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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
Great news: https://www.evolutionnews.org/2017/05/brazils-mackenzie-university-to-launch-new-center-on-intelligent-design/Truth Will Set You Free
May 2, 2017
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Kairosfocus@54. Thank you for the response. I read your clip, specifically the bolded sections. Unless I am misinterpreting this, the examples he is using are the same used by those who support subjective morality. Essentially, the golden rule. As I suggested as a hypothetical, what if the objective part of our moral governance is the moral governance itself? The absolute need for all humans to have some type of moral system who's adherence borders on reflex (although reflex is not a strong enough word). And what if the values that populate this moral system are not objective but based on a combination of objective observations and subjective interpretations and extrapolations? It is easy to envision how things like not killing, stealing, lying, torturing, kidnapping, and the like would be incorporated into such a system and still be coherent. It would be difficult for any of us to envision wanting any of this to happen to us or our family. To say nothing of the fact that these sorts of values are drummed into our heads from the day we can start to comprehend the world. But, again hypothetically, such a system would, by the necessity of its subjective nature, be open to the moral values of a few being completely outside the norm. Again, I believe that there are objective moral values, but I honestly can't see how we prove this or how we can rule out that they are not objective.hammaspeikko
May 2, 2017
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KF,
DS, absent the sort of complex order with logic of structure and quantity applicable, there will be no ordered system of reality, no cosmos. And I am not claiming there is just one ordered system or just one way to order a cosmos, by any means. Hence, possible worlds speak. Note, too, necessary beings will be in the framework of ANY possible world. KF
Ok, but do you have any response to my question about e^iπ = −1? I haven't seen you assert that it could fail to be true in some possible world. Therefore perhaps it's true in every possible world? In that case, is it not possible that humans could discover this equation with no divine assistance? It's not that difficult to understand.daveS
May 2, 2017
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HP, in effect you asked for how we would operationalise moral governance. I gave you one key, and earlier I pointed to a case study that would give inductive lessons, the moral yardstick case of kidnapping and torturing then raping and murdering a young child for sick pleasure . . . unfortunately, not at all hypothetical. here, I give you a remark by Locke, extended through his own citation from Hooker, that also has much to teach us:
[2nd Treatise on Civil Gov't, Ch 2 sec. 5:] . . . if I cannot but wish to receive good, even as much at every man's hands, as any man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be careful to satisfy the like desire which is undoubtedly in other men . . . my desire, therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of bearing to themward fully the like affection. From which relation of equality between ourselves and them that are as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is ignorant . . . [This directly echoes St. Paul in Rom 2: "14 For when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do what the law requires, they are a law to themselves, even though they do not have the law. 15 They show that the work of the law is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts accuse or even excuse them . . . " and 13: "9 For the commandments, “You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,” and any other commandment, are summed up in this word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” 10 Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law . . . " Hooker then continues, citing Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics, Bk 8:] as namely, That because we would take no harm, we must therefore do none; That since we would not be in any thing extremely dealt with, we must ourselves avoid all extremity in our dealings; That from all violence and wrong we are utterly to abstain, with such-like . . . ] [Eccl. Polity ,preface, Bk I, "ch." 8, p.80, cf. here. Emphasis added.] [Augmented citation, Locke, Second Treatise on Civil Government, Ch 2 Sect. 5. ]
I trust these will be of help for those inclined to study, especially as this passage and context was in fact foundational to the rise of modern liberty and democracy. . KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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F/N: In a cosmos, we will have an infinite set of necessarily true propositions that will be so contemplated. The sort of NB we speak of on grounds of addressing moral governance -- that's how we got there -- will be reason itself so to speak and will contemplate all these truths. Recall, this is more specific than, there is a finitely remote world-root of necessary being character. The God of ethical theism is on the table as serious candidate to be that world root as answering best to the need for a root that will fuse is and ought. It is a bonus that such a being would explain the eternal nature of propositions as being eternally contemplated. Do you have a serious alternative candidate world root that does not run into incoherence? As in: ______, and if the God of ethical theism (clearly a serious candidate) is ruled out, on what basis is this an impossible being? ______ (Recall, a serious candidate NB is either impossible or actual. Flying spaghetti monsters and the like need not apply.)kairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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DS, absent the sort of complex order with logic of structure and quantity applicable, there will be no ordered system of reality, no cosmos. And I am not claiming there is just one ordered system or just one way to order a cosmos, by any means. Hence, possible worlds speak. Note, too, necessary beings will be in the framework of ANY possible world. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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WJM,
Other than drawing upon bare, brute possibility, the only answer (as best explanation) we have is that our mental capacities and the physics of the universe converge upon a single world-root causation that has created/developed the two hand-in-hand for some purpose.
The existence of a world-root has been stipulated by me in this thread. What I'm asking is how this world-root could have any effect on mathematics, for example. Is it necessary that the world-root contemplate "1 + 1 = 2" eternally for it to be true? I'm not interested at the moment in discussing the much broader questions of why we value truth, &c.daveS
May 2, 2017
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KF,
DS, have to head out but the point is that the cosmos is an ordered system [per physics a quite complex one, too], which necessarily involves the logic of structure and quantity, that is mathematics. On that narrow point: mathematics is built in due to the coherent structure of the cosmos and its laws.
If the cosmos were less ordered (or perhaps unordered, if that's even possible), how would that change mathematics? I don't see how that would affect the truth of e^iπ = −1, for example.daveS
May 2, 2017
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Kairosfocus: "HP, please see the Kant Categorical Imperative, which is a rule of coherence in morals." I wasn't talking about categorical versus hypothetical imperatives. At least that wasn't my intent. I was simply being the devil's advocate with regard to the concept of moral governance. Personally I believe that we are under moral governance and that it is GOD who instilled this in us, in spite of the fact that we often have difficulties in discerning the values He actually wants us to follow. I just want to present a hypothetical, which I don't think is much different than what JDK proposed (he can correct me if I am wrong). Is it not possible that the gift God gave us was the need for a deeply ingrained moral system but didn't actually provide any individual objective moral values? In this way the actual moral values that we end up with are those best suited for our survival and our ability to thrive? These cultural moral values may change over time but they retain their own inertia, making change difficult and slow, which is often a good thing. I am not suggesting that this is what actually happened, but I also don't see that this type of hypothetical world is not a coherent possibility. I apologize for the double negative.hammaspeikko
May 2, 2017
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hammaspeikko @ 43:
Then might I suggest that his point would have been made clearer if you had have used the word “contradiction”?
I don't think so. Precision and nuance are always preferable to inaccuracy and gloss. Might take a little longer to comprehend, but the end result is valuable.
Now, be honest, did you know what antinomy meant before it was used here?
No, I did not. I had to look it up, as I often must with some of the terms used here (and elsewhere).Charles
May 2, 2017
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WJM, 44: Spot on. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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F/N: A quiet plea, cf this from The Laws, Bk X:
Ath. At Athens there are tales preserved in writing which the virtue of your state, as I am informed, refuses to admit. They speak of the Gods in prose as well as verse, and the oldest of them tell of the origin of the heavens and of the world, and not far from the beginning of their story they proceed to narrate the birth of the Gods, and how after they were born they behaved to one another. Whether these stories have in other ways a good or a bad influence, I should not like to be severe upon them, because they are ancient; but, looking at them with reference to the duties of children to their parents, I cannot praise them, or think that they are useful, or at all true. Of the words of the ancients I have nothing more to say; and I should wish to say of them only what is pleasing to the Gods. But as to our younger generation and their wisdom, I cannot let them off when they do mischief. For do but mark the effect of their words: when you and I argue for the existence of the Gods, and produce the sun, moon, stars, and earth, claiming for them a divine being, if we would listen to the aforesaid philosophers we should say that they are earth and stones only, which can have no care at all of human affairs, and that all religion is a cooking up of words and a make-believe. Cle. One such teacher, O Stranger, would be bad enough, and you imply that there are many of them, which is worse. Ath. Well, then; what shall we say or do?-Shall we assume that some one is accusing us among unholy men, who are trying to escape from the effect of our legislation; and that they say of us-How dreadful that you should legislate on the supposition that there are Gods! Shall we make a defence of ourselves? or shall we leave them and return to our laws, lest the prelude should become longer than the law? For the discourse will certainly extend to great length, if we are to treat the impiously disposed as they desire, partly demonstrating to them at some length the things of which they demand an explanation, partly making them afraid or dissatisfied, and then proceed to the requisite enactments. Cle. Yes, Stranger; but then how often have we repeated already that on the present occasion there is no reason why brevity should be preferred to length; who is "at our heels"?-as the saying goes, and it would be paltry and ridiculous to prefer the shorter to the better. It is a matter of no small consequence, in some way or other to prove that there are Gods, and that they are good, and regard justice more than men do. The demonstration of this would be the best and noblest prelude of all our laws. And therefore, without impatience, and without hurry, let us unreservedly consider the whole matter, summoning up all the power of persuasion which we possess. Ath. Seeing you thus in earnest, I would fain offer up a prayer that I may succeed:-but I must proceed at once . . .
We are here dealing with issues that generally come in thousand page books when fully addressed. Especially when ramifications and tangents have to also be addressed. These are not simple issues, worldviews and worldview issues are among the most intractable of all issues. Generally we hope for a society with enough consensus on a sound system that we do not have to worry about such. But thanks to the past 3 - 500 years, we do not have that luxury. And it is worldview troubles that lie at the heart of the ongoing collapse of our civilisation. So, to these troubled waters we must go. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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Antinomies (where, paradox does not necessarily imply irresolvable contradictions):
Merriam-Webster Definition of antinomy plural antinomies 1 : a contradiction between two apparently equally valid principles or between inferences correctly drawn from such principles [--> this also applies as the other two alternatives end in incoherence] 2 : a fundamental and apparently unresolvable conflict or contradiction [--> main intent] antinomies of beauty and evil, freedom and slavery — Stephen Holden
I trust this helps. We face as temporal-causal order, which chains in causally linked stages as the world unfolds and time marches on. The issue is where does such a chain come from, and that leads to three main alternatives. First, turtles all the way down, to use the commonly told story -- meaning infinite regress, which ends up with how do we ever cross endlessness to reach here. The second is some chicken-egg circle of causation, which ends up in incoherences tied to such a cycle being proposed as an ultimate origin. The third is the last turtle stands somewhere, i..e. a finitely remote world root. This was previously discussed and is in fact tangential to the focus of this thread which builds on those. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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DaveS, Why should humans be able to comprehend mathematics at all? Why should we value truth? Why should the universal constants be as finely tuned as they are? Why should symbolic communication even be possible? Other than drawing upon bare, brute possibility, the only answer (as best explanation) we have is that our mental capacities and the physics of the universe converge upon a single world-root causation that has created/developed the two hand-in-hand for some purpose. Why would anyone want to believe that their existence is a material absurdity of illusionary self, illusionary morality, and illusionary understanding?William J Murray
May 2, 2017
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Charles@42, most words, even those that are considered synonyms, have slightly different meanings. But we will typically use the one that has the most common usage if we want to get our point across. Using a word that may be slightly more accurate does not add clarity if it is a word that is so obscure that nobody knows what it means. "antinomy: a contradiction between two statements that seem equally reasonable." Then might I suggest that his point would have been made clearer if you had have used the word "contradiction"? I am not trying to be critical of Kairosfocus' actual argument, just that his arguments could be made much clearer and easier to read if he would avoid obscure words in favour of words that are in common use. Now, be honest, did you know what antinomy meant before it was used here? But I am distracting from the conversation.hammaspeikko
May 2, 2017
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hammaspeikko @ 39
Nobody here has ever used the word antinomies, which, by the way, is of Latin origin. The word “paradox” would have been just as precise and effective, with the added benefit of being understood by everyone.
Grammar police here. In fact, antinomies and paradox have different meanings:
antinomy: a contradiction between two statements that seem equally reasonable paradox: a statement that contradicts itself
a contradiction among multiple statements (that seem reasonable) is not the same as a single statement that contradicts itself. kairosfocus @ 8 alluded to 3 possible explanations, of which one explanation does not contradict the other two, i.e. that particular explanation lacks antinomies or it reconciles the other two. Multiple reasonable statements, yet with contradictions amongt them - antinomies is the correct term.Charles
May 2, 2017
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hammaspeikko, (ditto HeKS) Are you a voluntary participant here? Did someone force you to become part of this discussion? I agree that KF’s posts are often excessively long and ponderous. However, if you are going to comment on one of his threads then it’s your responsibility to understand his arguments. By contrast, I try to make my comments as succinct and easy to understand as possible. Yet for some reason KF is the click bait and I am not (not that I have the interest, time or desire to assume his role.) My question for you is this: are you really here to have a discussion or debate or do you see KF’s posts as an opportunity to be obstructive and obfuscate? Am I questioning your motives? Actually, I am questioning what your motives are. Only you can tell us that.john_a_designer
May 2, 2017
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hammaspeikko #39
Thank you for the condescension. You are making the mistaken assumption that formal education and intelligence go hand in hand. You would be wise to keep that in mind.
Oh, come on! Let's go to the tape for a moment, shall we? Here's what you said:
Kairosfocus, I am only a high school graduate so you will have to use words other than “antinomies” if you want to convince me of anything.
Then to john_a_designer you said:
JaD: “You are making an inductive argument for moral relativity, aren’t you?”
hammaspeikko: Couldn’t tell you. I don’t know what inductive means. But I do know what makes sense to me.
You are the one who waded into a fairly complex philosophical discussion and then made a show of saying 'aw shucks, I'm only a high school graduate, I can't be expected to understand these big words you're using.' You're the one who made the connection between your formal education and your ability to understand words that, as you've clearly discovered, can be easily looked up online. KF only responded to the connection that you made. So, while I completely agree that there's no important connection between formal education and intelligence or knowledge (and consider myself evidence of that), to now take umbrage at KF acknowledging a connection in your case that you made is just silly and disingenuous. If you don't want people here to make a negative connection between your formal education and your intelligence, maybe don't start off by making that very connection for them. If you don't understand something and would like someone to explain it, just say so and people here will usually be more than happy to oblige (we're a wordy bunch). There's nothing wrong with not knowing or understanding something. There is something wrong, however, with blaming your lack of understanding on your formal education and then getting offended when people take you at your word.HeKS
May 2, 2017
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Kairosfocus: "Pardon, but once we engage worldviews issues, we have to make very careful, precise use of language or we run into needless difficulties." There is a difference between using precise language and using language that is not used by anyone. Nobody here has ever used the word antinomies, which, by the way, is of Latin origin. The word "paradox" would have been just as precise and effective, with the added benefit of being understood by everyone. "So, I am sorry that some of the discussion will be above your level as a high school student whose native language is not English." Thank you for the condescension. You are making the mistaken assumption that formal education and intelligence go hand in hand. You would be wise to keep that in mind. And what is with the crack about English not being my first language? It is my first. I am also fluent in four others. You?hammaspeikko
May 2, 2017
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HP, please see the Kant Categorical Imperative, which is a rule of coherence in morals.I have to go, later. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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DS, have to head out but the point is that the cosmos is an ordered system [per physics a quite complex one, too], which necessarily involves the logic of structure and quantity, that is mathematics. On that narrow point: mathematics is built in due to the coherent structure of the cosmos and its laws. Where, the wider point is that we are looking at world framing including having to account for us. Gotta run. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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Origenes: "It may very well be the case that Mohamed Atta felt morally governed on September 11, 2001, while in fact he was not." I disagree. I think that he was morally governed. As we all are. "Obviously there is a difference between ‘actually being morally governed’ and ‘feeling that one is being morally governed’." Why? If we are morally governed by God, by Satan, or by some other process, we are still morally governed. "I am suggesting that some people are more in tune with moral government by God than others." This may very well be true. But how does anyone know if their moral compass is congruent with the will of God? Do we take their word for it? Are they wrong if we disagree? Does majority rule?hammaspeikko
May 2, 2017
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Origenes @ 17: Well said.Truth Will Set You Free
May 2, 2017
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KF, Well, the main point of my #25 was that I don't see any reason to suppose that God/the world-root builds mathematics into the universe through some process of contemplation (or otherwise). After reading your #31, I still don't. It seems to me it would instantly exist the moment the universe began to exist, with no action by God required. Precisely what did God have to do in order to make e^iπ equal −1? What would have happened if God had neglected this duty? Would the equation be false?daveS
May 2, 2017
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PS: Let us contrast, the well known advocates of naturalism, Michael Ruse & E. O. Wilson in their 1991 essay, “The Evolution of Ethics”:
The time has come to take seriously the fact
[--> This is a gross error at the outset, as macro-evolution is a theory (an explanation) about the unobserved past of origins and so cannot be a fact on the level of the observed roundness of the earth or the orbiting of planets around the sun etc. Also, evolutionary materialistic scientism is an ideology that builds on a materialistic interpretation of ideas about evolution, not a fact. And indeed, it is demonstrably self referentially incoherent and self falsifying.]
that we humans are modified monkeys, not the favored Creation of a Benevolent God on the Sixth Day . . . We must think again especially about our so-called ‘ethical principles.’ The question is not whether biology—specifically, our evolution—is connected with ethics, but how. As evolutionists, we see that no justification of the traditional kind is possible. Morality, or more strictly our belief in morality, is merely an adaptation put in place to further our reproductive ends. Hence the basis of ethics does not lie in God’s will … In an important sense, ethics as we understand it is an illusion fobbed off on us by our genes to get us to cooperate. It is without external grounding… Ethics is illusory inasmuch as it persuades us that it has an objective reference. [--> see the grand delusion I spoke of coming out quite directly?] This is the crux of the biological position. Once it is grasped, everything falls into place. [[Michael Ruse & E. O. Wilson, “The Evolution of Ethics,” Religion and the Natural Sciences: The Range of Engagement, , ed. J. E. Hutchingson, Orlando, Fl.:Harcourt and Brace, 1991. (NB: Cf. a separate discussion on the grounding of worldviews and ethics here on, which includes a specific discussion of the grounding of ethics and goes on to Biblical theism; having first addressed the roots of the modern evolutionary materialist mindset and its pretensions to the mantle of science. Also cf. here on in the next unit in this course, IOSE, for Plato's warning in The Laws, Bk X, on social consequences of the rise of such a view as the philosophy of the avant garde in a community.]
. . . with Will Hawthorne's stinging rebuke to such thought in the blog, Atheism is Dead:
Assume (per impossibile) that atheistic naturalism [[= evolutionary materialism] is true. Assume, furthermore, that one can't infer an 'ought' from an 'is' [[the 'is' being in this context physicalist: matter-energy, space- time, chance and mechanical forces]. (Richard Dawkins and many other atheists should grant both of these assumptions.) Given our second assumption, there is no description of anything in the natural world from which we can infer an 'ought'. And given our first assumption, there is nothing that exists over and above the natural world; the natural world is all that there is. It follows logically that, for any action you care to pick, there's no description of anything in the natural world from which we can infer that one ought to refrain from performing that action. Add a further uncontroversial assumption: an action is permissible if and only if it's not the case that one ought to refrain from performing that action . . . [[We see] therefore, for any action you care to pick, it's permissible to perform that action. If you'd like, you can take this as the meat behind the slogan 'if atheism is true, all things are permitted'. For example if atheism is true, every action Hitler performed was permissible. Many atheists don't like this consequence of their worldview. But they cannot escape it and insist that they are being logical at the same time. Now, we all know that at least some actions are really not permissible (for example, racist actions). Since the conclusion of the argument denies this, there must be a problem somewhere in the argument. Could the argument be invalid? No. The argument has not violated a single rule of logic and all inferences were made explicit. Thus we are forced to deny the truth of one of the assumptions we started out with. That means we either deny atheistic naturalism or (the more intuitively appealing) principle that one can't infer 'ought' from [[a material] 'is'.
And further with St John in this warning from scripture:
1 Jn 3:7Dear children, do not let anyone lead you astray. He who does what is right is righteous, just as [[God] is righteous . . . . 11This is the message you heard from the beginning: We should love one another. 12Do not be like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and murdered his brother. And why did he murder him? Because his own actions were evil and his brother's were righteous . . . 14We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love our brothers. Anyone who does not love remains in death. 15Anyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life in him.
kairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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HP, Pardon, but once we engage worldviews issues, we have to make very careful, precise use of language or we run into needless difficulties. So, I am sorry that some of the discussion will be above your level as a high school student whose native language is not English. Next, if you look here on (and focussing on SET's from here on), you will see that one of the first, utterly pivotal self evident truths is the one that error exists, following Josiah Royce. let me break out a brief form of this discussion, as it is directly relevant to the radical relatitivism 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. 9this one, if followed up, leads to many key consequences about morality, it is a moral yardstick truth.) 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:
Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,350+ ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical "material" elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ --> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . . [Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-
[ --> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by "winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . " cf a video on Plato's parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]
These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,
[ --> Evolutionary materialism -- having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT -- leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for "OUGHT" is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in "spin") . . . ]
and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ --> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality "naturally" leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ --> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, "naturally" tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush -- as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them [--> nihilistic will to power not the spirit of justice and lawfulness].
I suggest, it is time for some re-thinking. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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DS (& attn HP, JDK etc), First, there is an active worldviews thread, which is backed up by the 101 survey here and onward discussions. That is where these should have come up, but you were not active there. Similarly, these ethics issues came up tangentially to a thread on an attempt to dismiss the design inference. As well, many of the persistent objections regarding ID are sustained by refusal to cogently address responses in the longstanding weak argument correctives. It almost seems that there is a determination among objectors not to discuss things under their appropriate heads. Be that as it may, let us pause a moment to set a context for a world in which we get to 1 + 1 = 2. Let us start from, what goes on behind that, referring to sets: {|}, {|} (two separate but comparable single member sets) --> {|} UNION {|} (no overlap, as distinct identities) --> {|,|} . . . a two-set Where, per von Neumann: {} --> 0 {0} --> 1 {0,1} --> 2 . . . [endlessly] So, to get to the expression, we need a world in which abstract or concrete entities can be grouped as sets, distinct identity exists so that we can have non overlapping sets, the act of union can be carried out mentally or physically, and the united set can be distinguished also. Further to this, we need to recognise numbers and carry out an extension of the set of whole, counting numbers, and more. In all of this, propositions as what is asserted in sentences as true or false to reality, play a vital role. Thus, sentences, including those enough to describe procedures or even algorithms. For mathematics to exist so far as getting to 1 + 1 = 2, we have to have the study of the logic of structure and quantity, and also we have to have an underlying world in which coherent structures and quantities, as well as distinct identities, exist. We might as well take in things up tot he astonishing discovery of Euler: 0 = 1 + e^{i * pi} . . . which indicates an infinitely precise coherent interlocking of entire, largely independently developed, domains of mathematics [think, where 0, 1, e, i and pi came from originally, and how they came together in this expression!], a locus of unification that then spreads out into the world of the complex frequency domain, differential equation analysis and more, taking in a huge swath of science, engineering and technology. This is backdrop for Nobel Prize winning physicist Eugene Wigner's famous 1960 essay, e.g. here are the opening remarks -- we have become far too jaded:
The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences by Eugene Wigner [1960] "The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics in the Natural Sciences," in Communications in Pure and Applied Mathematics, vol. 13, No. I (February 1960). New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Copyright © 1960 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Mathematics, rightly viewed, possesses not only truth, but supreme beauty a beauty cold and austere, like that of sculpture, without appeal to any part of our weaker nature, without the gorgeous trappings of painting or music, yet sublimely pure, and capable of a stern perfection such as only the greatest art can show. The true spirit of delight, the exaltation, the sense of being more than Man, which is the touchstone of the highest excellence, is to be found in mathematics as surely as in poetry. --BERTRAND RUSSELL, Study of Mathematics THERE IS A story about two friends, who were classmates in high school, talking about their jobs. One of them became a statistician and was working on population trends. He showed a reprint to his former classmate. The reprint started, as usual, with the Gaussian distribution and the statistician explained to his former classmate the meaning of the symbols for the actual population, for the average population, and so on. His classmate was a bit incredulous and was not quite sure whether the statistician was pulling his leg. "How can you know that?" was his query. "And what is this symbol here?" "Oh," said the statistician, "this is pi." "What is that?" "The ratio of the circumference of the circle to its diameter." "Well, now you are pushing your joke too far," said the classmate, "surely the population has nothing to do with the circumference of the circle." Naturally, we are inclined to smile about the simplicity of the classmate's approach. Nevertheless, when I heard this story, I had to admit to an eerie feeling because, surely, the reaction of the classmate betrayed only plain common sense. I was even more confused when, not many days later, someone came to me and expressed his bewilderment [1 The remark to be quoted was made by F. Werner when he was a student in Princeton.] with the fact that we make a rather narrow selection when choosing the data on which we test our theories. "How do we know that, if we made a theory which focuses its attention on phenomena we disregard and disregards some of the phenomena now commanding our attention, that we could not build another theory which has little in common with the present one but which, nevertheless, explains just as many phenomena as the present theory?" It has to be admitted that we have no definite evidence that there is no such theory. The preceding two stories illustrate the two main points which are the subjects of the present discourse. The first point is that mathematical concepts turn up in entirely unexpected connections. Moreover, they often permit an unexpectedly close and accurate description of the phenomena in these connections. Secondly, just because of this circumstance, and because we do not understand the reasons of their usefulness, we cannot know whether a theory formulated in terms of mathematical concepts is uniquely appropriate. We are in a position similar to that of a man who was provided with a bunch of keys and who, having to open several doors in succession, always hit on the right key on the first or second trial. He became skeptical concerning the uniqueness of the coordination between keys and doors. Most of what will be said on these questions will not be new; it has probably occurred to most scientists in one form or another. My principal aim is to illuminate it from several sides. The first point is that the enormous usefulness of mathematics in the natural sciences is something bordering on the mysterious and that there is no rational explanation for it. Second, it is just this uncanny usefulness of mathematical concepts that raises the question of the uniqueness of our physical theories. In order to establish the first point, that mathematics plays an unreasonably important role in physics, it will be useful to say a few words on the question, "What is mathematics?", then, "What is physics?", then, how mathematics enters physical theories, and last, why the success of mathematics in its role in physics appears so baffling . . .
All of these and much n=more point to an extraordinary nexus through mathematics that joins the linguistic-conceptual world of abstracta to the concrete one of our day to day experience and its glorified common sense extrapolation, aka science. Mind and body somehow find themselves fused, starting with our first fact of consciousness, and the logic of that rational, responsible, free consciousness then forces us, step by step to analyse what sort of world do we inhabit and how could it come about, not just on structure and quantity but also conscience, rationality and morality, etc. Much of this is mysterious, but we know that, limited though it be, conscience guided logic is our principal guiding light to inquire, and that it has a track record of such power that we should treat its deliverances with serious respect, tempered by our proneness to err and need to cross check against experience. We inhabit a temporal causal world that unfolds by causally connected stages, e.g. from the big bang singularity [and what is that mysterious entity that logic tells us should be there as part of our roots?], forward to now. This then presents us with, what lies aback of that event? Thence the chaining of causal succession by stages and the triple choice, turtles all the way down, turtles in a circle, a last turtle that stands somewhere. Antinomies cut across the first two and lead us to the concept of a finitely remote world root reality. Assessment of the logic of being and non-being soon tells us that such a reality must in part at least be a necessary being, an entity independent of enabling, on-off causal factors, such that a serious candidate NB will either be impossible or eternally present in any possible world, as it is a frameworking reality. One example of course being distinct identity, i.e. two-ness: comparables, A and ~ A. Which brings us back full circle to the expression 1 + 1 = 2. So, already, we are at a world with a very strange-seeming root property. This is not the God of ethical theism, it is something far more general and generic, though such a God is a candidate. How does such a root give rise to a physical world? We do not know, any more than we know how mind and body interact. However, for the latter, we know that absent responsible, rational freedom, reasoning itself collapses in one or more of several ways that we have often discussed here at UD. the simplest is to see that a GIGO-limited computational substrate mindlessly churning away through cause-effect chains based on the happenstance of organisation and programming, is not a freely reasoning entity undertaking rational, insightful contemplation and inferences towards the truth and the right. We do instantly recognise, the two must somehow be connected. Further to this, we find that we are responsible, self-moved rational agents, that is, we are free enough to reason, and to regulate reasoning we are responsible with conscience as a sense that prompts us to the truth and the right, we find ourselves inescapably morally governed. Indeed an underlying force in all of the above is the implicit expectation that we are under binding duty of ought towards the truth and the right etc. And indeed we cannot carry out any sustained reasoning process without that discipline. To be rational is to be morally governed, as the complement to being a self-moved free agent. Where, this seems to be a general result. Going further, we now need to further constrain the world root by the need for it to be the ground of moral government. For at no other level is such feasible, the correct part of Hume's strictures. We then face what Clarke and Rakestraw hinted at in the clip in comment no 1, the world root, credibly, must inherently fuse is and ought. It is this which puts the serious candidate on the table, the God of ethical theism. Namely, the inherently good creator God, a necessary, maximally great being, worthy of loyalty and the responsible, reasonable, free service of doing the good in accord with our manifestly evident nature. Such a serious candidate NB will be either so, or else impossible as a square circle is impossible -- unavoidable incoherence of core characteristics. Where, of course, as this is philosophy, one is welcome to simply put forth a credible, cogently argued, coherent alternative: _____ , on the case that _____ . but in all of this, we see that mathematical entities and propositions such as 2 + 3 = 5 or 1 + 1 = 2 or 0 = 1 + e^i*pi, etc, come about through being intricately connected to a world, both in the abstract and in the concrete. So, we must not make the error of trying to think of such in isolation. Mathematics as a study that generates credibly true propositions, is an exercise of the study of the logic of structure and quantity, in a case where there is a going-concern world with self-moved, responsibly and rationally free, insightful agents in it. It applies to a world in which such abstract forms and constraints are inescapably bound up in the world of concrete objects. So, we cannot simply shut our eyes to the facts of the rationally contemplating, responsible, insightful, self-moved, embodied agent who carries out mathematics, and who then must fit into a world that adequately accounts for such an entity. Mathematics does not allow us to shut down the worldviews issues, including the question of resolving the IS-OUGHT gap. KFkairosfocus
May 2, 2017
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Hammaspeikko @26
HP: … arguing that we couldn’t be governed by a moral “sense” without God is a non-argument. The world has seen thousands of cultures, with thousands of religious beliefs, many of which are incompatible with each other. Yet I am not aware of any that did not feel that they were morally governed.
It may very well be the case that Mohamed Atta felt morally governed on September 11, 2001, while in fact he was not. Obviously there is a difference between ‘actually being morally governed’ and ‘feeling that one is being morally governed’. (*)
HP: Are you suggesting that they were all morally governed by the same God?
I am suggesting that some people are more in tune with moral government by God than others. - - - - (*) Assuming that we are all morally governed by God, it is probably more accurate to distinguish between acting in accord with his moral government and acting in defiance of his moral government.Origenes
May 2, 2017
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An example of inductive logic is: Metal A (iron) expands when heated; metal B (copper) expands when heated; metal C (tin) expands when heated… Therefore, all metals expand when heated. Inductive logic is different that deductive logic as the following slide explains: https://image.slidesharecdn.com/reasonandlogic-091006044642-phpapp02/95/logic-20-728.jpg?cb=1254804444 So if we observe that there are “thousands of cultures, with thousands of religious beliefs, many of which are incompatible with each other,” which result in thousands of different moral and ethical beliefs we feel compelled to assume inductively that there is no universally true system of morality. IOW morals are relative to individuals or cultures.john_a_designer
May 1, 2017
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JaD: "You are making an inductive argument for moral relativity, aren’t you?" Couldn't tell you. I don't know what inductive means. But I do know what makes sense to me.hammaspeikko
May 1, 2017
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