Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

FFT: Seversky and the IS-OUGHT gap

Share
Facebook
Twitter/X
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

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
JDK, you made some remarks above. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:01 PM
5
05
01
PM
PDT
Origenes:
Suppose we conclude that it is possible, in principle, for morality to be grounded in multiple persons. Suppose further that the persons involved live forever and will always gladly and freely support this morality. Would such a morality be ‘objective’? If not, why not?
Subjective feelings are not made objective simply by being widely or even universally felt. One aspect of subjective opinion is that we routinely recognize that its opposite is just as valid. I find liver disgusting, but I recognize that it is perfectly valid for someone else to hold that it is delicious. We can clearly see this is the case in that, even if every single person on the planet found liver disgusting, the moment someone said they found it delicious, we'd have to admit that their personal preference was just as valid as any other. That's how personal preference works. And this is completely at odds with how everyone treats morality. We treat morality, with incredible consistency, exactly as though it is an objective commodity. Though some may claim that morality is subjective, what they can do is demonstrate that we treat it as such, or that there is any substantive difference between how we treat it and how we treat things that we believe are objectively true.Phinehas
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
03:56 PM
3
03
56
PM
PDT
kf writes at 113,
JDK, the power series form for e^x then of e^ix leads to the exponential relationship e^i*theta = cis theta. The substitution instance, in rads, theta = pi, gives a specific, powerfully relevant result. That result ties together several domains of mathematics and implies a powerful coherence that is highly relevant post Godel. Among other things.
Yes, that is what I wrote at 101 and 104, although when I mentioned that I derived it for my students,I didn't bother to mention that we did that using power series. I also agreed that I understood the "deep coherence" that the formula represents. Also, in 112 I said I used to explain the form e^ix) + 1 = 0 for exactly the reasons you mention. Therefore, I don't understand why you keep lecturing me about this as if I didn't understand something. ???jdk
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
02:57 PM
2
02
57
PM
PDT
W J Murray @100 For clarity, I am not at all trying to argue with you. What follows is just an attempt to get some clarity about terms and concepts I struggle with.
WJM: Morality either refers to an objective commodity that exists regardless of subjective acceptance/participation, or it is not an objective commodity.
One feature of “objective”, I take it, is to exist regardless of subjective acceptance/participation. Here is my problem with this term. I my view all existence is ultimately grounded in a person, a subject if you will. In my view God is also a person — a subject. If God, as a person, upholds his morality, what makes it “objective”? Is it only “objective” to us, because God would hold the same morality regardless of our subjective acceptance/participation, or is it also somehow objective to God? One more thing: often “subject” or “subjective” is used as to indicate unreliability and/or weird random preferences/morality. This is not my understanding of those terms.Origenes
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
12:06 PM
12
12
06
PM
PDT
JDK, the power series form for e^x then of e^ix leads to the exponential relationship e^i*theta = cis theta. The substitution instance, in rads, theta = pi, gives a specific, powerfully relevant result. That result ties together several domains of mathematics and implies a powerful coherence that is highly relevant post Godel. Among other things. The resistance to what should be an easy yes, has to have its own explanation and I simply don't buy the line that algebraically we can get there from the form e^i*pi = - 1 so we go with what is "simpler." Yes, add 1 to RHS and LHS, so why is so much invested in not taking that step, which gives so much insight? Especially to students, where something of that level of beauty and power is utterly magnetic, drawing people to the discipline? [BTW, I didn't first hear this from the tutor in a class, a fellow student showed me at a student Astronomy club meeting, being amazed at what he had learned in class and knowing its striking power to draw attention, provoking interest.] KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
11:58 AM
11
11
58
AM
PDT
I didn't denigrate philosophical matters, either, although kf must be referring to me. I just wrote an explanation about why I wrote Euler's identity the way I did. I used to also write it the way kf did, and make the exact same point to my students about the five main constants that kf did. But no one would write the more general formula e^ix) – (cos x + isinx) = 0. I think kf is being too sensitive here.jdk
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
10:50 AM
10
10
50
AM
PDT
KF,
DS: I spoke to/of another participant, where the subtext does suggest a subtle denigration of philosophical matters connected to Mathematics. KF
Ok, thanks, I must have missed that exchange.daveS
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
10:21 AM
10
10
21
AM
PDT
JAD, for the real world we have to be content with at most moral certainty -- and that very term is a clue, too. Indeed the exchange above on the Euler identity brings out the issue of the incompleteness theorems and the theoretical possibility of incoherent axiom-sets for mathematics. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
10:18 AM
10
10
18
AM
PDT
EA, I commented in the other thread: https://uncommondescent.com/atheism/the-materialist-mindset/#comment-630798 KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
10:15 AM
10
10
15
AM
PDT
DS: I spoke to/of another participant, where the subtext does suggest a subtle denigration of philosophical matters connected to Mathematics. KF PS: I put it to you, that the form that brings out the five connected numbers is indeed further illuminating. There is a reason why that form is so widely used and is the form on which the remarks that this is the most beautiful equation in mathematics, were based.kairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
09:54 AM
9
09
54
AM
PDT
kf: Thanks for highlighting the prior exchange and our discussion with AJ, Seversky, Origenes and others. I haven't had a chance to go through all the comments above, but it looks like a lively exchange. For those interested, I've posted a new OP, analyzing not so much the argument against materialism and for objective morality, but the materialist mindset itself and how that impacts how the debate plays out: https://uncommondescent.com/atheism/the-materialist-mindset/Eric Anderson
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
08:45 AM
8
08
45
AM
PDT
I don’t recall anyone in any of our recent discussions, relating to this topic, discussing William Lane Craig’s syllogistic argument, which actually uses inductive logic to establish one of its premises. Here it is:
1. If God does not exist, objective moral values and duties do not exist. 2. But objective moral values and duties do exist. 3. Therefore, God exists.
Read more: http://www.reasonablefaith.org/transcript-moral-argument#ixzz3Tfk4P86Z How does Craig arrive at premise #2 which claims that “objective moral values and duties do exist”? It is because throughout human history most people from most cultures believe-- recognize-- that there are at least some things that are really morally wrong, even if they don’t completely agree about what those things are. We arrive at those moral beliefs inductively-- existentially from our experience of life as human beings. Of course, the weakness of inductive logic is that you can never be certain that particular facts A, B, C… establishes a universal truth. For example, it is generally observed that the solid form of a chemical substance is denser than its liquid form. Therefore, when place in a container of its liquid form, the solid form will sink. However, that is not true of water. The solid form of water-- ice-- floats in liquid water. However, Craig’s argument works even if there are some things-- even a few things-- which are really morally wrong. I would argue that human beings throughout history do generally agree that some things which are really wrong. For example, most societies think that murder, rape and incest are morally wrong. However, in modern society it goes way beyond that. How can we even conceive of the possibility of universal human rights without some kind of transcendent moral standard?john_a_designer
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
08:05 AM
8
08
05
AM
PDT
KF (and jdk): I know this was directed toward jdk, but it piques my interest:
And, thus, the implicit suspicion towards philosophy as shown is itself now suspect; indeed it begs the question, why that suspicion and dismissal?
Is there evidence of suspicion toward philosophy here? I think philosophy is exactly what is needed. I'm not suspicious of philosophy in the slightest. I'm no scholar, but I enjoy reading philosophy (of mathematics and logic, especially) and like to engage some of these questions to the best of my ability.daveS
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
06:30 AM
6
06
30
AM
PDT
The identity as a wrote it "brings out a phenomenon of infinitely deep coherence across entire domains of Mathematics": I agree with that. A slight rearrangement to include zero doesn't make that "infinitely deep coherence" any deeper, I don't think. I can assure that I understand the deep coherence: I used to teach the derivation of the formula for e^ix. I don't think the article you linked to tells me anything I don't already know.jdk
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
06:20 AM
6
06
20
AM
PDT
WJM, some very good notes. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
06:07 AM
6
06
07
AM
PDT
JDK, you inadvertently underscore my point. The rearrangement as you put it brings out a phenomenon of infinitely deep coherence across entire domains of Mathematics, which is highly significant post Godel, it is even in effect the other side to the story of the incompleteness theorems. Evidence that we have good reason for high confidence in the grand coherence of major domains of Math. In turn such coherence undergirds confidence -- note my adverting to faith here -- that we are seeing something real in mathematical investigations, we are discovering truths. Objective truths. And, thus, the implicit suspicion towards philosophy as shown is itself now suspect; indeed it begs the question, why that suspicion and dismissal? Could it be that the philosophical context the result points to is pointing where many would not go, today? After all, rhetorical persuasion is always to a purpose, and reveals the thoughts and intents of our hearts. KF PS: To see the lurking issues in small part cf here: https://www.researchgate.net/post/What_is_Special_in_Eulers_identity_e_ipi_102 then note Wolfram: http://mathworld.wolfram.com/EulerFormula.html PPS -- I add: This article is also interesting: http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-26151062 I clip:
Prof David Percy from the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications . . . . told the BBC: "It is a real classic and you can do no better than that. "It is simple to look at and yet incredibly profound, it comprises the five most important mathematical constants - zero (additive identity), one (multiplicative identity), e and pi (the two most common transcendental numbers) and i (fundamental imaginary number). "It also comprises the three most basic arithmetic operations - addition, multiplication and exponentiation. "Given that e, pi and i are incredibly complicated and seemingly unrelated numbers, it is amazing that they are linked by this concise formula. "At first you don't realise the implications it's a gradual impact, perhaps as you would with a piece of music and then suddenly it becomes amazing as you realise its full potential." He said beauty was a source of "inspiration and gives you the enthusiasm to find out about things".
kairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:58 AM
5
05
58
AM
PDT
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.jdk
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:44 AM
5
05
44
AM
PDT
Suppose we conclude that it is possible, in principle, for morality to be grounded in multiple persons. Suppose further that the persons involved live forever and will always gladly and freely support this morality. Would such a morality be ‘objective’? If not, why not?
If by "grounded" in multiple persons you mean it is subjectively held by all the individuals of a group, then no, it's not objective. Why not? Because black isn't white, up isn't down, and objective isn't subjective. Morality either refers to an objective commodity that exists regardless of subjective acceptance/participation, or it is not an objective commodity. That many or all hold a subjective view doesn't make that view objective in nature. A thing is objective in nature; we can then have subjective views of that thing that correctly assess/understand the objective thing's qualities.William J Murray
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:44 AM
5
05
44
AM
PDT
hammaspeikko said:
If we need some objective moral compass to inform us that being raped and forced into slavery are things that we would not want for ourselves, humanity is screwed.
Because I do a thing to someone else doesn't mean it will be done to me; because I don't do a thing to someone else doesn't mean it won't be done to me. What difference does it make if we would want it for ourselves or not? You are relying upon an assumed universal general moral rule to make your case when you have no grounds from which to assert or imply such a rule. There is no natural law that prevents me from doing to others things which I would prefer not be done to me. And yes, you are right - without the presumed universality and authority of the very moral rule you have implied - do unto others as you would have done unto yourself - humans would indeed be in some very deep trouble. However, it is precisely because such universals moral guidelines exist and we refer to them when speaking to each other that you can put on display your outrage that anyone would draw a moral equivalence between one preference and another. An outrage that should not exist if one actually lived up to the premise that morality is entirely subjective.
Is it not possible that our entire moral system is based on a God given need for moral governance and a God given ability to empathize? It seems to me that these two characteristics of humanity is all that is needed to account for what we see around us.
No, because "empathy" is not "governance" and can never satisfy a "need for moral governance". If all we have is empathy and there is no moral structure or consequences beyond that, then why not just shove empathy aside, deaden our concern for others, and do whatever we wish, whatever we think is ultimately in our best interests? Is there no penalty for harming others if we deaden our empathy or train our predilections to enjoy cruelty? There is no moral "governance" without consequences. Also, "empathy" is a poor source of moral information because empathy can be easily tricked or misled. We might feel empathy for someone going through addiction withdrawal, but we must put our empathy aside to do what is right for them and help them get through their withdrawal. The same is true when we have to teach our children or keep them from harmful situations or get them to eat a healthy diet. Empathy is a useful emotion, but it is conscience and reason that must prove the correct moral path forward even when empathy tugs at our hearts.William J Murray
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:40 AM
5
05
40
AM
PDT
KF, And I'm not suggesting it's trivial or simple in significance. Just that it's comprehensible, and perhaps a bit less astounding eventually.daveS
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:29 AM
5
05
29
AM
PDT
DS, that identity may be many things, but in effect "trivial and simple in significance" is not one of them. Start with infinitely deep coherence and elegant unifying simplicity. KF PS: The astounding number of raw possibilities in collections of objects is also something we struggle to understand. It lies at the heart of the significance of FSCO/I as a strong sign of design.kairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:16 AM
5
05
16
AM
PDT
DS, I actually saw someone else.
Noted.
I find that facet actually astounding.
I don't have much more to say about my original question here, but to respond to this---is it not desirable to, at some point and if possible, "get over" the feeling that this identity is astounding? As I ask this question, I fully concede that there are some facts which I will always find astounding (e.g., the number of permutations of a standard deck of cards is about the same order of magnitude as the number of atoms in our galaxy). However I think Euler's identity is much more comprehensible to humans.daveS
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
05:08 AM
5
05
08
AM
PDT
DS, I actually saw someone else. The simplification drops significant aspects, and one of the most wonderful features is not just the convergence of the five numbers and associated domains, giving a demonstration of core coherence [vital, post Godel!], but also that two very different transcendentals e and pi, are locked together with infinitely fine key-lock precision such that the prescribed operations yield an exact whole number result. I find that facet actually astounding. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
04:53 AM
4
04
53
AM
PDT
KF,
Though, I note that the Euler identity in particular draws out the infinitely deep connexion between the five most important numbers in Mathematics (and linked domains of thought as a direct consequence, lending great confidence in a Post-Godel world), showing a deep coherence. In particular, notice how the two transcendentals, e and pi are strangely locked together to infinite precision through this result, 0 = 1 + e^i* pi. (I notice someone tries to trivialise by rearranging to leave out the 0 and to move to – 1.)
I wonder who that would be? :P But seriously, I wrote the equation in a simplified form not to trivialize it, but because it's simpler that way. I for one don't find it "strange" that e and π satisfy this relation. It's a useful and beautiful formula, and a stepping stone to deeper understanding no doubt.daveS
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
04:48 AM
4
04
48
AM
PDT
O, Inter-subjective or even community "consensus" agreement may still be in error, as the case of that once universal -- and sadly not yet dead -- plague known as slavery, shows. Likewise, we must ponder the problem of the warped yardstick and the need for self-evidently true plumb-lines that cross-check. We really do need to go down to world-roots and find IS and OUGHT inextricably fused there to warrant moral knowledge, and we must know that our reasoning insofar as it is genuinely free, is pervaded by considerations of moral government. As we can readily recall from the almost inevitably earnest tone of our first instructions in logic, rhetoric and fallacies. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
04:21 AM
4
04
21
AM
PDT
Question: Can morality be grounded in multiple persons? Is it feasible that morality is more like an agreement between multiple persons rather than rules dictated by the one? One practical earthly problem would be that moral agreement between so many different persons is impossible. However, from a theoretical point of view, assuming the existence of a limited group of free rational responsible persons and enough time, what could stop them from freely reaching agreement on moral laws and by doing so base morality on multiple persons? Suppose we conclude that it is possible, in principle, for morality to be grounded in multiple persons. Suppose further that the persons involved live forever and will always gladly and freely support this morality. Would such a morality be ‘objective’? If not, why not?Origenes
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
02:54 AM
2
02
54
AM
PDT
F/N: Let me just inject a challenge. Knowledge implies a knowing, warranting subject, but claims credible objectivity as warranted, credibly true (and so reliable) belief, thus running beyond individual- or community- relative perception or opinion (and enforcement). Warrant of course being the gap-spanning bridge between belief or opinion and knowledge. In short, how do we bridge the kantian ugly gulch between the phenomenal internal-to-each-of-us world of rationally contemplative consciousness, and the domain of things in themselves? With, of course the logic of structure and quantity -- Math -- in very strong play (per Wigner), especially the Euler Identity, 0 = 1 + e^i*pi. That is, Kant's noumenal world. For this, I suggest as a start-point F H Bradley's challenge that the man who claims the unknowability of the noumenal world has already implied that he knows a very important thing about such a world: its alleged un-know-ability. Thus, he subtly reduces his claim to self-refutation -- and no, this is not patent, it took a leading philosopher to spot this about one of the all time top twenty. That is, this is precisely NOT a self-evident truth, as its discernment is obviously difficult and required sophisticated mental senses deeply trained by reason of long use. This hard-won insight, then frees us to ponder something like Josiah Royce's proposition, Error exists, and its import. As in, for SOME things we do not accurately know the external world of things in themselves, but for others we can know to undeniable certainty as shown. KF PS: Then also, ponder the issue of objective ethical knowledge, ethical SET and the problem of the warped yardstick. That is, if we adopt a warped and inaccurate yardstick as criterion of measuring truth, right etc, then that which is actually true, conforming accurately to reality, will never conform to the warped yardstick. So, if we reject criteria for testing our yardsticks -- plumb-line SETs (cf. here) -- we will become stuck in error and utterly resistant to correction. Until, we head over the cliff. And then, it is usually bloodily too late. PPS: Do you see why the cynical manipulator, such as a ruthless agit-prop strategist, will want to get us into a position where we cling to a warped yardstick? (Hence, do we see the redoubled importance of straight thinking informed by sound philosophical, logical, epistemological and ethical tools?)kairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
01:45 AM
1
01
45
AM
PDT
UB, food for thought, and do stick around. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
01:17 AM
1
01
17
AM
PDT
DS et al: Again, the issue is not any one or two expressions of the logic of structure and quantity. it is the coherence of a whole world. Though, I note that the Euler identity in particular draws out the infinitely deep connexion between the five most important numbers in Mathematics (and linked domains of thought as a direct consequence, lending great confidence in a Post-Godel world), showing a deep coherence. In particular, notice how the two transcendentals, e and pi are strangely locked together to infinite precision through this result, 0 = 1 + e^i* pi. (I notice someone tries to trivialise by rearranging to leave out the 0 and to move to - 1.) The core issue is the coherence of a complex world, and the conditions for the existence of such a world, which point to the need for a necessary being world root that is in effect the context and undergirding of all that occurs. Including, how there exist creatures able to reason on insight through responsible -- morally governed -- actions of logical inference. Both deductive and inductive. From the perspective of ethical theism, it is summed up in the worlds of Paul at Athens in 50 AD, speaking to the elites and guardians of the Western intellectual tradition at that time and place, at kairos, a hinge of history:
Ac 17:22 So Paul, standing in the center of the Areopagus, said:
“Men of Athens, I observe [with every turn I make throughout the city] that you are very religious and devout in all respects. 23 Now as I was going along and carefully looking at your objects of worship, I came to an altar with this inscription: ‘TO AN [d]UNKNOWN GOD.’ Therefore what you already worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you. 24 The God who created the world and everything in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands; 25 nor is He [e]served by human hands, as though He needed anything, because it is He who gives to all [people] life and breath and all things. 26 And He made from one man every nation of mankind to live on the face of the earth, having determined their appointed times and the boundaries of their lands and territories. 27 This was so that they would seek God, if perhaps they might grasp for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us. 28 For in Him we live and move and exist [that is, in Him we actually have our being], as even some of [f]your own poets have said, ‘For we also are His children.’ 29 So then, being God’s children, we should not think that the Divine Nature (deity) is like gold or silver or stone, an image formed by the art and imagination or skill of man. 30 Therefore God overlooked and disregarded the former ages of ignorance; but now He commands all people everywhere to repent [that is, to change their old way of thinking, to regret their past sins, and to seek God’s purpose for their lives], 31 because He has set a day when He will judge the inhabited world in righteousness by a Man whom He has appointed and destined for that task, and He has provided credible proof to everyone by raising Him from the dead.”
32 Now when they heard [the term] resurrection from the dead, [g]some mocked and sneered; but others said, “We will hear from you again about this matter.” 33 So Paul left them. 34 But some men joined him and believed; among them were Dionysius, [a judge] of the Council of Areopagus, and a woman named Damaris, and others with them. [AMP]
Food for thought. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
01:03 AM
1
01
03
AM
PDT
HeKS, 77 (& attn HP):
If objective morality does not really exist, then nothing is truly morally wrong or impermissible and moral intervention can never be rationally justified (certainly not as a moral imperative), because it would only ever amount to forcing your own moral opinions on other people who have different moral opinions that, objectively speaking, cannot possibly be wrong or inferior to your own. This discussion is one about ultimate grounding. If no ultimate grounding exists for moral values and duties then you can point out that rape and murder involve violence, the suppression of someone’s free will and a disregard for the value of life, but you can’t offer any ultimate justification for why any of those things are truly wrong. Instead they just become socially taboo … out of fashion among folks who consider themselves respectable … contrary to some kind of utilitarian philosophy or another. There would be no objective difference between the moral status of rape and murder and voluntarily choosing to eat liver because morality would ultimately consist of nothing more than statements about personal or group preference rather than descriptive statements about how the world actually is. Where the discussion proceeds from there depends on the person. Many people consider it self-evident that certain things really are morally wrong, considering a belief in objective moral values and duties to be properly basic (i.e. capable of being rationally held without needing justification by appeal to more basic evidence) and the conversation simply becomes about what is needed to ground those moral realities, with God being the only serious candidate on offer. For those who don’t hold a belief in objective moral values and duties to be properly basic, the discussion can become about establishing their existence as either a matter of logical necessity or as being the most rational conclusion based on other conclusions that are considered to be logically necessary.
Very well summarised, thanks. I also note that in 32 above, I addressed the core questions of relativism and subjectivism in steps of thought, which HP does not seem to have adequately taken up in the past day or so. Let me clip:
let me break out a brief form of this discussion [turning on Josiah Royce's proposition, Error exists -- which he identified as a point of general agreement on truth (we just typically think it's the other guy or gal who is in error! . . . ) and thus is pivotal for onward discussion], as it is directly relevant to the radical relativism and/or subjectivism you have been taught and led to accept as truth: Consider:
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.
What is actually going on is more or less what Plato warned us against in The Laws, Bk X, 2350+ years ago. Yes, this is nothing new, and the ruinous consequences have played out in history again and again, especially over the past 250 years . . .
Food for thought. of course, the past day shows just how easily people go off on all sort of tangents and just how much exactitude is required to work one's way through a complex difficult question. The very stuff of philosophy. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2017
May
05
May
3
03
2017
12:50 AM
12
12
50
AM
PDT
1 5 6 7 8 9 10

Leave a Reply