My position on normative ethics is (aretaic) negative utilitarianism, wherein 'harm suffering misery' of members of any sentient species (at minimum) are consider 'moral facts' — 180 Proof
'moral facts' (that is, facts which entail reducing or preventing increases of them). — 180 Proof
The answers here are the same in large part because the criterion proposed in objectively grounded. Harm is the objective moral fact at issue: objective because it is specie member-invariant — 180 Proof
The answers here are the same in large part because the criterion proposed in objectively grounded. — 180 Proof
The answers here are the same in large part because the criterion proposed in objectively grounded. Harm is the objective moral fact at issue: objective because it is specie member-invariant; moral because it entails a meliorative (helping) response; fact because it indicates a natural species defect that when stressed risks dysfunction or worse. — 180 Proof
The system works in the sense it can be applied. But, I can't suppose the outcome of your criteria. I don't want to assume to know and the matter be led off track. Feel free to supply any missing necessary details. My guess is all three answers won't be the same. To me destroying things that express beauty are at least an intrinsic harm to the possible increase in the quality of life they produce.1. Only insofar as it increases harm to someone.
2. ditto
3. ditto — 180 Proof
It delivered the worst humans have ever done. Slavery, Genocide, Illegal Downloading... — Cheshire
I'm glad the assumptions are being put to the test. I had largely taken it for granted that relativism is bad because, just cause..How? No one seems to be presenting a mechanism connecting objectivity of morals to people being somehow unable to act or form beliefs contrary to them — Isaac
No, I was focusing on your claim that there are just evil
people doing evil things. That is a quintessentially theological notion. Even if you don’t think of yourself believing in God, you clearly believe in Good( which is what defines as evil as what it is) , and for many theologians and philosophers this amounts to the same thing as God. — Joshs
I think we might disagree semantically, but the understanding of the implications seems to be the same. The opinion of the actor isn't a determining factor in the result; regarding the right or wrongness.Whether or not an action is objectively wrong is different from an action being right/wrong independent of the actor/situation. Moral absolutism says an action is intrinsically wrong regardless of the ends or actor, whereas an objective morality entails that ethical norms are not up to interpretation; they are laws like any other that one can simply point to. — ToothyMaw
I think we might disagree semantically, but the understanding of the implications seems to be the same. The opinion of the actor isn't a determining factor in the result. — Cheshire
Yes, I get that, but on one side you have justified beliefs, and on the other totally unjustified. There is no symmetry except in terms of zeal perhaps. So I do not find it to be a useful comparison. — ToothyMaw
I think that there might be some moral facts, and that maybe good can exist, but I have no faith in the matter. That would be the most important difference between my view and a theologian's. — ToothyMaw
Perhaps it would help to examine your assumptions. Seems like you are missing the point. Hitler thought what he was doing was good - engaged in righteous foundational work for a new epoch of human greatness. It's you that's determining what's justified and what is totally unjustified. You don't find it a useful comparison because it looks like you can't see the perspectivism inherent in this matter. — Tom Storm
And it isn't a matter of perspective which beliefs are justified in this case - one belief is based in science whereas the other in something else entirely. Surely that makes a difference? — ToothyMaw
If it could be argued coherently that they shouldn't do it because of some sort of absolute morality then maybe it could be stopped, however. — ToothyMaw
Not only are they worried about what’s morally permissible, their actions are bound by a strict moral justification. See Mein Kampf or the old and new testament But I get what you’re saying. In committing genocide they are rejecting one set of moral precepts
in favor of another. — Joshs
... why would it matter if morality was objective or not? Objectively wrong, or subjectively wrong, they don't care either way. Neither force people to do what's right. — Isaac
Same with laws: why bother with legistlating or just punishment since "neither force people to do what's right?" — 180 Proof
I firmly believe things are right or wrong apart from who does them. But, I can't account for how this could be; because every case seems to be about an observer. — Cheshire
6.41 The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world
everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: in it no
value exists--and if it did exist, it would have no value. If there is any
value that does have value, it must lie outside the whole sphere of what
happens and is the case. For all that happens and is the case is
accidental. What makes it non-accidental cannot lie within the world, since
if it did it would itself be accidental. It must lie outside the world.
6.42 So too it is impossible for there to be propositions of ethics.
Propositions can express nothing that is higher.
6.421 It is clear that ethics cannot be put into words. Ethics is
transcendental. (Ethics and aesthetics are one and the same.)
6.4312 .... The solution of the riddle of life in space and time lies outside
space and time. (It is certainly not the solution of any problems of
natural science that is required.)
whether morality 'objective' or 'subjective' matters mostly to philosophers, sophists and clergy – pedagogues (ideologues); that behaviors are either permissible or not however, matters to everyone else who lacks the leisure or inclination to reflect on whether morals (i.e. the permissible) are public customs or private preferences with which to each one regulates 'self-control'. — 180 Proof
Well, since you quote everything but the what you're asking about – and by your less than charitable reading of what you did quote – it's fair to assume you're looking for an ticky-tack argument and not a discussion. I can't help you with that. — 180 Proof
We find a book clearly written by God called "All the Morals" and in it is a passage which say "FGM is immoral". People who want to do FGM say "Well we're Immoral then" and carry on. — Isaac
I am at least to some degree. The reduction of suffering alone is the best guiding principle for a moral theory. I'm not sure how to measure this in the case I presented. I don't expect destroying art to cause any suffering, but it seems morally wrong to needlessly destroy something that has intrinsic value. I thought by isolating the matter between a single actor and an object I might be able to extract some further insight. I do appreciate your input regardless.↪Cheshire Then you're not a negative utilitarian as I claim to be when I prefaced my answers. — 180 Proof
Whether morals actually are objective, absolute, subjective, or relative matters not one jot when it comes to people following them. They will do so on the basis of a little bit of biology and a huge slice of enculturation. No matter what philosophers think. — Isaac
The trouble I gather is the result of tossing out the context of an action. An objective morality would still examine an action within the context it takes place. It seems like it sterilizes the matter for the sake of maintaining the position. Plenty of artist have destroyed works for materials or even burned them for heat. Ignoring the context just doesn't seem reasonable.Yes, but it is more difficult to justify an objective morality than an absolute morality it seems to me. If you just want the act to be right regardless of opinion absolute morality satisfies that without you needing to prove that moral facts exist. — ToothyMaw
An objective morality would still examine an action within the context it takes place. — Cheshire
Ignoring the context just doesn't seem reasonable. — Cheshire
Possibly many/most people have this belief.I firmly believe things are right or wrong apart from who does them. — Cheshire
This is where you differ from the people above. A consequent moral objectivist would either not ask about the origins of morality, or would be certain of a particular source of it. Either way, he would not struggle how to account for objective morality.But, I can't account for how this could be; because every case seems to be about an observer.
An objective morality would still examine an action within the context it takes place. It seems like it sterilizes the matter for the sake of maintaining the position. Plenty of artist have destroyed works for materials or even burned them for heat. Ignoring the context just doesn't seem reasonable. — Cheshire
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