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FFT: Seversky and the IS-OUGHT gap

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In the ongoing AJ vs ID discussion thread, major tangential debates have developed. One of these is on the IS-OUGHT gap, and it is worth headlining due to its pivotal worldviews importance (and yes, this is a philosophy issue). Let us start with Seversky, highlighting his key contention — which is commonly asserted:

Sev, 261: >>Origenes @ 258

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

You cannot logically derive “ought” from “is”. No one can, not even God. So, if our morality is God-given, how did He – or, indeed, any other being – derive it? Did He toss a coin?>>

Origines, 262 (to EA but relevant): >>Eric Anderson @259

Thank you for pointing out the typical materialistic response wrt morality.

EA: However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

The majority of materialists fails to understand that materialism can only take us to the illusion of effective moral laws. Suppose that by ‘Characteristic X’ is meant organismal behavior which is consistent with the moral law “thou shall not steal”. Now, in a purely material universe, all sorts of physical stuff can contribute to X, but X can never be caused by the moral law “thou shall not steal”. The consistency with a moral law is happenstantial and not an intended result. There cannot be a moral law who is telling atoms how to behave. In a materialistic world the moral law “though shall not steal” has no power to reach down in the brain and rearrange neuronal behavior so as to comply with that moral law.

Illusion.

Given materialism, it can only be the case that it is as if a moral law is being respected. So, no, naturalism cannot get us to morality. It can only get us to the illusion of morality. It can result in behavior which, incidentally, is consistent with a moral law. But noticing this consistency is nothing more than the occasional observation of temporal happenstantial synchronicity between two totally unrelated things.>>

KF, 263: >>Seversky, if you have been keeping track that is not what is at stake. The issue is, we are patently inescapably morally governed, as for instance you implied by trying to correct and by expecting us to have a sense of duty to the truth and the right. Either that speaks truly or mindedness collapses into grand delusion. As, if such is a delusional perception in an actually utterly amoral world then delusion is at the heart of attempts to reason and be responsible — as Rosenberg implies but tries to put a rosy picture on. Absurd. So, we need to ask, what sort of world must we be in for such moral government not to be rooted in grand delusion. This points to world-roots that cannot be infinite regress or a chicken-egg loop. Finitely remote, necessary being root. As, were there ever utter non-being (which can have no causal powers) such would forever obtain. The premise that, on pain of grand delusion and absurdity, we are responsibly and rationally significantly free and morally governed, self-moved creatures then leads to the world root being a necessary being that is at the same time inextricably the root of moral government. Where, if we are not self-moved initiating causal agents, we have no true freedom to draw a LOGICAL, meaningful inference from grounds and/or evidence to the consequent or a warranted conclusion, we would be trapped in a delusion of rationality while actually being the GIGO-limited playthings of our computational substrates and their blind, mechanically driven and/or stochastic cause effect chains. We must be free and self-moved to be rational or responsible. Is and ought are not IS–> OUGHT, but instead that they are inherently inextricably entangled and utterly fused at the world-root. There is one serious candidate (if you doubt, kindly provide a coherent alternative: _____ ) i.e. the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being, worthy of loyalty and the reasonable, responsible service of doing the good in accord with our evident nature.>>

The immediate context for this is also well worth excerpting as a part of the spark for onward discussion:

HP, 256: >>The [subjective moralists] I have read . . .  don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one. And, I apologize in advance for not phrasing this as well as I would like.

My own personal belief is that our system of morality is a combination of objective and subjective. The most obvious objective aspect of our morality system is that the existance of this system appears to be universal amongst humans. Even psychopaths and sociopaths have a morality system. They just happen to be very different than that of the majority of the population. Of the other values (not killing, lying, stealing…) some may be objective and others subjective. Frankly, I don’t know. And I don’t really care. But the one thing that makes logical sense is that if there are objective morals, they are not independent of subjectivity. They are either strengthened by our experiences or they are weakened. Thus explaining the variations that we see in their application amongst different cultures.>>

Origines, 258:>>

hammaspeikko: The ones I have read, which I admit are limited, are more nuanced than that. They don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one.

I have never heard about such a moral system. Individual values are subjective and non-individual values are not? Can you provide some more info?
The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

Here is atheistic philosopher Alex Rosenberg:

Scientism can’t avoid nihilism. We need to make the best of it….

First, nihilism can’t condemn Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, or those who fomented the Armenian genocide or the Rwandan one. If there is no such thing as “morally forbidden,” then what Mohamed Atta did on September 11, 2001, was not morally forbidden. Of course, it was not permitted either. But still, don’t we want to have grounds to condemn these monsters? Nihilism seems to cut that ground out from under us. …

To avoid these outcomes, people have been searching for scientifically respectable justification of morality for least a century and a half. The trouble is that over the same 150 years or so, the reasons for nihilism have continued to mount. Both the failure to find an ethics that everyone can agree on and the scientific explanation of the origin and persistence of moral norms have made nihilism more and more plausible while remaining just as unappetizing.

[A. Rosenberg, ‘The Atheist’s Guide To Reality’, ch. 5]>>

EA, 259: >>Origenes:

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

I think your point is well made, and should be sufficient to make any materialist squirm.

However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

This may not seem very intellectually satisfactory to the objective observer, but the materialist is perfectly happy to argue that morality evolved as a result of [insert made-up reason here]. It isn’t fundamentally different than any other system or characteristic evolving. No details. No particular reason or direction. It just did.

So while I agree with your general point, and Rosenberg’s frank admission, the entire issue becomes lost on the committed materialist. After all, the entire view of history and creation and all that this entails, is just — as you aptly noted — nothing more than a long accidental sequence of particles bumping into each other.

And those particles, so the thinking does, don’t have to ground anything. Not design, not functional complexity, not information. Nothing. Just wait long enough for the particles to bump into each other enough times, and — Ta Da! — here we are. Whether we are talking about molecular machines or morality, it is all the same in the materialist creation story.

Remember, this is all right in line with the Great Evolutionary Explanation for all things:

Stuff Happens.

It is really no more substantive than that.>>

So, how then do we come to be morally governed, and what does this imply about us and the world? END

Comments
KF: have you heard the phrase, “my truth is X”?
Many times. It suggests that there are multiple truths, which is incoherent.Origenes
May 4, 2017
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KF: The difference between subjective perception and the advance to warrant that then leads to a degree of objectivity should be clear …
It is clear Kairosfocus. This is the third time in a row that you explain it to me. It is clear to me that bad knowledge is termed “subjective”, that good knowledge is termed “objective” and that perfect knowledge is called “absolute”. I'm pretty sure that I got it the first time. Don't worry: it is perfectly clear to me. What is not clear to me is ‘why’. Why is the term “subjective” used to indicate bad/provisional/unwarranted knowledge? My questions in post #131 remain unansweredOrigenes
May 4, 2017
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Kairosfocus@139, I am not suggesting that a world root level necessary being is not required. I am merely hypothesizing what this necessary being is responsible for. And possibly what He is not responsible for. I don't think that anyone argues that, whatever the cause, we are morally governed. Humans have this deeply ingrained feeling of something, for lack of a better word, we call morality and that we feel, rightly or wrongly, that we are justified in expecting others to comply with our values. Whether or not our justifications are actually logically sound justifications is immaterial. For example, there was a recent case of a county clerk refusing to issue a marriage licence to a same sex couple. I have no doubt that she felt fully justified in this action and nothing anyone could say would change her mind. On the other side, I think that she was completely unjustified in her actions. The thing that we both have in common is that our views in this respect are governed by our individual and different moral values. As such, I have still not seen why a God given need for individual moral systems that is populated with subjectively derived moral values cannot result in the world we see around us. The values that the vast majority of us share (not killing, not stealing, not lying...) are easily seen as a requirement of a stable society, and therefore easily arrived at through reason. If you can identify a moral value that is shared by the vast majority of people that can't easily be derived by reason as a requirement of living in a community, then that is the one that can best be argued as being objective.hammaspeikko
May 4, 2017
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William J Murray @ 142
It’s logically impossible for there to exist something more personal and objective than the O3 God.
He doesn't exist in solitude. He created you, in His image and less than Him, but apart from Him with your own free will.
God has done everything there is to do, including everything you’ve personally done and everything required in the development of your journey be it salvation, enlightenment, ruination, damnation or ultimately non-existence.
No, God has not done everything required in your salvation. He has provided for it, yes, and offered it to you, as a gift, but like a gift, it must be accepted by you for what it is and the giver acknowledged. God has not lived your life for you, He gave you life and free will and with it you made your own choices, comitted your own actions. He has provided you with all that you require, yes, but you are responsible for your actions and inactions. God has delegated to you the responsibility to acknowledge the sacrfice He made for your sins. He doesn't thank Himself in your stead. That responsibility is yours to fulfill. He expects you personally to accept His offer of forgiveness and for you personally to thank Him for His sacrifice personally in your place, on your behalf personally. If you were the only person God ever created, He would still have made that same sacrifice for you personally and still expects you to acknowledge that sacrifice and be grateful to Him, personally.
There’s nothing you can say that I do, chose, had occur for me, etc., that is not contained in the universal immanence of the O3 godhead.
There remains the matter of "gratitude", yours to Him.Charles
May 4, 2017
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Origenes @ 114, I agree that the terms objective and subjective when is come to morality can be either misleading or confusing. It is no doubt confusing because we don’t see, smell or sense morality in the same way we sense something objectively “out there” is the world-- rocks, trees, flowers, stars, planets or people etc. Obviously morals are not something we perceive in that way. However, when it comes to ethics and morality is there a difference between what someone personally believes is right or wrong and what is really right and wrong. The first view is what is usually termed “subjective”; the second is what is termed “objective.” For example, is a man justified in cheating on his wife because they are having marital difficulties? He may be able to personally rationalize to himself that his actions are justified but does that make it right? Does right and wrong rest on an individual’s personal (subjective) opinion or is there a higher (objective) interpersonal standard that as human we are all obligated to follow? In other words, even if the terms “objective” and “subjective” are inadequate there are still categorical distinctions in ethics and morality which exist.john_a_designer
May 4, 2017
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Charles said:
It gets more personal because God has personally paid the price for the sins that you personally committed and God expects you to personally show your gratitude to Him personally and acknowledge Him personally, one way or the other.
Again, I don't see how that is any more personal. God has done everything there is to do, including everything you've personally done and everything required in the development of your journey be it salvation, enlightenment, ruination, damnation or ultimately non-existence. Omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent. There's nothing you can say that I do, chose, had occur for me, etc., that is not contained in the universal immanence of the O3 godhead. There's nothing more objectively existent and at the same time there's nothing more personal. It's logically impossible for there to exist something more personal and objective than the O3 God.William J Murray
May 4, 2017
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O, have you heard the phrase, "my truth is X"? KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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PPS: Let me draw it to your attention, again:
1: Error exists, symbolised E and with the denial, 2: Error does not exist, ~E. (That is, it is an error to assert Error exists ~E.) Already, we see that 3: E and ~E are mutually exhaustive and utterly opposed, one will be true and the other false. 4: Simple inspection shows that the assertion that in effect it is an error to hold that error exists must be the one in error. ~E falsifies itself. 5: So, we see that E is not only factually true (think of red X’s for wrong sums in elementary school) but it holds undeniably, the very attempt to deny it ends up underscoring that it is true. 6: This is an example of a self-evident truth. 7: Such a SET is true, it accurately describes some aspect of the world. In Aristotle’s language, it says of what is that it is, and of what is not, that it is not. (Cf. Metaphysics 1011b.) 8: The SET, E is also UNDENIABLY true, so it is justified true belief, certain knowledge. 9: Thus, certain knowledge exists, and the first such point is that error exists. 10: We know that truth exists, self evident truth exists, certain knowledge of such truth exists, and that a first such truth is that error exists. 11: This is key — a plumb line truth — as it at once sweeps away schemes of thought, ideologies, claims and worldviews that assert or imply that truth does not exist beyond strong opinion, or that truth is not knowable, or that self evident and certainly known truth is not possible. 12: This includes radical relatitivism and subjectivism, in the many, many forms that are popular or even academically entrenched. 13: Our era is an era in which key little errors in the beginning have led to vast systems built on errors,systems which need to be corrected and reformed or even replaced. 14: Likewise, moral SET’s exist, such as that it is evil to kidnap, torture, rape and murder a young child for one’s pleasure or the like motive. (This one, if followed up, leads to many key consequences about morality, it is a moral yardstick truth. [I add, cf here in context]) 15: In the case of the 9/11 attackers, they must have known that treachery, hostage taking, mass murder and the like were acts of piracy and war crimes, for cause. Such acts do not meet the criteria of just war, not least as there are non lethal means of addressing any legitimate concerns they may have had. 16: In fact these were acts of IslamIST terrorism, jihad by suicide bands, meant to open up the way for the final global conquest by Mahdi. This, under Q 9:5 and 29, which abrogate essentially all of the irenic parts. Just, it is not politically correct to say that these days. 17: In short, these are cases of readily demonstrated gross moral error. Similar to the acts of Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, Fidel Castro Che Guevarra and co. 18: So, if moral truth is knowable and moral error exists, our duty is to recognise and correct error, seeking to live by moral truth. 19: That is indeed an implication of your argument. You expected to exert persuasive power by appealing to our duties to truth and to right etc. But on radical relativism or subjectivism, such moral truths and duties do not exist, above might and manipulation making ‘truth’ ‘right ‘rights’ and the like in a given community. 20: In short, your arguments above turn on implicit appeals to duties that on your premises do not exist, they are self-contradictory and false, errors.
If you think this is an error, kindly explain specifically why: ______kairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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HP, we are dealing with quite difficult matters, as you can see form just the exchange on degrees of truth and what this connects to. Not even, this is true is a simple matter in the end, especially given the degree of assault objectivity has suffered in our civilisation. Likewise, another exchange is beginning to turn on the difference between claiming evidence of coherence to moral certainty and the fallacy of claiming a proof of consistency i/l/o the Godel results. the matters you have taken up are even more ticklish and broad ranging, actually requiring years of effort to form a coherent view that one can stand up in public with. I strongly suggest to you that you need to start with what a worldview is, what first principles of right reason are, what the logic of being is about -- I have found Avi Sion a very helpful source online on this, what possible worlds talk is about, then how can we explain the origin of our world as a temporal-causal order. In that context, there are issues on our being inescapably morally governed, indeed your and all of our arguments turn on implied binding duties to truth, right, and much more. In this context, I have argued that a finitely remote world root is the best supported solution on causal-temporal order and origin. This points to a necessary being as world root. beyond, post Hume, such a being will also have to ground moral government. I then brought to bear inference to best explanation (a form of inductive argument in the modern sense) to put forth the only serious candidate. I have invited those of other persuasions to put up alternatives that can pass the comparative difficulties test: _______ . Likewise, as a serious candidate necessary being will either be impossible (as a square circle is impossible) or actual, I have invited those who imagine there is no God to suggest how God is an impossible being: ______ . I trust this will at least outline for you the sort of range of issues and ideas I am working with. KF PS: At least twice above, I have shown you why radical subjectivism and/or relativism -- though popular and rhetorically appealing -- necessarily fail.kairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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O, start at predawn. I perceive a large, blackish ball on a table. As the sun rises, I find my sense of sight to be in a better environment, and I now see the ball is bright red. I have good reason to trust my colour-sense in daylight, rather than at night. However, some subject may have a form of colour blindness that causes him to easily confuse certain colours. In some cases he may correctly identify the red, but in others, he may be confused, I am told there is a muddiness. Now, suppose somebody makes a gift of those glasses that have a filtered cut-out band which appalrently reduces overlap of certain cone cells, and now is able to more accurately perceive colours. I have seen vids of people reduced to exclamations and tears on first putting on such glasses. In turn, I have reason to trust the vids and the claims that by filtering certain colour bands, a better colour resolution is possible for some colour blind people. I am also told there are people with a fourth type of cone, who have a super-resolution of colours. This, I have no reason to doubt, but it is not as well warranted for me. The difference between subjective perception and the advance to warrant that then leads to a degree of objectivity should be clear, where there is a whole realm of study on what degree of warrant is possible, reasonable or not reasonable in a given case, cf Courts of law and their rules of evidence as a good case in point. The further point that the absolute truth is an ideal of complete accuracy on the material factors in a situation, should also be clear. But this whole exercise in a nutshell shows just how ticklish the seemingly simple issues we are dealing with are. KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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DS, in part. It is not just comfort, an emotive term, it is that we have warrant enough to be responsibly willing to bet the farm on that coherence, which in fact we routinely do. And the Euler identity gives a striking one-point case on that coherence. KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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William J Murray @ 134
I don’t know how it can get more personal than god being the root and ongoing creator of your existence and source of your free will capacity.
It gets more personal because God has personally paid the price for the sins that you personally committed and God expects you to personally show your gratitude to Him personally and acknowledge Him personally, one way or the other.Charles
May 4, 2017
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hammaspeikko said:
If God is the ultimate source of our moral values, are they not then subjective from his perspective?
What does it mean to see things "from god's perspective"? God doesn't have "a perspective", god is omniscient and omnipresent. A perspective means having "a point of view" as if there are other "points of view"; what are the competing "points of view" or perspectives when it comes to God? Your question is a categorical non-sequitur. There is no other perspective. God's perspective contains all possible perspectives. This is why god is the root of the existence of the objective. There are no alternatives available.William J Murray
May 4, 2017
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Origines said:
Unfortunately it is not something I can adopt, because the concept of a non-personal God does not make sense to me.
I'm not sure how you're using the term "personal". The concept of god "as a person" makes no sense to me whatsoever, if we're talking about the fundamental root of existence. If you're talking "personal" as in an entity that is intimately involved in you personally, then I don't know how it can get more personal than god being the root and ongoing creator of your existence and source of your free will capacity.William J Murray
May 4, 2017
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Kairosfocus@125, this may all make sense to you, I have to be honest and say that it doesn't to me. But I am interested in your thoughts on the one comment I made. If God is the ultimate source of our moral values, are they not then subjective from his perspective? If not, then they exist in spite of Him, not because of Him. This being the logical consequences, doesn't it make more sense that God is the ultimate source of our need for a deeply ingrained moral system, but not necessarily responsible for the individual moral values that we each have? This is certainly a better explanation of the fact that we each have different values than to rationalize it by saying there are objective values but that we have difficulty figuring out what they are. The argument that if moral values are subjective that we are living a delusion is dead at the starting gate. I believe that not killing is an objective value, but the same value can easily be arrived at through simple logic. It may be subjective, but it is not delusional. If I am to expect others to not harm me, logic dictates that I should should not harm others and I should not sit back and watch others be harmed.hammaspeikko
May 4, 2017
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KF, Ok, is this a fair paraphrase of your statement?
We do not know if (most of) our mathematical reasoning is consistent. However we can take comfort in the fact that there is some coherence among mathematical domains, as demonstrated for example by Euler's Identity (and the related Formula) which relates 5 fundamentally important numbers, and which has significant application in a diverse collection of these domains.
daveS
May 4, 2017
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KF @129
KF: Subjective truth is what we actually perceive to be so, but that may be tainted by error.
Why call uncertain knowledge “subjective”? Why not use terms like “provisional” or “uncertain”? What information is added by the term “subjective”? We are subjects, all our knowledge is “subjective” by definition, so why the restrictive use of the term “subjective” for our most provisional/uncertain knowledge? What does it clarify?Origenes
May 4, 2017
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DS, nope, I used coherence for cause [I am specifically speaking of an epistemological grounding for confidence to moral certainty, not a claimed axiomatic deductive proof . . . which Godel showed we must suspect], and what I am speaking to is antecedent to ZFC etc. ZFC etc need to bow to this, not the reverse. Euler showed that major domains were in coherence, and even though he probably did not know what we would understand transcendentals to be [or did he do even more than I know on this area?], he showed that the two key ones that unify so much of math are infinitely locked, and locked to 0, 1 and i in that coherence. Likewise we see this extending to the operations involved and implied, and then flowing out again to a vast domain, including the applied world. KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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O, truth is that which says of what is that it is, and of what is not, that it is not, following Ari in metaphysics 1011b, giving source. The force of this should be obvious, telling it like it is. Truth -- an assertion of what is or is not so -- requires communicative agents, who will normally be perceivers. One may be subjectively aware of what is the absolute truth. But for that truth to have objective warrant, some logic has to be applied to evidence and to premises: are our senses credible, are we reasoning properly, did we start from plausible premises, are these observations accurate etc, and in the case of inductive reasoning, are our supportive arguments cogent. The distinction between the three degrees is important, as we or other agents may be in error. Absolute truth is an ideal goal, to know the relevant truth in entirety without gaps and without false additions, material to the issues we face. Subjective truth is what we actually perceive to be so, but that may be tainted by error. After a warranting, rational, responsible process, we may arrive at objective truth, open to correction but credible and tested to be reliable, to whatever degree. KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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KF, Regarding:
I point out: the five numbers form brings out a powerful and deep coherence across domains of Mathematics, and in so doing gives us significant mathematical — not merely philosophical — comfort in a post Godel incompleteness theorems world.
do you mean this provides some evidence for the consistency of our mathematical systems (e.g., ZFC)?daveS
May 4, 2017
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KF: … in context, we can speak of overlapping degrees or aspects of truth. Subjective — as perceived by a subject. Absolute, as being the materially complete, utterly accurate, undiluted, untainted description of reality.
The perceived Absolute (truth) is … perceived by a subject. Correct? If so, how does it help to say that the “subjective” is what is perceived by the subject?
KF: Objective, as intermediate and overlapping: well warranted and sufficiently reliable for use, but in principle open to correction towards being a closer approximation tot he absolute ideal.
Assuming that the “objective” (truth) is used by … a subject, I again fail to see how this helps to differentiate between the different levels of knowledge. In my book all knowledge is subjective: the bad, the good and the absolute. And there is nothing wrong with that; “subjective” is not a dirty word.
KF: I may know something subjectively that is absolutely true …
Right, I’m with you 100%. But, how does that not pose a problem wrt the use of the terms “subjective” and “absolute”?Origenes
May 4, 2017
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Origines, in context, we can speak of overlapping degrees or aspects of truth. Subjective -- as perceived by a subject. Absolute, as being the materially complete, utterly accurate, undiluted, untainted description of reality. Objective, as intermediate and overlapping: well warranted and sufficiently reliable for use, but in principle open to correction towards being a closer approximation to the absolute ideal. Warrant is the bridge that moves us beyond mere perceptions to a heightened confidence that we have something reliably close enough to the truth, the whole relevant truth and nothing but the relevant truth. The problem with subjects is of course that we may well err, though that error exists is a self evident, certain truth. One that utterly overthrows ideas that truth is no more than subjective, or relative to circumstances and communities, etc or is unknowable [especially to certainty] etc. I may know something subjectively that is absolutely true too, e.g. that I am conscious [including here even dream states etc], even through I may be deluded about some of the contents and circumstances of that consciousness. KF PS: Notice, how more and more philosophical detains are being required to clarify issues, puzzles and more? See why Plato in the Laws Bk X is right? PPS: The God of ethical theism is maximally great and inherently good, so will be the truth himself and communicative reason himself -- cf. here, too, the profound remarks on the LOGOS in John 1: 1 - 14, which is a philosophical introduction to specifically Christian ethical theism.kairosfocus
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HP, Pardon an intervention. Did you notice that the root case actually argued that -- on pain of grand delusion -- we are responsibly and rationally, insightfully free and thus logically and morally governed? Thus, that we live in a world that must come from roots that sufficiently sustain such creatures. For, we can see that neither infinite temporal-causal regress nor an ultimate chicken-egg loop make good sense . . the antinomies issue. Thus, we face a finitely remote world-root of necessary being character. Where also, post Hume, we can only so support moral government at world-root level. So, we need a necessary being world root that fuses IS and OUGHT inextricably and inherently. In that context, I invited a worldviews level inference to best explanation on comparative difficulties across factual adequacy, coherence and explanatory power. the God of ethical theism is a serious candidate necessary being and as a matter of fact after centuries of debates, is the only serious candidate that answers to the challenge: the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being, worthy of loyalty and the reasonable responsible service of doing the good in accord with our evident nature. I then simply invited (as I have done for years) that objectors simply put forward an alternative that will not rapidly fall into incoherence etc: _________ It will be readily seen that no one has put forth such a serious candidate. this underscores the force of the point, there is just one serious candidate. Where, a serious candidate necessary being (Flying Spaghetti Monsters etc need not apply) will either be an impossible being as a square circle is, or else it will be actual. Present, as part of the undergirding framework for any actually possible world. Not just this one. I also invited objectors to provide grounds for holding the God of ethical theism an impossible being: _______ Again, little or no response. What we see above is all sorts of side-tracks and tangents. In some cases, fair comment is: approaching the status of strawman fallacies. I suggest that you should refocus your thoughts and address the core challenge on the table. The same, holds for others also. KF PS: Hume's "Guillotine" argument:
In every system of morality, which I have hitherto met with, I have always remarked, that the author proceeds for some time in the ordinary way of reasoning, and establishes the being of a God, or makes observations concerning human affairs; when of a sudden I am surprised to find, that instead of the usual copulations of propositions, is, and is not, I meet with no proposition that is not connected with an ought, or an ought not. This change is imperceptible; but is however, of the last consequence. For as this ought, or ought not, expresses some new relation or affirmation, 'tis necessary that it should be observed and explained; and at the same time that a reason should be given, for what seems altogether inconceivable, how this new relation can be a deduction from others, which are entirely different from it. But as authors do not commonly use this precaution, I shall presume to recommend it to the readers; and am persuaded, that this small attention would subvert all the vulgar systems of morality, and let us see, that the distinction of vice and virtue is not founded merely on the relations of objects, nor is perceived by reason.
I draw attention, again to the Holmes comment I put up as comment no 1 above, which has largely been ignored but it of the greatest moment on the focal matter:
However we may define the good, however well we may calculate consequences, to whatever extent we may or may not desire certain consequences, none of this of itself implies any obligation of command. That something is or will be does not imply that we ought to seek it. We can never derive an “ought” from a premised “is” unless the ought is somehow already contained in the premise . . . . R. M. Hare . . . raises the same point. Most theories, he argues, simply fail to account for the ought that commands us: subjectivism reduces imperatives to statements about subjective states, egoism and utilitarianism reduce them to statements about consequences, emotivism simply rejects them because they are not empirically verifiable, and determinism reduces them to causes rather than commands . . . . Elizabeth Anscombe’s point is well made. We have a problem introducing the ought into ethics unless, as she argues, we are morally obligated by law – not a socially imposed law, ultimately, but divine law . . . . This is precisely the problem with modern ethical theory in the West . . . it has lost the binding force of divine commandments. [Arthur F. Holmes, Ethics, (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 1984), p. 81. Holmes goes on to point out that certain duties arise from our particular relationships, commitments and roles in the family and wider community. We may also face situations in which we are forced to choose the lesser of evils, especially where delay or inaction is in effect to make a worse choice.]
The answer of ethical theism is that IS and OUGHT are fused in the character of the necessary being root of the world, God. And as this is at the root of reality, it is not vulnerable to the IS IS -- OUGHT OUGHT gap Hume highlighted. Where also, intersubjective agreement [even among small-g gods who inherently are not going to be the NB root of reality], empathy, etc are all inadequate to sufficiently root OUGHT as a binding obligation, above and beyond might and manipulation make 'truth,' 'right,' 'rights' etc.kairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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Phinehas @116 Can you provide a definition of "objective"? See also post #114.Origenes
May 4, 2017
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WJM @119 Now I understand your use of the term "objective". Thanks. Unfortunately it is not something I can adopt, because the concept of a non-personal God does not make sense to me.Origenes
May 4, 2017
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JDK, did you not notice your very telling remark at 101 above:
101 jdk May 3, 2017 at 6:44 am I wrote e^(i•pi) = -1 because when I used to teach this I first showed the more general formula e^(ix) = cos x + i sin x, from which x = pi produces e^(i•pi) = -1. Rearranging the terms to include 0 is often done in order to make the “five basic constants” form, but the way I wrote it is really more mathematically meaningful if one is not trying to make a philosophical point.
That is what I am responding to, and you obviously have made no serious defense for the highlighted point. I point out: the five numbers form brings out a powerful and deep coherence across domains of Mathematics, and in so doing gives us significant mathematical -- not merely philosophical -- comfort in a post Godel incompleteness theorems world. Though, the epistemological import of coherence giving confidence regarding knowledge claims is not to be lightly disregarded. I put it to you that it is not a correct judgement that the one step short form is MORE mathematically meaningful given that issue of showing a strong coherence across key domains of Mathematics. Coherence is very important indeed, and this one eqn may be the most profound single short unifying statement of extremely broad and powerful coherence I saw in all my academic studies. A case, therefore, of a key fact for the discussion of the vexed puzzle of the one and the many. KFkairosfocus
May 4, 2017
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JaD@106, we may believe these three premises, but that is far from proof. First, why is it impossible to have objective moral values and duties without God? Duties could certainly be designed into us by a designer that isn't God. But even assuming that they were put their by God, what makes the moral values objective? Wouldn't they, by definition, be subjective, at least from God's perspective? Secondly, the second premise, that objective moral values and duties exist, is far from proven. Most of us may believe this because of what we have always been taught, much like many people believe evolution, but we can't know this for a fact.
For example, most societies think that murder, rape and incest are morally wrong.
Most is not all, which I would think is the prerequisite for something to be universal. Most societies have condoned institutional murder, whether as capital punishment, war or abortion. Rape was legal in so called Christian societies until well into the 20th century (1993 in some US states). Incest was not uncommon until fairly recent times.
How can we even conceive of the possibility of universal human rights without some kind of transcendent moral standard?
We think about it all the time, even though we don't always agree on what a universal human right is. For example, the equality of all people, regardless of gender, race and religion is generally agreed to be universal human rights, and we are willing to fight for them. But this has not always been the case. Even in western cultures, women did not receive equal treatment and equal rights until quite recently. More recently, basic human rights have been extended to homosexuals. None of this was the result of any transcendent moral value. It was the result of people fighting for these rights and the rest of society not having any logical and rational reason to deny people these rights. And, I hate to admit it, religion has often played a significant role, often in a misguided fashion, in denying these basic rights to people. For example, the Christian marriage vow, up until very recently, required the wife to "love honour and obey".hammaspeikko
May 3, 2017
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to kf: Here are a list of statements that I believe are true about Euler's identity, and I think that there are none that you would disagree with. Do you see any statements here that you don't think are true, or you think should be stated differently to be more accurate? 1. Euler's formula e^(ix) = cos x + i sin x is an important formula in mathematics. 2. Euler's formula can be derived from the power series for e^x, cos x, and sin x, plus the powers of i. 3. Euler's formula is quite remarkable, as it brings into a single formula three major and seemingly separate areas of mathematics: trigonometry, exponential functions, and complex numbers. (Side note: I think it is thus remarkable that e^(ix) can be interpreted as a vector in the complex plane.) 4. Given that Euler's formula can be derived from the power series, which are themselves derived from calculus in respect to the fundamental properties of trig and exponentials, Euler's formula can ultimately be shown to be logically derived back to the basic foundations of the mathematics of functions, algebra, and arithmetic. 5. Euler's identity e^(i*pi) = -1 is a direct result of letting x = pi in Euler's formula. 6. Euler's identity can therefore be written e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0, which is very nice because it contains the two fundamental constants of arithmetic (the additive identity 0 and the multiplicative identity 1), pi (representing trig), e (representing exponentials), and i (representing the complex numbers). 7. Thus many people see Euler's identity as one of the most, if not the most, remarkable identities in math, representing the way that seemingly disparate aspects of math can cohere into a unified whole.jdk
May 3, 2017
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Origienes @ 114: That is where our outlooks different; I don't view god as a subject, an individual or as a person. but rather as the root of existence itself. It is the absolute nature of being that provides the basis for "objectiveness".William J Murray
May 3, 2017
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??? I have no idea what you are talking about ???jdk
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