Under moral subjectivism, the following is true:
1. A belief is a (cognitive) stance taken on the trueness or falseness of a proposition; and
2. Beliefs make moral propositions true or false.
These two statements are inconsistent with each other, and here’s a quick syllogistic demonstration of why:
P1: A stance taken on the trueness or falseness of something, is independent of the trueness or falseness of that something.
P2: A belief is a (cognitive) stance taken on the trueness or falseness of a proposition.
C1: Therefore, a belief about a proposition cannot make that proposition true or false.
P3: Beliefs make moral propositions true or false.
P4: C1 and P3 being true are logically contradictory.
C2: Therefore, moral subjectivism is internally inconsistent. — Bob Ross
I don't like to separate reason from emotion in such a hard-and-fast manner. There's a difference, but it's more of a difference because we've marked it in English -- the Subjective and the Objective -- but I think there's too much philosophical hay made out of the distinction.
Neither the passions nor the mind are primary -- they form a unity that is the judger. — Moliere
When we engage in ethical reasoning, are we inquiring into whether people believe something, or whether something is right or wrong? — Leontiskos
If we are inquiring into whether something is right or wrong then the question of how we know that something is right or wrong is not a derailment. — Fooloso4
If “I should not torture babies” is true, then you are obligated to not torture babies. You can’t affirm that it is true that “I should not torture babies” without conceding it is true that I shouldn’t torture babies: that’s incoherent. — Bob Ross
It follows that I believe it to be a normative claim.
But it wouldn’t be a normative claim, and that’s the point. — Bob Ross
If the proposition expresses something about how something ought to be. Saying “I believe one ought to ...” is not a proposition about what ought to be: it is about what one believes ought to be. — Bob Ross
If I say, "I believe torturing babies is wrong" then that amounts to saying, "I believe no one should torture babies". It follows that I believe it to be a normative claim. Saying Torturing babies is wrong" is really just shorthand for the former "I believe......" — Janus
I haven't anywhere said the two sentences are semantically equivalent. — Janus
No I didn't — Janus
Saying Torturing babies is wrong" is really just shorthand for the former "I believe......" — Janus
but my believing that does not make it so for them — Janus
If I want to claim something is wrong tout court, then I need to be able to say what it is that makes it so, otherwise it is mere hand-waving. — Janus
On the strength of what would I be obligated?
And what would it mean for such a claim to be true beyond my feeling or thinking it to be so?
Would there need to be a lawgiver who would punish me if I transgressed.
…
Are you invoking God?
If a proposition expresses how something ought to be for some individual, then it is the fact that the individual believes that proposition that "supports the ought", so to speak
If you want to go beyond that you need to discover what "supports the ought"—you need to address that question.
But it can be modified pretty easily by noting that 2 can be changed to "feelings/the world make moral propositions true or false", and then there's no contradiction -- at least as I'm seeing it now. — Moliere
P1: A stance taken on the trueness or falseness of something, is independent of the trueness or falseness of that something.
P2: A feeling is a (cognitive) stance taken on the trueness or falseness of a proposition.
C1: Therefore, a feeling about a proposition cannot make that proposition true or false.
P3: Feelings make moral propositions true or false.
P4: C1 and P3 being true are logically contradictory.
C2: Therefore, moral subjectivism is internally inconsistent.
I don't hold that reason and emotion map to the objective and the subjective. — Leontiskos
One way to access Plato's point is to note that an agent can marshal and include emotions within their agency, but someone who is dominated by their emotions is to that extent not an agent at all. They are a patient (hence, "passions"). To grant emotions autonomy in themselves is to have cut oneself off from the ability to distinguish a proper relation to emotion from an improper relation to emotion, and it strikes me as self-evident that there are proper and improper ways to relate to emotion.
More generally: we are simultaneously agents and patients; the emotivist excludes the former and the rationalist excludes the latter.
but someone who is dominated by their emotions is to that extent not an agent at all
we are simultaneously agents and patients; the emotivist excludes the former — Leontiskos
P2 would be "A belief is a cognitive stance taken..."
and P3 would be "Feelings make moral propositions true or false"
The feeling is the non-cognitive truth-maker of the cognitive belief. — Moliere
Emotivists (to my knowledge) don't claim that you are beholden to your emotions to act. Just that emotions inform moral proclamations. One can simply act against their emotions. I do this constantly. To me, one of the biggest benefits of emotivism is that it explains moral disagreement, even intrapersonally. I can have conflicted moral standpoints, because the views done rest of logical predicates (i.e confirming/disconfirming conclusions regardless of their valence). — AmadeusD
"P2: A feeling is a non-cognitive stance taken towards the trueness or falseness of a proposition." Again, I don't see how feelings have any more power to make moral propositions true or false than beliefs have. — Leontiskos
I would think that the Moral Subjectivist could agree that being dominated by emotions is a bad thing, though. — Moliere
Rendering Plato's point in MS for someone who struggles with temper, say: The MS beleives "One ought not act on anger" which means "I feel disgust with myself when I act angry, and I want to be a better person", and if they do, in fact, feel disgust with themselves in that moment and want to be a better person then "One ought not act on anger" is true when that speaker says it. — Moliere
I like your general statement. It seems to get along with the notion that reason and emotion aren't at odds, except you'd say that agents and patients aren't at odds.
I think we only become patients upon seeking a cure. Before that we may be sick, but we're not patients -- and I think that desire for a cure is an important part of any rational path to self-improvement. At the very least in terms of actually being successful in changing rather than listing things that we should be doing (but won't). — Moliere
A feeling isn't a non-cognitive stance taken towards the trueness or falseness of a proposition. — Moliere
The Moral Subjectivist would just claim that the truth of the moral statements will come from those who speak those statements and their truth or falsity of their various commitments — Moliere
but the reason people enact them is due to some attachment, which can include a moral attachment like the example of the person who wants to get over his anger to become better. These sorts of feelings are just as much feelings as the ones which are more commonly named, in this broad use of "Feelings" — Moliere
What establishes the hierarchy? What determines when the level of disgust is too high to be tolerated? — Leontiskos
If what are at stake are truly cognitive truths, then emotion itself cannot establish hierarchies or determine thresholds.
It is reason which does all of this, and therefore reason is implicitly assumed in the background. The person who has a hierarchy of emotions has already gone beyond appeal to emotions.
I don't really know what a sentence like this means, and because of that I dislike the word "just." :razz: — Leontiskos
More simply, I don't think feelings are truth-makers for moral propositions. "I should smash this guy across the face." "Why?" "Because I have a feeling of anger." This is incomplete. The feeling of anger does not in itself make the moral proposition true. It may be true, and the anger may signal its truth, but it may also be false, and the anger may be a consequence of stupidity or error. The anger itself is not a truthmaker. — Leontiskos
But most ethics don't justify violence on the basis of anger at an individual. The attachments preached are love, loyalty, and so forth. Striking out of anger is usually shamed, unless there is some justification for the anger, so of course -- due to our attachment to "One ought not strike out of anger" we will follow that to its logical implication and also say to our risible friend "That's not a good reason, let's go cool off outside" — Moliere
Saying Torturing babies is wrong" is really just shorthand for the former "I believe......"
— Janus
but my believing that does not make it so for them
— Janus — Leontiskos
Torturing babies is wrong
I believe torturing babies is wrong
The point is that (2) does not entail (1). — Leontiskos
The obligation towards a moral proposition, is its truth-binding nature. If you deny this, then you are saying that you can affirm that it is true that “you should not torture babies” without affirming that it is true that you should not torture babies. — Bob Ross
E-motions are moving forces which are meant to coordinate with our agency, not to override and destroy our agency. — Leontiskos
1 is your bias of the word belief, and certainly not mine, nor does it account for the history of the word, merely your own understanding of it.1. A belief is a (cognitive) stance taken on the trueness or falseness of a proposition; and
2. Beliefs make moral propositions true or false. — Bob Ross
Leontiskos: The activity of ethical reasoning is X; the subjectivist is not doing X; therefore the subjectivist is not engaged in ethics. — Leontiskos
Prove to me, via ethical reasoning, that abortion is wrong. More generally, how is anything proved to be wrong? — Leontiskos
I'm saying that for me to say torturing babies is wrong is equivalent to me saying I believe torturing babies is wrong.
It's like if I say to you "Your wife is having an affair" when I don't have hard evidence for it but I believe it very strongly for whatever reason; what I'm really saying is I beleive your wife is having an affair if I am honest,
I can't make sense of the claim "torturing babies is wrong" if I take that to be saying it is wrong tout court, because I can't imagine anything that could make that true, apart from what most people would feel and believe.
Which means that the proposition is inextricably tied to belief, mine, someone else's, even most peoples'.
As I explained in the absence of any other truthmaker belief is all we've got.
You are talking about committing a semantic contradiction
Really nothing is morally binding: people can believe something is wrong, even feel terrible shame in doing it, and yet do it, nonetheless
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