Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

Justifying Moral Interventions via Subjectivism (and an apology to RDFish)

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

First, I’d like apologize to RDFish for mistakenly attributing to him an argument others had made earlier in the “Moral Viewpoints Matter” thread, which I had argued against prior to RDFish entering the thread.  He never changed his position as I later asserted. Sorry, RDFish.  I also think my mistake led me to take RDfish’s argument less seriously as it led me to believe he was flip-flopping around, especially after he moved from color perception to beauty perception as comparable to morality perception – when, from RDFish’s perspective, he was attempting to use a less problematic comparable given his perspective that I held an erroneous understanding of what color actually is (which I may or may not).

I took some time to get some perspective and reassess his argument there and would like to continue if he is so willing.

This debate is about the logical consistency of moral systems wrt behavior that are premised either as being subjective or objective in nature.  Either one holds morality to be a description of some objective commodity and logically must act as if that is true, whether it is true or not, and whether it can be supported as true or not, or they hold that description to be of a subjective commodity and must logically act as if that is true, whether or not it can be supported or proven.  Whether or not either premise can actually be supported or proven is irrelevant  to this debate. IOW, RDFish’s argument that it is not logical to act in accordance with a premise that cannot be demonstrated or supported to be true may be a good argument, but it is irrelevant to this argument because I’m not making the case here that either premise can or cannot be adequately supported in order to justify, if need be, belief in such an assumption.

Now for some grounding on “subjective” and “objective”.

When I describe the properties of a thing I am experiencing that I hold to be an objectively existent commodity, I am not, in my mind, describing subjective qualities, even though I am describing what I am physically interpreting through my subjective senses.  It might do to offer some examples: if I taste sugar and say that it is sweet, I realize I’m using a subjective sensory input device and relying on consensually-built terminology based on shared experience to describe my sensory reaction to a physical property of sugar (not “sweetness”, but rather a chemical structure that produces a “sweetness” sensation in most people that taste it). If I taste something sweet and say “I prefer 2 sugar cubes in my coffee over none”, that’s a statement of personal feelings or preference about sweetness.; that preference is not produced by the chemical in the coffee; it is not even produced by the amount of sugar.  That preference is entirely internal.

Sweetness is not a property of the sugar; just as RDFish points out that color is not a property of e-m wavelengths.  However, those subjectively sensed properties (even if to some degree affected by variances in hardware/software) are the basis of our agreements about how to categorize and think about things and whether or not those things are held to be subjective or objective in nature.  IOW, even if RDFish makes a sound case that the experience of color is mostly a subjective phenomena, that doesn’t change the fact that we act, and must act, as if we are experiencing a perception of some objectively existent commodity.

A point to remember here is even if color is a subjective experience, it is not subjective in the same sense that a color preference is subjective.  Our behavior stemming from the experience of color is entirely different from our behavior stemming from a color preference, and that difference is the crux of my argument.  Just as we do not choose how we perceive color, we also do not choose “how sweet we like our coffee”, so to speak.  For better or worse, how sweet we like our coffee is a matter of unchosen personal taste preference (preferences are not whims; they are how we actually prefer a thing, and they are entirely internal.)

I want to restate: this is not an argument about what is, per se. It is an argument about logical consistency, particularly how it relates to our behavior.  Regardless of what we intellectually believe morality to be, and regardless of what morality actually is, how do we actually act when it comes to moral choices, particularly wrt moral interventions (stopping someone else from doing something immoral)?

For clarity’s sake, however, RDFish said that the perception of “beauty” would be a better comparison to our perception of morality.  Do we act as if beauty is a perception (perception, meaning, sensory interpretation of some kind of objectively existent commodity, like chemicals or e-m wavelengths), or do we act as if beauty is an internal, personal preference?  For this argument, it doesn’t matter what beauty or morality “actually” are, but rather it matters how we behave, and whether that behavior is in accordance with our stated idea of what those things are.

Does the perception of the colors of the painting, the size of it, the subject matter produce qualitatively the same behavior as the perception of its relative beauty? If someone says “it’s a 4×6 painting”, or “the artist used mostly red”, or “it’s a painting of a fish”, can we hold them to be in error and subject to correction as if they were referring to objective commodities? Yes.  If they say “it is beautiful”, can they be in error as if they were referring to objective commodities? No, because we hold consideration of beauty to be an internal, entirely subjective preference.

Is RDFish willing to force his idea of beauty on others?  Would his idea of beauty justify an intervention into the affairs of others? Certainly not. However, I would assume that RDFish would be willing to intervene if someone was about to put salt in a cake recipe for a wedding reception instead of sugar, just as he would intervene if someone was about to deactivate a bomb but was going to cut the wrong color of wire.  Whether or not color, or beauty, or sweetness actually refer to objectively existent commodities, subjective commodities, or some gray-area commodities, we act differently according to whether or not we hold the sensation in question to refer to something objective in nature or subjective in nature. In all  things including that which RDFish compares morality to,  if we consider our perception to relate to something objective in nature, we are willing to intervene; if we consider our perception to be a personal preference, we will not.  In fact, we most often consider being willing to intervene on the basis of personal preference immoral.

So no, beauty cannot be a good comparison to morality in terms of how we react, and must react, to such perceptions. IMO, RDFish is erroneously (wrt this argument) attempting to make the case that “the perception of beauty” is analogous to his idea of “what morality is”, but that’s outside of the scope of the argument here. The question is about the behavior resulting from the perception, not what the perception is actually “of”. Unless RDFish compares “the perception of morality” to some other perception that produces the same kind of behavior, the analogy is false wrt this argument.

RDFish’s original use of color as a comparison for moral sense actually comes very close to my own concept of morality and our moral sense and wrt how we actually behave; as if we are getting a moral signal, so to speak, from “out there”, in a sense, from what I call “the moral landscape”.  Our interpretation and processing of it would be at least as problematic as our interpretation of and processing of color; fraught with hardware and software challenges – comparable, I would say, to back before we even understood the process that produced color perception or what it was related to (e-m wavelengths).

The problem for RDFish using the color comparison, though, is that we will only intervene in matters of color if we hold that our disagreement is about the objective, physical world; we will not intervene if we hold that our disagreement is a matter of internal, personal preference. Thus, for color to be a valid comparison, it requires that we hold our moral perception to be a preception about some objective, actually existent, transpersonal, significant commodity or else we cannot justify intervention in the moral affairs of others.

In the other thread I asked RDFish what subjective-morality consistent principle justified moral interventions; he answered that there were no objective justifications for moral interventions.  That’s not what I asked. If morality is not held to be a perception/interpretation of some objectively-existent commodity (like color/e-m wavelengths), what principle that is consistent with a morality held to be subjective (like the  perception of beauty) justifies intervening in the moral affairs of others, when we would never intervene if morality was, in our experience, actually like “beauty”?

Comments
Silver Asiatic: Again, it does not need to be justified by anything other than subjective choice. "Be sure you're right, then go ahead." However, as humans are social organisms, they will attempt to persuade others, or at least justify their actions. "When in the course of human events ..." Silver Asiatic: The feelings in others are irrelevant to the moral quality of the act. That is certainly not correct for most humans. Humans want approval and support of their peers, and often show compassion for others. The moral quality is often contingent on the feelings of others. Silver Asiatic: What others decide as morally good for them, is in fact, morally good for them, under subjectivism. Sure, but the first person may still seek to persuade or impose their own values on the second person. Silver Asiatic: A subjectivist cannot claim that drug use is morally bad for everyone. Of course they can. You seem to think that there is a necessity that someone consider everyone's moral opinion to be of equal validity. Silver Asiatic: Autonomy is necessary in that system. Subjectivism isn't a system. Moral systems usually encompass both subjectivists and objectivists because they often agree on many particulars. Silver Asiatic: Morals can be taught and corrected based on a non-subjective standard. Morals can be taught and corrected based on a subjective standard.Zachriel
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:57 AM
7
07
57
AM
PDT
Zachriel @218,
Moral indignation is not the same emotion as simple anger, though people can get quite worked up about other people’s driving. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDr_J_pLg0A
Heh - thanks for the link :). Unfortunately, "moral indignation" has no meaning if you believe morality is subjective and personal - you're back to personal preference, because you've just dropped the component of "visceral" response.drc466
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:57 AM
7
07
57
AM
PDT
RDFish @203,
Since there is no such thing as an objective morality that we can objectively determine, we have no choice but to subjecively follow our own moral sentiments
. You're either being deliberately obtuse, or honestly don't understand that your position is NOT contradictory to the original post. It is 100% true to say that we have to subjectively follow our own moral code. It is also 100% true that the possibility exists that there is one, single objective moral definition of good/evil, right/wrong. It is also 100% true that people who believe in objective truth and attempt to get other people to conform to their subjective understanding of good are acting logically. It is also 100% true that people who DON'T believe in objective morality are acting illogically if they attempt to get other people to conform to their subjective understanding of good BASED ON MORAL REASONS. If you honestly believe that there is no God, no standard of what is good and what is evil, and what is evil to you might be good for someone else - then the only rational reason you have for forcing that person to conform to your ideals of good is "because that's my personal preference and I want to". Whereas the objectivist can rationally say "in my subjective opinion, this [action] is objectively GOOD, and all people should follow it." I fully understand that you think the fact that "no one can know what is objectively GOOD and EVIL" trumps all else - I just find it a ridiculous and silly position that no one functionally or practically follows. However - feel free to try to convince the world that morality is an artificial construct that ultimately comes down to personal preference and that there isn't any thought, action, or belief that is Objectively Evil or Objectively Good.drc466
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:52 AM
7
07
52
AM
PDT
It’s typically justified by appealing to similar feelings in others. How would you feel?
Again, it does not need to be justified by anything other than subjective choice. The feelings in others are irrelevant to the moral quality of the act. What the subjectivist decides is morally good for himself, is in fact, morally good. What others decide as morally good for them, is in fact, morally good for them, under subjectivism.
A subjectivist can certainly claim that drug use is bad for everyone, and valuing others, intervene.
That's not correct, as above. A subjectivist cannot claim that drug use is morally bad for everyone. For anyone who chooses drug use as a moral good, it is morally good for that person. The subjectivist agrees to this. Therefore, to then say that what is morally good for the individual is morally bad, is a contradiction.
You are assuming that a subjectivist necessarily considers autonomy a paramount good, which may or may not be the case.
It's neither good nor bad - it's just the single principle of authority in subjectivism. What the individual says is morally good, is morally good. Autonomy is necessary in that system. Another subjectivist cannot say "what you've decided as morally good for yourself, is actually morally bad".
According to your logic, a subjectivist wouldn’t even try to teach their child what they consider to be right and wrong, poppycock which should disabuse you of your misconceptions.
It's not my logic, it's subjectivist logic that you're struggling with, but I'm glad to see that. You're right of course. You recognize that something beyond subjectivism is necessary for moral education. Subjectivism does not work. Morals can be taught and corrected based on a non-subjective standard. Edit: I'll add that one can attempt to teach moral values under subjectivism - but that's different than imposing them.Silver Asiatic
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:47 AM
7
07
47
AM
PDT
As already pointed out, there’s nothing extraordinary about humans valuing human infants.
And that is why we abort 1.2 million potential infants a year in the USA alone. We humans must really value infants- NOT. Obviously Zachriel doesn't know what it is talking about, again, as usual.Joe
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:47 AM
7
07
47
AM
PDT
drc466: So, someone tripping you on the sidewalk is a greater evil than genocide in Somalia, because your emotions get stirred up more by the former than the latter? Moral indignation is not the same emotion as simple anger, though people can get quite worked up about other people's driving. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MDr_J_pLg0AZachriel
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:37 AM
7
07
37
AM
PDT
Mark Frank @207,
drc466 #191 Zachriel’s response 192 is pretty much spot on.
See my response @201. Basically, you are saying that the intensity of your emotion somehow validates your personal preference? So, someone tripping you on the sidewalk is a greater evil than genocide in Somalia, because your emotions get stirred up more by the former than the latter?drc466
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:34 AM
7
07
34
AM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: The specific reason is irrelevant – it’s entirely personal and subjective and does not need to be justified as consistent or logical or comparatively ‘moral’ based on other moral standards. It's typically justified by appealing to similar feelings in others. How would you feel? Silver Asiatic: What is different in subjectivism is that people are doing what is morally good for them. As humans are empathetic creatures, they concern themselves in the affairs of others. Silver Asiatic: A. Drug use, morally bad for me. A subjectivist can certainly claim that drug use is bad for everyone, and valuing others, intervene. Silver Asiatic: Right – but we can see the inconsistency and contradiction as above. There is no contradiction, but a balancing of competing values. You are assuming that a subjectivist necessarily considers autonomy a paramount good, which may or may not be the case. According to your logic, a subjectivist wouldn't even try to teach their child what they consider to be right and wrong, poppycock which should disabuse you of your misconceptions.Zachriel
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
07:05 AM
7
07
05
AM
PDT
c hand #212
If you “agree that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil” then should all people subjectively believe this?
Yes - although the most important thing is that refrain from torturing infants.Mark Frank
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
06:54 AM
6
06
54
AM
PDT
Zac:
Silver Asiatic: The motive for the determination of a moral value is irrelevant except that it must be done for subjective reasons. The subjective reason is the very negative valuation of the suffering of others.
The specific reason is irrelevant - it's entirely personal and subjective and does not need to be justified as consistent or logical or comparatively 'moral' based on other moral standards. An increase in suffering of others can be a moral good in subjectivism.
Just because a person may recognize that others may have differing moral views doesn’t mean the person won’t try to impose their views on others.
What is different in subjectivism is that people are doing what is morally good for them. In other systems, differing views come from judging that people are doing something morally bad.
A: Drug use is self-destructive. B: I like drugs. A: Don’t do drugs.
A. Drug use, morally bad for me. B. Drug use, morally good for me. No-drugs is morally bad. A. Don't do what is morally good for you, do what is morally bad for you.
A and B act according to their individual moral values. Just because B acts according to B’s moral values doesn’t mean that A won’t try to impose A’s values on B. If A’s moral values include the imperative to impose A’s moral values on others, then A will act according to that belief.
Right - but we can see the inconsistency and contradiction as above. Imposing subjective morals would prohibit what is morally good for people.Silver Asiatic
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
06:51 AM
6
06
51
AM
PDT
c hand: If you “agree that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil” then should all people subjectively believe this? It's not surprising that humans value human children. That doesn't make morality objective, meaning existing independently of human sensibilities. Mother rabbits value baby rabbits, but humans eat baby rabbits, e.g. noisettes de lapereau sauce cacao. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5x0BSgLKnSkZachriel
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
06:30 AM
6
06
30
AM
PDT
Mark Frank If you "agree that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil" then should all people subjectively believe this? If not, who should not believe this ?c hand
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
06:16 AM
6
06
16
AM
PDT
Barry On reflection I am wondering what it is that you accuse me of lying about. Bearing in mind that a lie is deliberate falsehood. I agree with you that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil. So that's not it. Presumably you think I am lying when I say that the statement is not a self-evident objective truth. My opinion has been shared by many people including some the world's most famous philosophers at least since Hume. Were they all lying? A worldwide movement in multiple languages over hundred years all perpetrating this falsehood knowing full well it was wrong. Or I am special in knowing it was false while the others were just misled?Mark Frank
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
12:35 AM
12
12
35
AM
PDT
Barry Arrington: Again, whether the Inca perceives the objective reality of the moral truth is beside the point. Being wrong about an objective truth does not make it false. At any rate, if you are going to deny a self evident moral truth, there is no use arguing with you. By definition self evident truths cannot be demonstrated. This is incoherent. How can the Inca wrongly perceive a self-evident truth? It wouldn't be all that self-evident then after all. Furthermore, if it is possible to be wrong about a self evident truth, as you just said, how do you know that yours, and not the Inca's, particular concept of it is the correct one? fGfaded_Glory
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
12:21 AM
12
12
21
AM
PDT
RD fish/ AI guy Let me use your "mountain" example. We are all climbing the mountain. Everybody should know which way is up and which way is down the mountain. You choose to go down and than declare that in your subjectivist view you are climbing up the mountain. I wouldn't want you as my hiking partner. (hopefully it's not Brokeback Mountain)Eugen
February 4, 2015
February
02
Feb
4
04
2015
12:08 AM
12
12
08
AM
PDT
BA #204 So you have run out of arguments and the only move available to you is to declare "I am self-evidently right and you are a liar." AS you say that brings the discussion to an end. Does this work in court?Mark Frank
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
11:08 PM
11
11
08
PM
PDT
drc466 #191 Zachriel’s response 192 is pretty much spot on.   Phinehas #193
But the issue isn’t just logical consistency, but consistency in behavior. When you look at behavior, it becomes very clear that saying, “because I abhor cruelty,” means something categorically different to the person saying it than, “because I abhor liver and onions.” Both statements may be logically consistent under subjectivism, but based on observed behavior across the entire human race, they are categorically different statements. One is clearly referencing a subjective commodity, but observing human behavior indicates that the other is connected to the same sort of response we would expect if the commodity in question were objective.
It is a good point. Not all subjective issues are as trivial as our taste in liver and onions (at least it makes a change from ice-cream). There are many subjective issues which are deeper and more complex and for which we produce reasons and arguments. My favourite example is whether something is funny but there are an infinite number of others: awesome, frightening, attractive, fascinating, inspiring ….. So while I accept that abhorring cruelty is a different category from abhorring liver and onions they are both subjective.  “I abhor cruelty” is a statement about (or possibly an expression of) my attitude to something which is true in virtue of my attitude. I think what confuses people is that disputes about ethics and indeed many other subjective issues often proceed on the assumption that if you could only explain your position clearly enough or summon enough evidence then your opponent would agree with you. That is what gives it an objective feel. My supervisor when I was an undergraduate back in the 70s called this suspended subjectivity. It doesn’t just apply to ethics.  For example, it happens in aesthetics when you are debating a film and you feel strongly that your opponent doesn’t understand how subtle it is of whatever. But in the end there is a subjective core. Try convincing a leader in the Islamic State they are wrong and you will quickly find that it is not an objective issue but one of deeply held different beliefs.Mark Frank
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
11:05 PM
11
11
05
PM
PDT
Hi c hand,
Why is it dangerous to (even falsely ) believe that the torture of children for pleasure is wrong for all people for all time?
It isn't of course. The reason the objectivist delusion is dangerous is not because some objectivist holds some particular moral view. Rather, it is because by pretending that there is only one single morality that is objectively true - and that morality is of course the one they happen to prefer - they disregard anyone who disagrees with them with a false sense of moral authority. We just saw this with Barry's post. It's not a problem when people's moral sentiments align - for example regarding the torture of children for pleasure. It is a problem when people's moral sentiments diverge - for example torturing terrorism suspects. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
10:41 PM
10
10
41
PM
PDT
RDFish Why is it dangerous to (even falsely ) believe that the torture of children for pleasure is wrong for all people for all time? Would it be acceptable if all people for all time just happened to uniformly hold this belief subjectively ?c hand
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
08:59 PM
8
08
59
PM
PDT
And right here is a perfect illustration of why the delusion of objective morality is so dangerous: Barry Arrignton says @202:
At any rate, if you are going to deny a self evident moral truth, there is no use arguing with you. By definition self evident truths cannot be demonstrated. And when you lie, as you have here, and say a self evident truth is false the discussion must necessarily come to an end.
So Barry declares that whatever he himself happens to subjectively view as a self-evident truth is objectively true, and whoever disagrees with him are liars who must not even be talked to! Thank you Barry for making that abundantly clear.RDFish
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
08:11 PM
8
08
11
PM
PDT
Hi drc466,
Objectivist: There is one objective [morality], with one objectively best [way to do good], and we need to use that understanding to encourage other people to follow the [doing good, not evil] path that we believe is that objective, best way.
Sure... but after all this mountain stuff, all you've got is the definition of objectivism that we've been using all along.
Subjectivist: I don’t believe that there is one, objective [morality], or one best [good over evil].
No, you've already got it wrong again. Honestly I think these mountains are just blocking your view - you are making this way harder than it needs to be. Anyway, subjectivists believe that everybody has their own mountain, and each believes that there is one best way up their own mountain. It's just that subjectivists don't pretend that their mountain is the only mountain in the world, while objectivists do.
Feel free to point out logical errors in the description of the Objectivist view, Subjectivist view, or conclusion above.
Thanks.
First of all, the two analogies aren’t necessarily exclusionary – my analogy doesn’t rely on whether objective morality is actually true, or not. It just states that, per the original post, attempting to enforce morality on others is only logically coherent for the objectivist, or for the subjectivist that admits he/she is only doing it for personal preference (not “right” or “wrong”) reasons.
We're all in the same boat. The objectivist has nothing but personal preference to choose one morality or another, just like the subjectivist. The only difference is that only subjectivists admits this.
Your objection reduces down to “since we can have perfect knowledge of objective good, we must act as if it doesn’t exist”.
(I think you mean to say "since we can't have perfect knowledge...", right?) No, this is not my position at all. Rather, it is this: Since there is no such thing as an objective morality that we can objectively determine, we have no choice but to subjecively follow our own moral sentiments". The only person here who has even attempted to refute my argument is StephenB. But he has made a mess of it, by arguing for example that while beauty and logic and morality are all objectively knowable, mathematics is not. I don't know a single other human being who would endorse that sort of reasoning. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
08:06 PM
8
08
06
PM
PDT
Mark Frank @ 181. Let us grant for the sake of argument that some Inca believed that torturing an infant for personal pleasure was good. He would have been wrong. Again, whether the Inca perceives the objective reality of the moral truth is beside the point. Being wrong about an objective truth does not make it false. At any rate, if you are going to deny a self evident moral truth, there is no use arguing with you. By definition self evident truths cannot be demonstrated. And when you lie, as you have here, and say a self evident truth is false the discussion must necessarily come to an end.Barry Arrington
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
07:12 PM
7
07
12
PM
PDT
Zachriel @192,
drc466: I don’t believe that your other phrasings would necessarily improve that justification – e.g. “because I abhor cruelty” makes a moral value judgement of what is “cruel” – therefore, you are reduced back to either believing that there are objective measures of what is “cruel”, or the subjective reasoning “I prefer to label this as cruel, and want to apply my personal preference to others behavior”. Abhor is more than just a simple dislike, but to regard with extreme repugnance and loathing. This distress may cause a person to react to cruelty, which we can define neutrally as causing suffering in others. Someone may dislike chocolate, become ill when exposed to blood, and become angry when watching cruelty. These are visceral reactions.
Heh - I'm going to call this the "Guardians of the Galaxy Theory of Intensity of Emotion Morality":
Rocket Raccoon: Question. What if I see something that I wanna take and it belongs to someone else? Rhomann Dey: Then you will be arrested. Rocket Raccoon: But what if I want it more than the person who has it? Rhomann Dey: Still illegal. Rocket Raccoon: That doesn't follow. No, I want it more, sir. Do you understand me? What are you laughing at? What? I can't have a discussion with this gentleman?
drc466
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
06:40 PM
6
06
40
PM
PDT
RDFish:
You have no justification for saying any of these things – they’re all just your subjective opinion (and frankly bizarre).
You're making a statement that is objectively true?Mung
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
05:50 PM
5
05
50
PM
PDT
RDFish @198: So, to recap, let's compare: Definitions: Mountain = morality Top = maximum good Bottom = maximum evil Walk up = do good Walk down = do evil drc466's Analogy (combining posts 163/191), replacing the above:
Objectivist: There is one objective [morality], with one objectively best [way to do good], and we need to use that understanding to encourage other people to follow the [doing good, not evil] path that we believe is that objective, best way. Subjectivist: I don’t believe that there is one, objective [morality], or one best [good over evil]. Either a) there is no [morality], or b) every person [has] their very own [morality]. Conclusion: An Objectivist is superior to the Subjectivist because the Objectivist not only believes there is a best [way to do good], but is able to rationally, logically define an “objective” goal – [maximum good]. Could the objectivist have the wrong [definition of good], or [wrong way to do good], or disagree with other objectivists as to [a complete definition of good versus evil]? Sure – but it doesn’t change the possibility that [objective good exists] and one best [way to do good], and the objectivist desire to enforce morality on others is a rational one. On the other hand, a true Subjectivist is left to suggest that not only is there no best [preference of good over evil], there is also no real [maximum good] – your [actions of evil] is just as valid a [definition of maximum good] as the objectivists (or subjectivists) [definition or goal of good]. Which makes the subjectivist desire to encourage people to [do good according to his/her personal definition] even more logically incoherent.
Feel free to point out logical errors in the description of the Objectivist view, Subjectivist view, or conclusion above. I'm comfortable that it is logically sound, and thus so is my analogy it is based on. RDFish's Analogy:
We all believe in [morality], but have never seen [morality]. You claim to [know the difference between good and evil], but you can’t show anyone where it is, and you have no pictures of it, or any other evidence that it exists – you just want everybody to take your word for it. Not only that, but you claim that the [morality] you see is the only [correct morality] in the world, and if anyone else [has a definition of morality], they are hallucinating. The fact that you can’t show anyone [objective morality] tells me [objective morality] is either false or moot: If [objective morality] doesn’t exist, then your claim is false, and if [objective morality] does exist but you can’t show it to anyone, then it is moot.
First of all, the two analogies aren't necessarily exclusionary - my analogy doesn't rely on whether objective morality is actually true, or not. It just states that, per the original post, attempting to enforce morality on others is only logically coherent for the objectivist, or for the subjectivist that admits he/she is only doing it for personal preference (not "right" or "wrong") reasons. Second, there are in fact multiple errors in your analogy: 1) "if anyone else [has a definition of morality], they are hallucinating." Wrong - I'm perfectly willing to admit that my definition of morality is probably wrong in places, but that doesn't change my responsibility to try to get others to do what I understand to be (objectively) good. To do nothing because I might be wrong, would be itself wrong - "all that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing". 2) "if [objective morality] does exist but you can’t show it to anyone, then it is moot". Wrong - if objective morality does exist, and I succeed in helping others conform better to objective morality, I have done "good", regardless of how close I knew I was coming to good while doing it. 3)"You claim to [know the difference between good and evil], but you can’t show anyone where it is, and you have no pictures of it, or any other evidence that it exists – you just want everybody to take your word for it." Wrong - I don't want everybody to take my word, I wish to be challenged on it. How else can we refine our understanding of good and evil? That is part of the reason that objectivists prefer democracy (wisdom of the masses), and religions train preachers (offer their vision of good). I'd hate to be a dictator, but I do enjoy a good argument. Your objection reduces down to "since we can have perfect knowledge of objective good, we must act as if it doesn't exist". This is not a logical conclusion, is irrelevant to whether the subjectivist desire to enforce moral viewpoints for moral reasons is logically coherent, and even if it were true would only reinforce the point that subjectivists have no moral basis for justifying moral interventions. (In other words - you agree with the original point, you just don't think objectivists can justify moral intervention either).drc466
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
05:41 PM
5
05
41
PM
PDT
Hi drc466,
Well, I knew you wouldn’t like the analogy, but I’m afraid just saying “its not a valid analogy, so I win” doesn’t count.
??? That's not what I did, obviously. I told you why it wasn't valid.
Your proffered explanation for why the analogy doesn’t work
??? You just told me I simply said it wasn't valid. This is pretty confusing.
You are correct in one sense
Yes, in the sense that your analogy was invalid.
– the better analogy for the subjectivist opinion is that either a) there is no mountain (no morality), or b) every person is on their very own mountain (subjective morality), while the objectivist claims that there is a single mountain (objective morality) with a qualitative difference between top (good) and bottom (evil).
Yes, that's better. Still completely unhelpful, but at least you're mapping your analogy to our debate now.
Otherwise, the analogy stands – if you believe that you are on your own mountain/plain, you have no logical objective reason (other than personal preference, per Mark above) to try to make someone else follow your path.
Ooops, now your analogy is invalid again, because I have every reason to try to make people follow my morality, of course, just like you do. Nobody cares what paths people take to go up mountains, but everybody cares if people run around murdering and raping and so on.
And the inability to precisely define the shape of the objectivist mountain does not render the view that there is a single one “false or moot”. Your rebuttal fails.
You are not making any sense at all, because this analogy is completely harebrained. If you really want a mountain analogy, here it is: We all believe in mountains, but have never seen one. You claim to see a mountain, but you can't show anyone where it is, and you have no pictures of it, or any other evidence that it exists - you just want everybody to take your word for it. Not only that, but you claim that the mountain you see is the only mountain in the world, and if anyone else sees another mountain, they are hallucinating. The fact that you can't show anyone this mountain tells me your mountain claim is either false or moot: If the mountain you are seeing doesn't exist, then your claim is false, and if it does exist but you can't show it to anyone, then it is moot. Get it? Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
02:52 PM
2
02
52
PM
PDT
Silver Asiatic: The motive for the determination of a moral value is irrelevant except that it must be done for subjective reasons. The subjective reason is the very negative valuation of the suffering of others. Silver Asiatic: There is no other moral standard that can be cited to make slavery morally bad for that person. Just because a person may recognize that others may have differing moral views doesn't mean the person won't try to impose their views on others. Silver Asiatic: As above, drug abuse is a moral good for the subjectivist who chooses it. To prevent drug abuse is to forbid something that is morally good. A: Drug use is self-destructive. B: I like drugs. A: Don't do drugs. A and B act according to their individual moral values. Just because B acts according to B's moral values doesn't mean that A won't try to impose A's values on B. If A's moral values include the imperative to impose A's moral values on others, then A will act according to that belief.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
12:05 PM
12
12
05
PM
PDT
Zac
In the case of opposing slavery or murder, it is for the benefit of a third party.
The motive for the determination of a moral value is irrelevant except that it must be done for subjective reasons. For the subjectivist who decides that slavery is morally good - it is a morally good behavior. To oppose slavery in that case is to forbid a morally good behavior for that individual. There is no other moral standard that can be cited to make slavery morally bad for that person.
Even if it is for what is perceived as private immoral acts, such as drug abuse, it can be imposed for the perceived benefit of the person being restricted.
As above, drug abuse is a moral good for the subjectivist who chooses it. To prevent drug abuse is to forbid something that is morally good.Silver Asiatic
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
09:45 AM
9
09
45
AM
PDT
MF:
Which I guess is a way of saying that while subjectivism may be logically consistent in practice no one would accept “because I abhor cruelty” as a principle for preventing others being cruel. This seems to be clearly false. I see people offering this kind of justification all the time.
But the issue isn't just logical consistency, but consistency in behavior. When you look at behavior, it becomes very clear that saying, "because I abhor cruelty," means something categorically different to the person saying it than, "because I abhor liver and onions." Both statements may be logically consistent under subjectivism, but based on observed behavior across the entire human race, they are categorically different statements. One is clearly referencing a subjective commodity, but observing human behavior indicates that the other is connected to the same sort of response we would expect if the commodity in question were objective.Phinehas
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
09:22 AM
9
09
22
AM
PDT
drc466: I don’t believe that your other phrasings would necessarily improve that justification – e.g. “because I abhor cruelty” makes a moral value judgement of what is “cruel” – therefore, you are reduced back to either believing that there are objective measures of what is “cruel”, or the subjective reasoning “I prefer to label this as cruel, and want to apply my personal preference to others behavior”. Abhor is more than just a simple dislike, but to regard with extreme repugnance and loathing. This distress may cause a person to react to cruelty, which we can define neutrally as causing suffering in others. Someone may dislike chocolate, become ill when exposed to blood, and become angry when watching cruelty. These are visceral reactions.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
February
02
Feb
3
03
2015
09:07 AM
9
09
07
AM
PDT
1 2 3 4 8

Leave a Reply