I really think everyone is over-thinking... — Mp202020
I changed the OP to help dissolve this dispute:
C1: Therefore, a belief about a proposition cannot make that proposition true or false. — Bob Ross
I admit it can be confusing, and this is why we have to be very careful: the proposition "I believe <...>" is about a belief of the subject-at-hand, but whether or not it is true is not dependent on any beliefs about it. — Bob Ross
C1: Therefore, a belief cannot make a proposition true or false. — Bob Ross
I don't think Michael is saying that the the truth of the proposition is dependent on what "we" believe. He is saying that the truth is dependent on what the person referenced by "I" believes in that proposition.that "I believe that aliens exist" is not dependent on what we believe about it, so you have failed to demonstrate what belief makes the proposition true or false." — Bob Ross
"a belief cannot make a proposition true or false" is false. — Michael
I think you're missing Bob Ross's point."I believe that aliens exist" is true iff I believe that aliens exist. Therefore your conclusion that "a belief about the proposition cannot make a proposition true or false" is false. — Michael
if people believe stoning someone to death for a minor crime is moral, it is. A moral relativist has no grounds to say that it isn't. — Tzeentch
↪ChrisH If all moral views are equally valid, — Tzeentch
But is moral discourse an essential feature of morality? — Pantagruel
Do you think morals are more explicit or implicit in nature? — Pantagruel
Are you saying that proselytizing is a feature or purpose of morality? — Pantagruel
That's an open door, isn't it? If everything can be moral, then it is exceedingly easy to defend one's subjective values. — Tzeentch
If I understand correctly that is your position, since you mentioned you weren't a moral relativist, but do make said distinction. — Tzeentch
What those arguments tend to boil down to is that when many people believe a thing, it is moral. — Tzeentch
The first describes any value/opinion/preference broadly encompassed by what is generally agreed to be the human activity, morality.
The second (the usage you're using I think), is "moral" as shorthand for morally good/permitted.
— ChrisH
If morality is "opinions that one believes ought to be adopted by everyone", then having such opinions is moral in and of itself, no? — Tzeentch
It simply doesn't make sense to ask if their values are moral in the second sense without specifics.
— ChrisH
Indeed, but if one holds a moral relativist view, the specifics cannot matter.
The reason all of this might sound confusing, is because moral relativism makes the term 'morality' become meaningless (and therefore it makes little sense, in my view). That's the point I'm trying to get across. — Tzeentch
But then it makes no sense to believe morality, personal or collective, are aesthetic preferences. — Tzeentch
Is what they are doing moral? — Tzeentch
Personally, I'm not a moral relativist. I think morality loses all its meaning when it is viewed through moral relativism and you simply end up with morality being whatever the strongest group manages to impose on the rest of the people — Tzeentch
"might makes right." — Tzeentch
What I was attempting to say was that a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others is not, in my view, really a morality - it's aesthetic preference. My understanding is that it's the intention to influence others which distinguishes moral values and aesthetic preferences
— ChrisH
Assuming a moral relativist view, any and all notions of morality are nothing but personal fancy (aesthetic preference), and the only question is who gets to impose their personal fancies on other people; "might makes right." — Tzeentch
Isn't a personal morality that doesn't seek to influence others no different to personal aesthetic preference?
— ChrisH
I think they are the same in that they are expressions of personal values and feelings as opposed to reason. Is that what you mean? — T Clark
even if Cooper is right in saying that public awareness of Trump's malignant delusions is required. — Wayfarer
While I'm at it, I'll make another request that moderators notify affected members when they delete a post or thread. At the very least it will help avoid unwelcome kvetching from loudmouth members like me. — T Clark
Any oncologist will tell you that the patients that beat cancer are the fighters, — Olivier5
Behaviorally, its absence makes little difference — hypericin
On the one hand, they often praise science for being value-free: objective, unbiased, neutral, a pure source of facts. Just as, as often, however, they speak of it as being itself a source of values, perhaps the only true source of them.' — Jack Cummins
The impossibility of being 'the same X in two places simultaneously' isn't merely "practical", — 180 Proof
Shouldn't we have some idea, at this point? — RogueAI
How can the quality of depth in a visual experience be explained within physicalism? — Harry Hindu
Since you don't deny that humans have qualia, — TheMadFool
can it be explained with physicalism? — TheMadFool
so where are we supposed to draw the line? — Outlander