Why not take up that fundamental obligation and deploy the objective implications thereof? In other words, the fundamental obligation is a hypothetical imperative of which one has already committed themselves to and, thusly, why not simply obligate oneself to whatever is implied from that commitment? — Bob Ross
All good, nevertheless my only objection is here: fundamental obligation is categorical, represented as a command of reason, re: shall, whereas hypotheticals are mere ought’s.
Why not take up…..? Mostly because it’s all-too-often very much easier not to.
I agree with the proposition that moral obligations do not begin with desires.
A fact cannot be moral or immoral. Not for the reasons you are stating but by definition.There is no such thing as a moral fact, even in the case that they do exist, which is simultaneously a fundamental obligation; that is, the core principle which commits oneself to the moral facts, in the case that they exist, is necessarily a moral non-fact. — Bob Ross
Ok, but why are desires not simply synonymous with tastes?
Moral obligation: that interest of will, by which the worthiness of being happy is justified.
A fact cannot be moral or immoral. Not for the reasons you are stating but by definition.
A fact is something known to exist or having occured.
I inject moral as a qualifier for obligation, because the topic is concerned with moral facts. — Mww
A proposition is something that is suggested to be considered, accepted or done. It clearly refers to the future. A fact on the other hand refers to something that is present or in the past. These terms/concepts are incompatible with each other. They cannot replace one another.I would say that a ‘fact’ is a proposition of which its content appropriately agrees/corresponds to reality — Bob Ross
A proposition is something that is suggested to be considered, accepted or done.
It clearly refers to the future.
A fact on the other hand refers to something that is present or in the past.
I'm afraid that you must choose a term/concept other than "fact" for your posit. It will be much better than altering its meaning to fit your posit. Don't you think?
From what I could understand from your description, maybe the term/concept of "thought" will do ....
From Dictionary.com we read about the meaning of the term "proposition" in specialized fields, that are included in philosophy:Philosophically, a proposition is a statement that is truth-apt and not merely something “suggested to be considered, accepted, or done”. — Bob Ross
Nothing of these is a proposition. They are just information about things that happened or happen are are going to happen. That is either facts (past and present) or expectations (future). There is nothing in them that proposes anything. We can't say, e.g. " I propose that Bob went to the store yesterday”, or "I propose that Bob is eating” or "I propose that Bob is going to eat”. They all sound ridiculous, don't theyA proposition can be about the past (e.g, “bob went to the store yesterday”), present (e.g., “bob is eating”), future (e.g., “bob is going to eat”), tenseless expressions (e.g., “bob went to the store on Friday, December 23rd, 2022 at 5:55 a.m.”) — Bob Ross
Logic: A statement in which something is affirmed or denied, so that it can therefore be significantly characterized as either true or false.
…
A proposition in philosophy is the statement or conjecture which can be analyzed for its truth value.
Philosophically, a proposition is a statement that is truth-apt
Both expressions "to be" and "can be" refer to a future action
In fact, these definitions are not much different than the what I discribed earlier.
A proposition is something that is suggested to be considered, accepted or done. It clearly refers to the future
See, you don't make a proposition for the sake of the proposition itself, and just forget about it.
Can you fit this term in any of the descriptions of the term "proposition"?
a ‘fact’ is a proposition of which its content appropriately agrees/corresponds to reality
Nothing of these is a proposition. They are just information about things that happened or happen are are going to happen. That is either facts (past and present) or expectations (future). There is nothing in them that proposes anything.
We can't say, e.g. " I propose that Bob went to the store yesterday”, or "I propose that Bob is eating” or "I propose that Bob is going to eat”. They all sound ridiculous, don't they
OK, we can go on forever if you keep trying to milk the bull.
…
anyone would have the patience to do ... But my patience is over.
Are you agreeing that moral obligations begin with tastes, but that one should desire to abide by some set of categorical imperatives? — Bob Ross
Heading into the bush for a few days; not sure of cell coverage, so…. forewarned.
Negative on both. Moral obligations begin with interest in a principle, and one SHALL, not merely SHOULD DESIRE to, abide by a categorical imperative the principle determines….in order to declare himself an moral agent that is worthy of his happiness.
Couple questions: — Bob Ross
What are you semantically distinguishing with "shall" vs. "should desire"? — Bob Ross
……there would be facts of the matter about morality that society could strive towards independently of tastes….. — Bob Ross
Sure, but at the risk of detouring the thread topic? Up to you, of course; it’s you that called the meeting.
Moral obligation relative to interest, indicates the employment of practical reason in determining a willed volition. That obligation relative to an interest in a principle, then, indicates practical reason determine a willed volition in accordance with the subjective disposition of the moral agent himself. A principle in a moral agent that accords with his subjective disposition, is called a maxim. The point being, to eliminate outside influence with respect to moral considerations in general.
Taste, on the other hand, represented by aesthetic judgement, indicates merely a desire, which is always relative to sensation, re: attainment of that which corresponds to, and thereby satisfies, a desire, which in turn is always influenced from outside. Influenced from outside eliminates employment of practical reason, without which there is no proper moral consideration.
Morally speaking, acts willed according to good principles are more powerful than acts willed by mere good feelings.
Dunno about semantically. I positively detest, and refuse to engage in, so-called “language games”.
Shall indicates a command of reason offering no alternatives; should desire indicates a conditional want which implies a plethora of alternative inclinations.
Personally, I think as soon as society enters the conversation, morality becomes group morality writ large, which is ethics. So maybe there is a form of realism in society, but it isn’t moral as much as ethical, realism
Anyway….obviously I survived 6 days in the bush. She with the whistle and spray, me with the .44. No need for either and good times for all.
I am just curious: is she a transcendental idealist too? — Bob Ross
….both a “interest” in a “principle” and a “desire” in a “’good’ feeling” are both mere acts of “taste”, just separated semantically by what it is directed towards. — Bob Ross
So is “shall”, for you, a command with literally no alternatives (e.g., a person being forced to do something, etc.)? If so, then that doesn’t seem like the word is too often applicable. — Bob Ross
Nahhhh….oil and water. She’s a retired Fed in the intelligence services with U-Dub Masters in history and library science, for her, it’s facts and nothing but the facts.
Still, in proper philosophy, I submit it is not so much the directed towards, but rather, the arising from
…
Simply put, it follows that interest in a principle it that by which a moral act is given and its negation impossible regardless of circumstance, but mere desire for a good feeling is just as likely to invoke an immoral act as a moral one
I’ve been thinking about “moral realism”.
I’ve been thinking about “moral realism”. Is morality a real thing? Even if it isn’t, per se, it seems the case there is in all humans a condition by which certain behaviors are legislated, so if the behaviors are real in one sense of the term, wouldn’t that condition by which behaviors are caused be real is some sense? I dunno….it’s a fine line between granting the realness of behavior but denying the realness of behavior’s causality.
I think there must be as many moral facts as there are acts in accordance with subjective moral commands. But that is not sufficient reason to grant objective moral facts in general, to which one is morally obligated. While I am perfectly entitled to say my act is in fact a moral act, am I thereby entitled to say my act is derived from a moral fact, and if I am not so entitled, by what warrant is my act, in fact, moral? If I then fall back on moral command as necessary causality, am I then forced to deem a mere command of reason, a fact? — Mww
…..all interest is of a will, but the desire to do something irregardless of whatever surface-level pleasure/pain is better, correct? — Bob Ross
I also, nowadays, find the moral facts, if they do exist, to be irrelevant as long as the person has committed themselves to being rational. — Bob Ross
….how do you reconcile Einstein’s general/special relativity with Kantian notions of space and time? — Bob Ross
If there is a subjective condition by which behaviors are legislated, and these conditions come into conflict which results in argument, does it then follow that they are in some sense objective? — Leontiskos
On the other hand, here is an proposition that states any cognition or series of cognitions shared by all members of a set capable of them, are for that reason, objective cognitions. I’m not so sure about that myself, but, it’s out there. Some folks rejecting that form of objectivity favor a thing called “intersubjectivity”, which just looks like subject/object version of Frankenstein’s ogre. — Mww
What categorical error were you thinking as possible? — Mww
The interest isn’t of the will, which is the autonomous faculty of volitions. The interest residing in the agent, is in a principle, with which the will determines a volition.
subjective moral fact equates to moral commitment; objective moral facts equates to rational commitment
They can’t be reconciled, because Einstein invoked a geometry Kant didn’t use in his construction of the conceptions of space and time
Kant derived true propositions in order to prove their possibility, and because the proof of their possibility stands, they can be employed as ground for something else relative to them. Einstein disputed the propositions as being true in any condition, but they were never intended for any condition, but only for one.
Einstein didn’t like Kant’s notion of synthetic a priori propositions….the ground of all mathematical proofs…
so are you saying that there is an ‘interest’ devoid of ‘will’ which is a part of the structure of being a will? Is that the idea? — Bob Ross
If there is really an ‘interest’ (i.e., a desire) which pertains to the structure of being a will and not to a will itself, then I think that would be, by definition, a moral fact (in its own right). — Bob Ross
But under Einsteinien space/time fabric, they are not synthetic judgments—they are not isolated ‘pure’ forms of one’s experience (like Kant thought): they do pertain as properties to the things-in-themselves. — Bob Ross
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.