way — Pfhorrest
only a much looser folksier notion of "complexity" would in practice be applied to looser, folksier kinds of beliefs. — Pfhorrest
I admit that progress has been much more slow and haphazard in the moral subdomain — Pfhorrest
there is still evidence of some progress over time: concepts like liberty, equality, democracy, etc, getting much more recognition now than thousands of years ago, as well as the secularization of society and a focus more on material well-being than some abstract spiritual purity or such. — Pfhorrest
I'm not saying that every single person should be trying to exhaustively think through all of the consequences of all of their actions on the entire universe, present and future. If everyone did that, the consequences of their subsequent (in)actions would probably be worse for the entire universe, present and future. I'm just saying that the measure of judging whether an action is better or worse doesn't have any hard limit where you've considered "enough" people and the rest "don't matter". Consider however many you can handle considering. The others still matter, and if you could handle considering them, that would be better. But if the best you can do is just considering the one person you're interacting with right now, then that's the best you can do, so do that. If you can do better, do better, but if you can't, then you can't. That doesn't mean that better isn't better, just that it's too hard to do... for you, right now. But if you or someone else can manage to do better, then that's still better, and better is always worth doing, if you can do it.
That's the core principles as they apply to every day life. — Pfhorrest
I do also advocate that we should try to have an organized social effort to get the best of us together to do the best that they can for the best of everyone, like we have an organized effort to investigate reality in the form of scientific peer review, not just leaving everything up to isolated individuals. — Pfhorrest
I've literally just cited the standard definition of relativism which says almost exactly that. 'What is 'correct' is relative to the particular people doing the judging. — Isaac
You seem to separate out ethical facts from aesthetic facts purely on the grounds that people do not seem to act as if aesthetic facts were universal, and then you say that what people do or do not think as no bearing on the matter. — Isaac
The fact is you can't escape being you, you're own perspective. So if you say Xing is morally wrong, even in a culture that thinks it isn't, you're still just saying that in your language game, Xing is the sort of thinng we use the word 'wrong' for. You're not playing the other culture's language game so obviously you're not going to use their word meanings. there is a difference between talking about another culture and talking in the same language games as another culture. If I say "French is a really beautiful language" I'm using English to talk about French. That's not the same as talking in French. — Isaac
Well no, because unlike the swans example, you're obviously aware that there are many, many philosophical theories which obviously fit the data sufficiently to satisfy perfectly intelligent and knowledgeable people. So 'it seems to fit the data' seems massively insufficient in a way that it wouldn't were you not aware of the countless alternatives. — Isaac
I absolutely do doubt that. How would you even begin? — Isaac
Which undermines your argument. — Isaac
You'll have to give me an example more than just your hand-waiving claim. Take a nomadic hunter-gatherer tribe and talk me through the progress you think they've made by gradual elimination of nonsense ideas to, say, modern America. — Isaac
it is this exact problem of what to do with the uncertainty generated by being unable to judge all the consequences all the time — Isaac
You've even, on that thread, acknowledged that getting to an afterlife would be hedonistic. So that's all religious moral theories brought into this fold too. — Isaac
If we knew for a fact that some action would lead to masses of suffering for the rest of humanity do you really think any ethicist anywhere would argue that we should nonetheless do it? — Isaac
This begs the question because you couldn't know who constituted 'the best'. — Isaac
All you're really advocating is that we consider short-term, easy to predict gains over longer-term, more uncertain ones. — Isaac
a claim that Alice thinks X and she's right to do so, while Bob thinks not-X and he's right to do so, which just amounts to saying that both X and not-X. — Pfhorrest
if Alice says "X is wrong" and Bob says "no it's not" and then they argue about it, like they think they can't both be true (in a universalist sense, though specifying this every time really shouldn't be necessary) at the same time, then it's clear that they're not just expressing their feelings about things, because they're acting as though it's not possible that what they respectively think can both be true at the same time. — Pfhorrest
Moral relativism denies that the latter kind of conversation is ever had, or at least that it's worth having. — Pfhorrest
the grounds on which an object of aesthetic consideration would be objectively of aesthetic value would be the same grounds on which a matter of moral consideration would be objectively morally right. — Pfhorrest
So if a German in 1945 said "Hitler hat nichts falsch gemacht", that would be true? — Pfhorrest
if they said so in their language, that would be true, because that's just how "falsch" (wrong) was used then and there? — Pfhorrest
I found a bunch of alternatives that all seemed only half-right, and no clear consensus on any of them being completely right, everyone insisting that the other side is completely wrong. So I started trying to figure out what would it look like if I took to heart all of the arguments of every side against each other, what alternatives were there in the wake of that. What I'm trying to "sell", as you put it, is just another alternative that I haven't seen presented before — Pfhorrest
it's not really addressing the novel big picture that makes any of this worth stating at all, it's just addressing the old pieces with old arguments that have already been tread to death. I don't find those old arguments about the same old things that interesting, and it's just a chore to tread over them again and again in a way that no new ideas are being exchanged, it's just banging the same heads against the same walls as have been done a thousand times. Meanwhile, the actual new bits, the interesting things that make any of this worth talking about, are ignored, just because they're connected to the same old bits it's not even worth arguing about anymore. — Pfhorrest
Any mathematical model of data is basically a compression algorithm. A formula for a curve takes less information to state than all of the points of that curve separately. A simpler (smaller, shorter, lower-information) formula that more closely matches more data points compresses that data more efficiently. — Pfhorrest
Nomadic hunter-gatherers, from all I've read, had generally pretty good moral standards for the most part, largely because one couldn't survive well with poor morals. The advent of agriculture then enabled hierarchical and authoritarian civilizations and a lot of really evil shit became possible and even advantageous for the ones who did it. Then, slowly and haphazardly over the ages since then, we've begun identifying the worst of those things and building consensus that they are wrong (and thus social resistance to the implementation of them), with things like (as I mentioned) liberty, democracy, equality, etc, becoming increasingly normal standards we try to hold ourselves to, whereas once they would have been seen as loony impossible dreams doomed to fail. — Pfhorrest
And that's why I'm not a consequentialist. — Pfhorrest
Not all religious moral views say that the pleasure or pain expected in the afterlife is the reason why doing something is morally good or bad, — Pfhorrest
there are plenty of people who think certain parts of humanity suffering is straight-up good irrespective of its consequences; see again retributive justice for its own sake. — Pfhorrest
Find a neo-Nazi, for instance, and pose to him a hypothetical post-scarcity technological utopia where not only all white people but all Jews and black people and so on all get their happily-ever-afters equally, and ask if he thinks that that's as good a scenario as one where only the whites get that. — Pfhorrest
I expect the reason why they’d think only whites getting it is better would boil down to retribution anyway: they think the Jews et al are evil and trying to tear down the righteous whites, and therefore deserve to suffer for their wrongs — Pfhorrest
Are you familiar with spoon theory? In this context "the best" I refer to are people with "a lot of spoons". — Pfhorrest
All you're really advocating is that we consider short-term, easy to predict gains — Isaac
Not at all. I'm just advocating that we consider what gains we're able to predict — Pfhorrest
Only if you've already begged the question of whether the X in question is objective. If the X in question is true relative to the person expressing it, then Alice thinks X and she's right to do so, while Bob thinks not-X and he's right to do so is not the same as saying both X and not-X, because a statement X without the context of a person stating it would not make sense. — Isaac
Of course they're acting as if what they respectively think can't both be true at the same time, it can't - for Alice, or for Bob. For Alice, Bob is wrong and Alice can't do anything but argue as Alice so she's going to argue as if Bob is wrong, because Bob is wrong for her and she can't argue as if she weren't her (or at least it would no longer be a moral argument if she did). — Isaac
If I think Xing is morally bad it means I don't want people to X. In what way does that lead to the conversation about X not being worth having? It's the conversation in which I express that Xing is wrong. — Isaac
From a cultural perspective, I'm saying "in our tribe Xing is wrong, so if you don't want to be ostracised, you'd better not do X". That's not only an argument worth having, but for a social species it's an incredibly powerful one. — Isaac
Yeah, sounds about right - only a few years into your reign before your favourite music becomes mandatory because your panel of experts deemed it to actually be the best and anyone thinking it isn't is just factually wrong. Ever spoken to a Pink Floyd fan? — Isaac
can't say it would. As I've tried to explain, the 'truth' of moral statements is context dependant, and for me, Hitler did do something morally wrong. Asking whether it's 'true' without context is already assuming objective morality. I could pretend to be a Nazi, and say, "no Hitler didn't do anything wrong", I expect that's what a Nazi would say, but why would I care what a Nazi would say, I'm not a Nazi. — Isaac
If a Nazi said to another Nazi "don't do the wrong thing, you must do the right thing" the second Nazi would understand that as meaning 'shoot the communist' (or whatever atrocity we're thinking of). This is unequivocal proof that 'wrong' and 'right' meant those things to those people. If they didn't then they wouldn't have understood each other. — Isaac
You know literally everyone feels this way, right? There's not a person in the world whose web of beliefs is identical to another's. We all think our own model is the most accurate, that it differs from other in ways where those other models are flawed. It's nothing unique to you, it's human nature. — Isaac
That doesn't go any way toward analysing a person's web of beliefs. — Isaac
Right. But what you've quite specifically said there is that agriculture caused a change in human morality (or at least the expression of it). So you've undermined your model of morality growing through the exchange of ideas. It appears morality was perfectly adequate without that, agriculture just fucked things up. Maybe an exchange of ideas has occurred since then, but not a necessary one, clearly. — Isaac
And that's why I'm not a consequentialist. — Pfhorrest
So something other than the foreseeable consequences of your actions makes them morally right? What would that be? — Isaac
Not all religious moral views say that the pleasure or pain expected in the afterlife is the reason why doing something is morally good or bad, — Pfhorrest
No, some claim that God knows best. Either way it's still a way of dealing with the uncertainty about what is 'best'. — Isaac
You're just straw-manning. You need to provide a quote from someone in support of retributive justice claiming that it is morally right even if it leads to horrific consequences over all timescales. — Isaac
People simply do not arrive at their beliefs and actions by a process of rational consideration. — Isaac
Plus also, incidentally, the poor would come out bottom of that list every time. Is that really what you want, ethics decided by the rich? — Isaac
All you're really advocating is that we consider short-term, easy to predict gains — Isaac
Not at all. I'm just advocating that we consider what gains we're able to predict — Pfhorrest
...says it all. — Isaac
"Is true relative to the person expressing it" means nothing more than "is the opinion of that person", — Pfhorrest
What remains is the question of whether there's any resolution of that disagreement to be had; whether either of them is right in their opinion, in a sense other than the trivial sense of "agrees with their own opinion". You can refuse to consider that question if you want, you can claim that there's no way to answer that or no sense to make of it, but then you are just bowing out of the conversation between people who are trying to figure out the answer to it. — Pfhorrest
They're acting like they each think they are actually correct, and it needs to be settled which of them is; like they can't just have their separate opinions neither being in any way better than the other. — Pfhorrest
If I think Xing is morally bad it means I don't want people to X. In what way does that lead to the conversation about X not being worth having? It's the conversation in which I express that Xing is wrong. — Isaac
In which case you're acting in a universalist fashion, not a relativist one. — Pfhorrest
What you're saying then is "Xing is disliked in our tribe". That moves the focus of disagreement from Alice and Bob to some Alician tribe and a Bobian tribe. The Alicians disapprove of some kind of action, and the Bobians think it's fine. Do they just tell each other "alright you do you, it's not like either of us is actually right about this", or do they act like the other is actually wrong -- do the Alicians act like the Bobians are letting people get away with moral atrocities, and the Bobians act like the Alicians are being tyrants for not permitting something harmless? If they act in the latter way, they're acting like universalists, like there is such a thing as correct in a sense other than just "our opinion" and there is a disagreement about what that is. — Pfhorrest
You're not talking about reasons to support or oppose some kind of action or state of affairs, but just about the fact that someone or another does support or oppose them and there will be consequences for you if you act contrary to their opinions. — Pfhorrest
where do you draw the line around a "tribe"? Is California my tribe? Ventura County? The Ojai Valley? My block? My household? Or in the other direction, the United States? The world? The whole universe? And how many of the people in whatever unit you pick have to be in agreement for that to be the thing that is "actually right or wrong relative to that unit"? — Pfhorrest
Why can't I just call the half that thinks what I want to think "my tribe" and then claim that I am right by that definition? — Pfhorrest
Why can't I keep doing that until it's just me identifying myself as my own tribe and claiming that since I agree with myself (of course) that I am right, and anyone who disagrees can fuck off because it's not like there's any better standard than the one I'm appealing to (the standard of "I agree with it") by which they can call me wrong. — Pfhorrest
Unless you say that a larger consensus within a larger group is "more right", in which case the "most right" would be universal unanimity. — Pfhorrest
You did catch that I'm an anarchist, right? — Pfhorrest
Then you act like a universalist with regards to Nazis. — Pfhorrest
moral relativism is the view that moral judgments, beliefs about right and wrong, good and bad, not only vary greatly across time and contexts, but that their correctness is dependent on or relative to individual or cultural perspectives and frameworks. — SEP
If one Nazi said to the other "shoot the Spaniard, not the Italian", and the second Nazi shot the person that the first Nazi meant for him to shoot, but in fact both of the people in question were from Italy, does that prove something about the definition of "Italian" and "Spaniard" in the Nazi's language-game? Of course not, it only shows that both Nazis thought that one of the two people they were discussing was Spanish, but they were both incorrect about that. — Pfhorrest
What I'm saying is that, surveying the different kinds of views that people have had as thoroughly as I could, I couldn't find any views that weren't clearly wrong -- in ways that someone else was usually pointing out too, though they in turn were clearly wrong in ways that still others were pointing out -- so I had to come up with new ones. — Pfhorrest
I would have expected people to have a tendency to come up with unique original views of their own in light of this situation — Pfhorrest
That doesn't go any way toward analysing a person's web of beliefs. — Isaac
We were talking about formal scientific models, not natural, folksy webs of belief. — Pfhorrest
agriculture enabled an exploration of moral ideas that previously would not have been possible to explore, because in a pre-agricultural society only very narrow ways of living are even possible in practice. Once it was possible in practice to explore those different ways of living, we as a species explored some really shitty options, and have since then slowly been learning why not to do things that way, even though we can. — Pfhorrest
When we're children and live with our parents our lives are more strictly regulated, and there's a lot of things we simply can't do, even if we wanted to, because our parents won't allow us to do them, or just because we lack the practical means, the power, to do them. When we become adults we're suddenly free from those restrictions and are able to do a bunch of things we couldn't do before -- including a bunch of awful things that we really shouldn't do. In time we learn why we shouldn't do those things, even though we can, and begin to self-impose restrictions and regulations on ourselves. The transition from restricted childhood to wild-and-crazy early adulthood wasn't some kind of negative learning. We didn't know not to do those things before, and we didn't need know that to because we were prevented from doing them anyway. It's not until we were able to do them that we needed to learn why not to. — Pfhorrest
On my account you can't ever positively show that anything is morally obligatory, just like you can't show that any belief is definitely true. You can only show that something is morally forbidden, just like you can only show that a belief is false. That's why consequentialism is the parallel to confirmationism. "This plan would lead to good consequences, therefore this is a good plan" is just as invalid as "this theory has true implications, therefore this theory is true". Affirming the consequent either way. — Pfhorrest
In actual usage, the term “consequentialism” seems to be used as a family resemblance term to refer to any descendant of classic utilitarianism that remains close enough to its ancestor in the important respects. Of course, different philosophers see different respects as the important ones. Hence, there is no agreement on which theories count as consequentialist under this definition.
A definition solely in terms of consequences might seem too broad, because it includes absurd theories such as the theory that an act is morally right if it increases the number of goats in Texas. Of course, such theories are implausible. Still, it is not implausible to call them consequentialist, since they do look only at consequences. — SEP
We were discussing the criteria by which to judge something better or worse, not the uncertainty in applying those criteria. — Pfhorrest
If retributive justice would make everyone suffer forever, then I don't think anyone would be for it, because people do care about some suffering, especially their own. But if retributive justice isn't particularly effective at reducing suffering (of future victims), there are people who will nevertheless be for it anyway, because there are some people (the criminals) who they think deserve to suffer, not because of any instrumental reason, but just intrinsically. — Pfhorrest
People simply do not arrive at their beliefs and actions by a process of rational consideration. — Isaac
Therefore there's no point in trying to have any rational discourse about such things? Then you really are just giving up like I say all relativism is tantamount to. — Pfhorrest
No more than I want science decided by the rich. What I really want is for there not to be rich and poor at all, but given that there are, of course it's only people with at least a certain baseline of material stability in their lives who are going to have the bandwidth to do heavy thinking. — Pfhorrest
Quoting partial sentences for cheap rhetorical points? Really does say it all. — Pfhorrest
why is the only way to resolve differences to decide that one view is objectively right? — Isaac
Why does it need to be settled which of them actually is right? — Isaac
Not at all. I'd also prefer a world in which no-one liked Justin Bieber, doesn't mean I think it's objectively wrong to do so, it would just be a better place to live. — Isaac
You've just totally misunderstood relativism, despite having it clearly set out by the SEP quote. Nowhere in the definition of relativism does it specify that people with different opinions about what's right must be allowed to get on with it by people who think it's wrong. Relativism says nothing whatsoever about how we should act. I could (as above) start a campaign to rid the world of all Justin Bieber records, to ban him from the airwaves and make it illegal for him to sing. None of that would have any bearing on whether I think other people are 'wrong' to like his music. It's just a reflection of how strongly I don't like his music. — Isaac
That there will be consequences for you is a reason to support or oppose some kind of action. — Isaac
You did catch that I'm an anarchist, right? — Pfhorrest
Yeah, right! — Isaac
I think that these principles necessitate things like:
An empirical realist ontology
A functionalist and panpsychist philosophy of mind
A critical rationalist or falsificationist epistemology
A freethinking philosophy of education
A hedonic altruist account of ethical ends
A compatibilist and pan-libertarian philosophy of will
A liberal or libertarian account of ethical means
An anarchic political philosophy — Pfhorrest
Relativism states that the correctness of a moral statement is relative to the person issuing it. Not that there is no such thing as correctness. — Isaac
They understood the word 'right' to mean something like protecting the fatherland against the communist menace by any means. — Isaac
No, you were saying that people's moral beliefs could be analysed for complexity using Kolmogorov. You've yet to even begin to explain how. — Isaac
Give me some examples of moral activity which was not possible (even in kind) in hunter-gatherer communities that agriculture made possible. — Isaac
I'm sure you don't mean it, but as a warning shot you do realise how massively insulting this narrative is to modern day tribal people's? They lead alternative lifestyles, not backwards or underdeveloped ones. The path of human development is not at all like one from children to mature adults. It's just one on a number of possible choices, most moderns societies took that path, some didn't. You need to choose analogies that avoid making those that didn't sound like they're backward. — Isaac
Nothing in the definition of consequentialism specifies that it derive a moral requirements as opposed to a moral proscriptions, and negative utilitarianism is a form of consequentialism. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_consequentialism — Isaac
I know. The argument you keep failing to address is that when we have a choice about what criteria to use (which we do), dealing with the uncertainty in applying those criteria is one of the merits we should consider. You want to just ignore how practical your chosen criteria are to apply, for some reason. It's just daft to say we're going to choose the criteria first regardless of any pragmatic implications, then deal with the pragmatic implication of applying them later. Why would we do that? — Isaac
A person who wants retributive justice despite the negative consequences on human suffering truly does value retribution higher than suffering — Isaac
To be clear, if you want your moral theory to be actually applied in the real world you need to deal with the fact that what people say they believe and what people actually believe are not the same thing. You can argue against what they say they believe in an academic game, but if you want to apply it to the real world you have to deal with what they actually believe. — Isaac
Why would rational discourse be the only way that doesn't constitute giving up? — Isaac
Right. So a consequence of your proposed system is that the rich get to decide what's moral. Saying you don't want that to be a consequence isn't sufficient. — Isaac
Very well. You claimed not to be interested only in predictable consequences (undeniably dominated by the short-term ones) and then said "I'm just advocating that we consider what gains we're able to predict" How is that not a direct contradiction? — Isaac
That implies that the involved parties think that there is some scale (independent of their own opinions, which differ already) on which the options can be ranked as better or worse, more correct or less correct. — Pfhorrest
"They're acting like they each think [...] it needs to be settled which of them is [actually correct]." — Pfhorrest
When you say "it would just be a better place to live" do you mean anything more than "I would prefer to live in that world"? I expect not. — Pfhorrest
do you feel the same way about your differences with Nazis? I expect not. I expect (and hope) that you're not just willing to agree to disagree with Nazis — Pfhorrest
you act toward Nazis like a universalist. — Pfhorrest
That's pretty explicitly giving up on caring about what's right or wrong, just like I say that relativism amounts to. — Pfhorrest
the threat of punishment for acting otherwise than compelled doesn't give you any internal reason to honestly support that course of action — Pfhorrest
it's things like this that make me think that you really just have no idea whatsoever what my views (1)actually are. ... (2)I said this: — Pfhorrest
For something to be "correct relative to someone" is no different from it being someone's opinion. — Pfhorrest
If you only talk about the extension of a term, that leaves you no grounds whatsoever to ask whether or not something belongs within the extension of the term. The intension gives you some kind of criteria by which to measure up a thing and decide if it is a member of the set denoted by that term. — Pfhorrest
To say that any X just means "whatever is called X" is to ignore the intension of "X" and only pay attention to its extension. And you seem to do that only with moral terms, not with anything else. — Pfhorrest
you really want only some of the same principles that apply to factual matters to not apply to moral matters — Pfhorrest
now you're introducing moral beliefs into a sub-conversation that was explicitly only about non-moral beliefs. — Pfhorrest
extreme hierarchy and authority was not possible in hunter-gatherer communities because the person trying to boss everyone around and horde everything for himself could just be abandoned by the rest of the tribe — Pfhorrest
I'm certainly not trying to give that impression. — Pfhorrest
On my anti-consequentialist view that kind of argument can't fly: it doesn't matter that your actions prevent more harm than they cause, they still cause some harm, and so are unjust.
(Preemptively: yes, I know it's very hard in practice to avoid causing any harm to anyone, and in those circumstances my view says to cause the least harm possible, but that's different from saying to do whatever it takes to minimize any harm that happens at all for any reason). — Pfhorrest
Just taking someone's word for something without question is an impractical way of finding out what's actually a correct or incorrect thing to think. — Pfhorrest
Therefore hedonism, for the sake of practicality. If doing hedonism is still hard... well, we'll just have to do our best at it — Pfhorrest
It's not a question of which they value more than the other, it's a question of whether they value them independently as ends in themselves — Pfhorrest
In doing so, if we can manage to do so, we can get people who do have practical, functional, correct views as the deepest parts of their belief networks to bring the rest of themselves more in line with that; and also, expose any people who do have truly deep-seated dysfunctional views, make them face up to that and deal with it. — Pfhorrest
Like I said... ugh... three hours ago... I didn't think it was necessary, on a philosophy forum, to specify that I mean rational discourse as the thing I'm talking about not giving up on. — Pfhorrest
the rich already get to decide what is declared right or wrong today, since they control all governance. — Pfhorrest
I'm not advocating that we neglect the long term, but if it's hard to get good data on the long term one way or the other, then of course we can't plan as narrowly for it, and instead have to broadly plan as well as we can afford for everything in the range of possibilities, in proportion to whatever likelihoods we can manage to figure out about them. — Pfhorrest
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