But wouldn't that reduce morality to subjectivity? — Noblosh
It is subjective. I am not a moral absolutist. I see morality as personal - and hence subjective. In the eyes of a moral absolutist, that may seem too subjective. To me it does not.It is just too subjective — TimeLine
Let me guess: says.. you! So, would you be so nice as to clarify that view for me?But wouldn't that reduce morality to subjectivity? — Noblosh
Yes, of course. That's what morality is. — Terrapin Station
Let me guess: says.. you! So, would you be so nice as to clarify that view for me?
Do you claim there's nothing in common between all versions of morality, subjective as they may be?
Nothing inherent to morality? No way to distinguish someone's morality from their preferences?
Would you agree, for example, that someone who doesn't stay true to their moral beliefs is immoral? — Noblosh
What did I do wrong? Nothing. I behaved unethically, for ethical reasons. — Khashoggi
The mistake that some (not all) moral absolutists make is to hold on to the unexamined presupposition that believing one's values are subjective renders one powerless, or disinclined, to act on them. The presupposition is wrong, but it is very widely believed. — andrewk
No, I am not. That is the classic moral absolutist mis-step, to conflate denial of absolute right and wrong with denial of personal morality. I believe there is no such thing as absolute, mind-independent, objective wrong. But I have a very strong personal sense of right and wrong, on the basis of which I strive to act.You are saying that there is no such thing as 'wrong' — TimeLine
I do not understand the question, as 'trusting in my values' is a concept that does not mean anything to me.how can you trust in these values when making an ethical decision, a decision likely to impact others — TimeLine
The only way in which a judgement on my part of his actions makes sense is:
(1) if I am on a jury and am called upon to judge whether he has committed a crime. In this case all that matters is what the law says; and
(2) if I want to use his case as an example to encourage or discourage certain types of behaviour to others. In this case all that matters is my assessment of his behaviour according to my values, not those of anybody else. — andrewk
So are you saying that you're always acting according to your moral beliefs (or according to what you really feel or your personal preferences, if you will), for example? If you're not, I'd argue that you're sometimes acting immorally, would you agree? Accounting for subjectivity or not, I think we should be able to come to a definite consensus at least about what immorality is.And right, there's no way to distinguish morality from preferences, because preferences--namely, about certain types of interpersonal behavior--are what morality is.
Someone "not staying true to their moral beliefs" is probably someone who has stated moral stances that aren't what they really feel. Maybe because they were kowtowing to social norms, for example. — Terrapin Station
So are you saying that you're always acting according to your moral beliefs — Noblosh
I'd argue that you're sometimes acting immorally, would you agree? — Noblosh
I think we should be able to come to a definite consensus at least about what immorality is. — Noblosh
If I would know you well (enough), would I be able to know when you're acting immorally? Also, would all kinds of constraint that would prevent you from acting according to your moral dispositions be immoral?Defnitely in a situation where you're acting against your moral dispositions just to acquiesce to social norms, you'd feel that you're acting immorally, yeah, so I'd agree there. — Terrapin Station
If I would know you well (enough), would I be able to know when you're acting immorally? — Noblosh
Also, would all kinds of constraint that would prevent you from acting according to your moral dispositions be immoral? — Noblosh
I'm asking you these because I'm curious if you consider morality having any objective aspects. — Noblosh
Maybe you're just saying that all ethics are subjective since we're choosing which to follow and which to dismiss. — Noblosh
Hence, in my analysis, whether Khashoggi acted wrongly is a matter that in the end only he can assess. — andrewk
For values to be trustworthy or non-trustworthy would require that there be a 'correct' set of values against which mine can be measured, and I do not believe there is such a thing. — andrewk
Contradicts how?This contradicts your basis of striving to act according to your personal morality whereby you believe that Khashoggi is the only one who can assess whether his actions are deemed immoral, which is thus an objective, mind-independent decision and your 'very strong personal sense of right and wrong' leads to counter-intuitive implications. You are denying your personal morality and so your 'very strong personal sense of right and wrong' on the basis of which you strive to act is false, as you are acting with inaction. — TimeLine
Umm.But you do. You said it yourself, that 'believing one's values are subjective renders one powerless, or disinclined, to act on them.' — TimeLine
Can you spot the difference?The mistake that some (not all) moral absolutists make is to hold on to the unexamined presupposition that believing one's values are subjective renders one powerless, or disinclined, to act on them. The presupposition is wrong, but it is very widely believed. — andrewk
I agree. If we have a difference, perhaps it is one of emphasis.We do however make judgments of others in formulating policies, for instance. An industry should not imply child labour except under certain stringent conditions, say. In such cases we seek common ground with others about what we think would be wrong, surely? — mcdoodle
Nothing I have said implies that I would not take action to prevent harms committed by someone else. In fact I have said quite the opposite. — andrewk
The only way in which a judgement on my part of his actions makes sense is:
(1) if I am on a jury and am called upon to judge whether he has committed a crime. In this case all that matters is what the law says; and
(2) if I want to use his case as an example to encourage or discourage certain types of behaviour to others. In this case all that matters is my assessment of his behaviour according to my values, not those of anybody else. — Andrewk
Here is the passage from which you took those words — andrewk
That statement you quote is about making a judgement of somebody after the actions have occurred. If the actions have already occurred, I cannot prevent them. You seem to be inferring from that that I would not seek to prevent further such actions, if I deemed them to be harmful. — andrewk
The reason for your confusing the two might be that in both cases a judgement is required. But they are different judgements. The judgement in 1 is about harm. The judgement in 2 is about guilt — andrewk
Saying to the would-be mugger: 'Hey you, stop that', and then (courage permitting) physically restraining them while asking bystanders to call the police if they don't stop.What exactly do you mean by prevention? — TimeLine
How is this related to the meta-ethical problem at hand? No one is discussing your powerlessness in fighting injustice but ascertaining your position on Khassoggi. You have been unable to answer anything; what is 'wrong', what is 'belief' viz., your values, and how 'prevention' is related to the subject of your moral position? The answer to that is because you have no answer because your position is baseless.As for arms dealers: you tell me what power I have over them and I'll tell you in what circumstances I'd use it. — andrewk
I call that potential action 'wrong' which would violate my ethical framework if I were to do it. I try to use the term publicly only in relation to my own actions, not those of others, as I see moral judgements of others as usually unhelpful.what is 'wrong', — TimeLine
I call 'belief' any proposition that is sufficiently plausible to me that I am prepared to act in accordance with it.what is 'belief' — TimeLine
My moral framework will lead me to decide to take certain actions. Some of those actions may involve imposing my will on others, including preventing them from doing things - eg preventing the mugger from completing their mugging. Such interventions will be prompted by the perception that I am in a position to be able to prevent harm from occurring.how 'prevention' is related to the subject of your moral position? — TimeLine
My primary value is compassion. Beauty is another. I sometimes muse over the extent to which they overlap.your values — TimeLine
I call 'belief' any proposition that is sufficiently plausible to me that I am prepared to act in accordance with it. — andrewk
I call that potential action 'wrong' which would violate my ethical framework if I were to do it. — andrewk
I'm afraid I don't understand that question.How do you measure this 'ethical framework' with your beliefs and whether your values that enable you to act against what you consider 'wrong' as being aligned 'correctly'? — TimeLine
I wasn't saying that. But I do have that direct access.Are you saying that you have direct access to your judgements and experiences — TimeLine
No I am not saying that.that there is no sociological or epistemological basis to this ethical framework in which you have formed? — TimeLine
I'm afraid I don't understand that question.Since you muse quite regularly on the concept of Beauty, how does this conceptualisation form? — TimeLine
Are you saying that you have direct access to your judgements and experiences
— TimeLine
I wasn't saying that. But I do have that direct access. — andrewk
Since you muse quite regularly on the concept of Beauty, how does this conceptualisation form?
— TimeLine
I'm afraid I don't understand that question. — andrewk
How do you measure this 'ethical framework' with your beliefs and whether your values that enable you to act against what you consider 'wrong' as being aligned 'correctly'?
— TimeLine
I'm afraid I don't understand that question. — andrewk
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