That contradicts the sources cited, so I will say for the final time, you are mistaken. — Wayfarer
Or are you preoccupied with picking nits? — Wayfarer
For example, there is no mind-independent state-of-affairs (or arrangement of entities) in reality that makes it true that “one ought not torture babies” but, rather, it is true because it corresponds appropriately to the mind-independent category (i.e., abstract form) of ‘the good’. — Bob Ross
suffice to say it’s difficult to know what you’re trying to say other than “I’m convinced rape is objectively bad”
So idk man. Maybe the reverse is the case - if you’re that convinced, you should be able to convince me. If not, maybe you’re not being honest
Also, in b4 the Dingi turn up: Yes, i have been rape. That is why I am not in the least bit troubled by having this conversation. — AmadeusD
as far as I’m concerned those are practical questions.
I don’t know about any rules that I could apply to anyone else but me — AmadeusD
That contradicts the sources cited, so I will say for the final time, you are mistaken.
— Wayfarer
It is unfortunate because you don't understand the sources you yourself quote despite being explained, or care to read what comes after: — Lionino
c. 1300, substaunce, "divine part or essence" common to the persons of the Trinity;" mid-14c. in philosophy and theology, "that which exists by itself; essential nature; type or kind of thing; real or essential part;" from Old French sustance, substance "goods, possessions; nature, composition" (12c.), from Latin substantia "being, essence, material." This is from substans, present participle of substare "stand firm, stand or be under, be present," from sub "up to, under" (see sub-) + stare "to stand" (from PIE root *sta- "to stand, make or be firm").
Latin substantia translates Greek ousia "that which is one's own, one's substance or property; the being, essence, or nature of anything."
The figurative and general meaning "any kind of corporeal matter, stuff," is attested from mid-14c. As "material wealth, property, goods," late 14c.
The sense of "the matter of a study, discourse, etc.; content of a speech or literary work" is recorded late 14c. That of "meaning expressed by a speech or writing," as distinguished from style, form, performance, is by 1780.
I don't get the relevance of this though. — Michael
Just like how we can infer the general conception of a triangle from particular triangles, we can infer the general conception of the good from particular examples (e.g., helping the sick, being kind, respectful, truthful, etc.). This conception is objective just as much as the conception of a triangle. — Bob Ross
Hey Leontiskos, I perused the Thomist blog you linked to. I have a specific question on something I read there: — Wayfarer
Moore doesn't say that morality "has no essence" (whatever that means). Moore says that moral terms like "good" are undefinable. This contrasts with naturalist theories that claim that moral terms like "good" can be defined in one or more other terms, such as "pleasurable" or "healthy". — Michael
It relates to ↪Hanover's opinions about Moore's Open Question. — Leontiskos
This view is that the good is an abstraction of similar acts such that it turns out to the be equivalent to essentially 'flourishing'. — Bob Ross
I think it poses enormous problems, and that it is directly related to these intractable problems of metaethics. — Leontiskos
what blog are you thinking of? — Leontiskos
Is helping the sick good just because we use the word “good” to describe things like helping the sick? Or is helping the sick good because it satisfies the criteria of “being good”?
In large part, yes. The difficulty is that when we get to fundamental words and concepts they become more difficult to understand. "Being" is the grand-daddy example. Understanding what such words mean requires a highly competent philosopher, and I'm afraid Moore and Wittgenstein are far from that. Point being: these are difficult questions which must be approached with a large dose of humility. The fact that so many on TPF approach them arrogantly explains why their answers are so confused and superficial.
Now the first difficulty to note with the notion of goodness is that it is neither act-centric nor human-centric. There can be good acts and good humans, but there can also be good dogs, and good bridges, and good airplanes, and good sunshine. So we must first avoid the conflation of 'good' with 'moral' or even 'prudent'/'skillful'.
It is because it “satisfies the criteria ...”; but we only gain knowledge of that criteria by abducing it from the particulars. — Bob Ross
I don’t immediately know what the concept of a triangle is, but particular triangles are triangles because they meet the criteria of that concept of a triangle. I gain knowledge of the concept of a triangle by abstraction of particular triangles. — Bob Ross
The issue here is that Hanover (and others) seem to think that using an undefined term poses no problems — Leontiskos
It is here. — Wayfarer
I think the term 'individual substance' is rather odd, don't you? Shouldn't it be an individual being or an individual subject? This use of 'substance' is one of my gripes about philosophical terminology - I've often pointed out that it originates with the Latin translation of Aristotle's 'ouisia' as 'substantia', thence the English 'substance'. But 'substance' in ordinary usage means something utterly different to the philosophical 'substance'.
I'm sure those learned in Aquinas and philosophical terminology understand this distinction but it seems to me to result in a very unfortunate equivocation between the philosophical and ordinary meaning of the term, such that the meaning of the quoted passage really sounds decidedly odd.
Any thoughts on that? — Wayfarer
Which is not right, either, but nevertheless conveys the original idea of 'ousia' better than 'substance'. After all, we have learned an astonishing number of things about material substance: the periodic table, the standard model of physics, the list is endless. What do we know of 'spiritual substance?' Why, it's a mere fiction, a hangover from medieval theology, the ghost in the machine. That's the substantive point. ;-) — Wayfarer
I am not following what your point is here? Are you implying that I am being arrogant in my definition of the good? — Bob Ross
Likewise, the universal, or highest good, is when everything in reality is acting in harmony and unity to flourish; — Bob Ross
My position isn't that words have no meaning. My position is that the have no essences. If my position was that words have no meaning, why would I be arguing with words?
Your criticism here has nothing in particular to do with moral terms, but it has to do with all terms. That is, you're not just saying I can't define good and bad, but I can't define anything, including "define." — Hanover
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