Nor do I, and that's not what I have been suggesting. I am pointing out that there is a truth functional equivalence between them. P is true IFF P is a fact.Note that I do not accept the idea that 'truth' and 'fact' are exact synonyms. — Leontiskos
I agree. From the concurrent thread on deriving an ought form an is:That's fine, but there can be a big difference between the various ways that such truths are understood. — Michael
Direction of fit does a much better job of differentiating ought from is, than a simplistic, scientistic refusal to acknowledge that ought statements, and moral statements generally, have a truth value. It has the advantage of displaying the difference of intentionality.I do agree that there is a difference between what is the case and what ought be the case. I think that better captured by Anscombe's shopping list. The difference is that of direction of fit; when we say what is the case, we change our words to fit the way the world is. When we say what ought be the case, we are changing the way things are to match our words. — Banno
The phrase I have bolded is much stronger than antirealism. It claims that there are no moral facts. My simple argument shows this to be wrong.I think that Hume’s Guillotine can be deployed to validly extinguish the existence of moral facticity, if ‘moral’ language signifies ‘what one ought to be doing’, since in any event of reasoning about ‘what one ought to do’ it is going to be grounded in non-facts. — Bob Ross
That one ought not kick puppies for fun is a moral statement.
It is a true statement that one ought not kick puppies for fun.
Facts are true statements.
Therefore there are moral facts. — Banno
P2-A: All prescriptive statements (P) which dictate ‘what one ought to do’ (D) are non-factual (T). — Bob Ross
Why pay this any heed, when it is clear that there are moral facts, and that we can and do use them to make inferences? Mackie's argument from queerness just confuses being objective and direction of fit. We all agree that one ought not kick puppies for fun, and so objectivity is irrelevant.I'd say that it's error theory which demonstrates how ethical propositions can be truth-apt, but false. So they can take on logical forms but they cannot form sound inferences. — Moliere
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics?...we're not just asserting our convictions... — Moliere
I’m not trying to prove that one ought not harm another. I’m trying to make sense of moral realism. Moral realists claim that there is something like an objective, mind-independent fact that one ought not harm another, and that because of this fact the proposition “one ought not harm another” is true.
So this could have been summed up by, "I agree with Hume." Yet the forum is filled with critiques of Hume. I thought you were attempting to go beyond Hume in one way or another.
As I said in my first reply to you, you are begging the question.
P2-A is the contentious premise, and it receives no defense/justification
P2-A*1: If Hume’s Guillotine is true, then P2-A is true.
P2-A*2: Hume’s Guillotine is true.
P2-A*C: Therefore, P2-A is true.
Edit: This seems to be your argument in a simplified form:
1. Anything which depends on non-facts is a matter of taste.
2. Moral claims depend on non-facts.
3. Therefore, moral claims are a matter of taste.
(2) needs to be defended by something more than a mere appeal to Hume.
We get ‛T is a normative true statement’, and what we want to know is whether asserting this is equivalent to asserting the truth of T
If we’re allowed to use statements as bound variables – that is, if Ex can quantify over “facts” and “statements”, not just “objects” or “states of affairs” -- then it looks like we can quote the statement without committing ourselves to its truth, or even to whether it’s true-or-false.
But if only states of affairs can count as existing, then we have to make what is (to me) an awkward translation
Where I would like some help is in understanding whether Banno's objection, quoted above, must be correct. Are we making a normative statement in the sense that we're talking about truth, or in the sense that we're talking about whatever the normative behavior is? Does it require both truth and normativity to create a normative statement? Have I even made a meaningful distinction? I think so, but . . . see above re my logical competence.
To say of some normative statement, that it is true, is itself to make a normative statement, isn't it?
Are we making a normative statement in the sense that we're talking about truth, or in the sense that we're talking about whatever the normative behavior is?
Does it require both truth and normativity to create a normative statement?
The phrase I have bolded is much stronger than antirealism. It claims that there are no moral facts.
A close look at Ross' argument shows that he assumes that normative statements are not factual at P1.
It surprises me that no one else has pointed this out.
He doesn't prove his thesis; he assumes it, then allows it to ride into his conclusion on the back of normative statements.
He does this again, explicitly, in his updated version:
P2-A: All prescriptive statements (P) which dictate ‘what one ought to do’ (D) are non-factual (T).
Moral anti-realism is the position that there are no true moral facts. — Bob Ross
So understood, moral anti-realism is the disjunction of three theses:
moral noncognitivism
moral error theory
moral non-objectivism — Stanford
My bolding.Non-objectivism (as it will be called here) allows that moral facts exist but holds that they are non-objective. — loc cit
P2-A* (fucksake!) is not an argument, it is an assertion. As has already been explained.P2-A is derived from P2-A* — Bob Ross
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics? — Banno
P2-A* (fucksake!) is not an argument, it is an assertion. As has already been explained. — Banno
I'd say that it's error theory which demonstrates how ethical propositions can be truth-apt, but false. — Moliere
Why pay this any heed, when it is clear that there are moral facts, and that we can and do use them to make inferences? — Banno
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics? — Banno
This needs to be said far too frequently, and surprisingly most often to those who advocate some form of empiricism...The point at issue is that one cannot simply present a theory as a justification for excluding facts. — Leontiskos
We all agree to the fact that coffee is delicious, and a great way to start the day. Despite the fact that cockroaches are disgusting and terrifying, some folk keep them as pets. While it is a fact that Germany is a wonderful country to visit, I would prefer to visit Turkey. The fact is I tried shopping at a market near me, but everything was overpriced. So now I travel looking for bargains. Thanks — Banno
...eccentric usage... — Judaka
"Should"? The term exists and has a long standing place in English despite your misgivings.Why should the term "moral facts" exist if all moral opinions are moral facts? — Judaka
They are all well-formed sentences of English. What's eccentric here, if anything, is the insistence that there can be no moral truths. — Banno
"Should"? The term exists and has a long standing place in English despite your misgivings. — Banno
Certainly not. I don't think I've made any such claim. Cite me. Nor is that an implication of what has been said - if it is, show your argument.By your understanding, valid and mutually exclusive facts co-exist since a statement can be true by one's preferences, interpretations and feelings. — Judaka
No. Did you not see the Ngram?Did you miss the "if"? — Judaka
Certainly not. I don't think I've made any such claim. Cite me. Nor is that an implication of what has been said - if it is, show your argument. — Banno
Your argument is that moral truths are intractable, therefore you will save yourself some trouble by simply asserting that they do not exist. — Banno
Why pay this any heed, when it is clear that there are moral facts, and that we can and do use them to make inferences? Mackie's argument from queerness just confuses being objective and direction of fit. We all agree that one ought not kick puppies for fun, and so objectivity is irrelevant.
...we're not just asserting our convictions...
— Moliere
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics? — Banno
We all agree to the fact that coffee is delicious, and a great way to start the day. — Banno
”The concept of “fact”, the primary intended meaning of that which the word represents, being empirical, shouldn’t be adjoined to that human condition having no definitive empirical predication whatsoever.”
-Mww
I agree: so where does that leave moral realism, then? — Bob Ross
Traditionally, to hold a realist position with respect to X is to hold that X exists objectively. On this view, moral anti-realism is the denial of the thesis that moral properties—or facts, objects, relations, events, etc. (whatever categories one is willing to countenance)—exist objectively.
…
So understood, moral anti-realism is the disjunction of three theses:
moral noncognitivism
moral error theory
moral non-objectivism
Non-objectivism (as it will be called here) allows that moral facts exist but holds that they are non-objective.
Again, "true fact" is redundant.
P2-A* (fucksake!) is not an argument, it is an assertion. As has already been explained.
But isn't "asserting our convictions" what we do in physics as well as morality? We engineer planes from what we believe to be true. Why shouldn't we do the same thing in Ethics? — Banno
This strikes me as an important point in these conversations.
Sure, you should try to defend P2-A*1 if that is how you wish to defend P2-A. Give us a persuasive reason to accept your thesis.
This seems to me to be the nub of our differences. Opinions are not meaningless. If they are logically indistinguishable from moral truths (they are not...) then moral truths are not meaningless, either.My view is that "moral truths" are meaningless and logically indistinguishable from opinion. — Judaka
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.