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

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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
Mark @171, Point well taken. The justification "because I prefer it" would be logically consistent with subjectivism. 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". Anyway - I yield the point. Subjectivists who admit their position is strictly a matter of personal preference, and not objective, are logically consistent. This makes a decent foundation for local town ordinances, not so much personal morality or nation-state criminal law. RDF @168 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. Your proffered explanation for why the analogy doesn't work is as follows:
I will explain your problem: While in your analogy it is known that there is one summit and one best approach, the analogous question here (the existence of an objective morality) is actually what we are debating. Sigh.
You are correct in one sense - 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). 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. 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.drc466
February 3, 2015
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JimFit: Morality exists on living humans only, to have a morality you must first be alive and for you to be alive demands someone to obey OBJECTIVE MORALITY TO KEEP YOU ALIVE. So a rabbit suckles her young due to objective moral precepts rather than a desire to nurture.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
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Silver Asiatic: Within subjectivism, what every person chooses as being morally good or bad, are in fact, morally good and bad for that person. Subjectivism requires this. Sure. For instance, someone may think slavery is wrong, even if most everyone else thinks slavery is good. Silver Asiatic: A subjectivist can still impose contrary values on others but cannot state that those values are necessarily morally good for the person. In the case of opposing slavery or murder, it is for the benefit of a third party. 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.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
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Aurelio
I think there should be an award for writing of this level of clarity!
To have an objective existence there has to be objective morality. If morality was subjective your existence would be subjective as well but you can't exist and not exist at the same time. Morality exists on living humans only, to have a morality you must first be alive and for you to be alive demands someone to obey OBJECTIVE MORALITY TO KEEP YOU ALIVE. If someone didn't cared for you and let you as a baby in the forest you would die for sure, only objective morality leads to a human capable to grasp what morality is because objective morality is the reason he exists.JimFit
February 3, 2015
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Zac
No one is required to accept someone else’s values,
Within subjectivism, what every person chooses as being morally good or bad, are in fact, morally good and bad for that person. Subjectivism requires this. A subjectivist can still impose contrary values on others but cannot state that those values are necessarily morally good for the person. In fact, if the values conflict, the subjectivist would potentially impose what is considered morally bad for the individual or prevent what is morally good.Silver Asiatic
February 3, 2015
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mike1962: Is that a “yes” to my question? If you review the exchange, you should find your answer.
mike1962: “This is mine, and if you take it I have the right to get it back” is not merely a moral “sense”, but rather a specific moral precept. Zachriel: If you mean a dog will fight over a bone, sure. Not sure that’s what most people mean by an objective moral precept. mike1962: Why not? Please explain the difference between what I have described and what “most people mean by an objective moral precept.” Zachriel: It’s doubtful a dog considers any abstract rule before deciding on a course of action with regards to a bone. mike1962: So acting according to a moral precept first requires a consideration and a decision? Zachriel: precept, a general rule intended to regulate behavior or thought.
mike1962: So acting according to a moral precept first requires a consideration and a decision? Yes. As normally construed, a moral precept is an abstraction that is referred to in order to guide conduct. The Latin etymology, prae "before" + capere "to take", is instructive, meaning to have a rule in place beforehand. You had claimed that "this is mine..." is a moral precept. We pointed out that a dog will fight over a bone, but that this is not what most people mean by a moral precept. mike1962: Are you saying we have free will to act any differently than we do and that dogs and monkeys do not? Dogs and monkeys are just as free as people, and like people, they act according to their natures. People and monkeys have a sense of fairness.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
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mike1962: So acting according to a moral precept first requires a consideration and a decision? Zachriel: precept, a general rule intended to regulate behavior or thought.
Is that a "yes" to my question?
mike1962: “This is mine, and if you take it I have the right to get it back” is not merely a moral “sense”, but rather a specific moral precept. Zachriel: By the way, with dogs, it’s what’s mine is mine, and what’s yours is mine too.
You brought up dogs. I'm not sure why.
mike1962: Are you saying we have free will to act any differently than we do and that dogs and monkeys do not? Zachriel: Primates have a general sense of fairness. Dogs do not.
You didn't answer my question.mike1962
February 3, 2015
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Box: What are you talking about? Klingons? Your inability to even imagine a non-human morality. Box: The claim is not that everyone has a perfect apprehension or perception of objective morality. The claim is that it objectively exists. And the evidence is that it is a human sensibility, not an objective reality. Box: You did not point out anything of the sort. Zachriel (#175): Humans value human infants. Nothing extraordinary about that. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5x0BSgLKnSkZachriel
February 3, 2015
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Zac,
z: If you can’t even imagine non-humans having a moral sense, then that would undercut the argument that morality exists independent of human sensation.
What are you talking about? Klingons?
z: But even among humans, the value placed on other humans varies considerably: practices include human sacrifice, conquest, enslaving women, cannibalism, ethnic cleansing, and genocide.
Irrelevant. The claim is not that everyone has a perfect apprehension or perception of objective morality. The claim is that it objectively exists.
z: As already pointed out, there’s nothing extraordinary about humans valuing human infants.
You did not point out anything of the sort.Box
February 3, 2015
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Box: So your insects and other animals are totally irrelevant to the debate. You would have to step outside of the human circle to determine whether your sensation of morality is being colored by the human perspective. If you can't even imagine non-humans having a moral sense, then that would undercut the argument that morality exists independent of human sensation. But even among humans, the value placed on other humans varies considerably: practices include human sacrifice, conquest, enslaving women, cannibalism, ethnic cleansing, and genocide. Box: Let’s be clear that objective morality only extends to beings capable of apprehending objective truth – as StephenB pointed out to you already. As already pointed out, there's nothing extraordinary about humans valuing human infants.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
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BA
You know for a certain fact that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people.
This is a classic move in the objectivist/subjectivist dance.  By taking an extreme example you hide issues under a cloud of emotion and make anyone who disagrees with the precise wording appear to condone the act. Nevertheless I disagree. I don’t believe you know moral judgements as “facts” so I would say that as it stands it is false. I would accept “Everyone agrees without hesitation that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people.” subject to the following clarification. The statement conflates two different things. The time and place of the act and the time and place of the moral judgement. These are two different statements: * All of us (here and now) would agree without hesitation that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people. I think that is broadly true. * Everyone, at every time and place, would agree without hesitation that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people. I doubt that is true. I don’t know the innermost psyche of the Incas who performed child sacrifices but it seems quite possible they did it for personal pleasure and thought it was morally OK.Mark Frank
February 3, 2015
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Zac: Other sentient beings may or may not value humans similarly.
Let's be clear that objective morality only extends to beings capable of apprehending objective truth - as StephenB pointed out to you already. So your insects and other animals are totally irrelevant to the debate.Box
February 3, 2015
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Box: But why don’t you get it through your thick skull that this fact obviously supports the notion of the objectivity of morality? Other sentient beings may or may not value humans similarly.Zachriel
February 3, 2015
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Zac,
Barry Arrington: You know for a certain fact that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people.
Barry points to the existence of a moral wall that equals a solid brick wall for every sane person. If that doesn't convey objectivity what does?
Zac: Humans value human infants.
You offer this as if it supports your position. But why don't you get it through your thick skull that this fact obviously supports the notion of the objectivity of morality? IOW it does not support subjective moralism. It's mind-boggling that you and your ilk keep bringing up this and similar remarks as if they are supportive for the subjectivist position; see #112.Box
February 3, 2015
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Humans value human infants.
If that were true then abortions would be illegal.Joe
February 3, 2015
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BA #162
You know for a certain fact that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people. It is literally impossible to imagine any circumstance under which that act would be other than evil. Yet you continue to insist that there is not one moral proposition that can be demonstrated to be objectively true. The patent falsity of your position has been pointed out to you many times; yet you cling to it ever more tenaciously.
This is clearly not an objective truth in the sense being advanced by the objectivists. An overwhelming majority of human minds agrees that X goes against their moral code. This fact is silent on whether the cause is common subjective individual sense (certainly plausible, given shared genetic and cultural heritage) or that there exists*** an external code to which (in this matter at least) their antennae are accurately tuned. *** (or rational beings must act as if there exists)Hangonasec
February 3, 2015
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StephenB: Is there something about the words “that’s right,” that you would like to retract. We already corrected the misapprehension. We apologize if our original answer was unclear. Barry Arrington: You know for a certain fact that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people. Humans value human infants. Nothing extraordinary about that. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5x0BSgLKnSkZachriel
February 3, 2015
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To be fair to StephenB, research suggests the possibility that forms of moral behaviour may already be present in a proto state in some other higher mammals (cf. the work done by Frans de Waal and other zoologists). It is certainly conceivable that such behaviours are passed on from generation to generation within social groups of animals, depending on how well they promote the survival of the group. By the time mankind has developed sufficient consciousness to be aware of them and how widespread they are, such deeply engrained behaviours may be extremely widespread, normative, and come to be seen as inherent to human nature. Because of their importance to the well-being and survival of the group, deviating behaviours will come to be universally judged as 'wrong'. The whole thing gets codified as morality. I can see why one might consider such pervasive and effectively involuntary moral standards to be objective (mike1962 might agree?), although they are still internal to people, not necessarily unchanging (especially when the boundaries of the 'group' are changing), and will disappear at the passing of the last human being. fGfaded_Glory
February 3, 2015
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Hi StephenB,
I know that the laws of morality are objectively true the same way I know the laws of logic are objectively true. I apprehend them as self-evident principles. --- Mathematical axioms are not self evident truths.
According to you, then, this law of logic (modus ponens) is self-evidently/objectively true: [(P → Q) & P] → Q But this Peano axiom is not self-evidently/objectively true: (P = Q) → (P+1 = Q+1) But the laws of morality are self-evidently and objectively true! Oh - and beauty is objective too. You have no justification for saying any of these things - they're all just your subjective opinion (and frankly bizarre).
What you don’t understand is that objective morality is defined as the morality that is proper to human nature, which is understood as the natural moral law.
Says you. You think you can just issue an edict that everyone must believe you when you say there is some particular morality that is "proper to human nature" (is->ought)? And furthermore we have to accept your take on which morality that might be? Sorry, that is just as subjective as can be. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 2, 2015
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drc466 #165
The Subjectivists above are intellectual Subjectivists, but functional Objectivists, but can’t admit it, because functional subjectivism is psychopathic.
I applaud your returning to the subject of the OP as I understand it. WJM finished it with this question:
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”?
He eventually agreed that:
Subjectivism has no inherent logical inconsistency if one agrees to Mark Frank’s ultimate principle of justification “because I prefer it” (because whatever other principles are adopted, like equality or not harming others, are adopted because one prefers them); if one disagrees with that principle but is willing to force moral compliance on others according to their personal morality, then their behavior is logically inconsistent with their refusal to agree to that justifying principle.
( “because I prefer it” suggest something whimsical and selfish. The same point might also be phrased as something like  “because I abhor cruelty” or “because I want to see crimes punished”. ) So that seems to have answered his question and your point. It is not necessarily functionally objectivist to impose your moral views on others. Although WJM also wrote:
Sane, rational, healthy people do not agree that they are willing to force others to comply to what they hold as entirely subjective feelings/perceptions and ideas, no matter how strongly they feel them. For sane, rational, healthy people, that very idea is immoral.
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. I also offered several counter-examples of subjective (non-moral) issues where people find it morally acceptable to force others to comply with their views (in fact  planning laws in the UK and I think elsewhere enshrine this in law). No one responded to that except StephenB who (understandably as he had not been following the exchange) thought I was using it as an argument for subjective morality.Mark Frank
February 2, 2015
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RDFish
Then I point out that our ability to confirm logico-mathematical laws is nothing whatsoever like our inability to confirm the rules of morality.
Which is an irrelevant comment since I said nothing about mathematics. Mathematical axioms are not self evident truths.
All right then, all you objectivists – I see what your game is. Hey guess what? You know all that morality that I believe that I was calling subjective? It turns out that it’s my moral code that is objectively true after all! Yup, the debate is over, and the objectivists were right all along… except you are all following the wrong objectively true morality! My morality is the only objectively true morality, so you’d better wise up!
Well, RD, that is a charming scenario, but you can't really make it work. What you don't understand is that objective morality is defined as the morality that is proper to human nature, which is understood as the natural moral law. Obviously, you don't believe in the natural moral law, so attaching the tag "objective" to your subjective morality doesn't help you. In order for morality to be objective it must be enshrined in nature and written on the human heart. Thus, by calling your subjective morality objective, you completely ignore the subject component, which is just as real. As I explained @106, "All perceptions are subjective; all things perceived are objective. Our conscience, which apprehends the natural moral law is subjective; the natural moral law that it apprehends is objective."StephenB
February 2, 2015
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Our "subjectivists" seem adamant to prove that unintelligent blind forces are behind the steering wheel.Box
February 2, 2015
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Hi drc466,
I’m nominating you for my “most ridiculous quote of the day award” today, for this statement.
Given the provenance, I'm honored.
An analogy: Let us imagine that we are engaged in the race to the top of the mountain. There is, objectively speaking, one and only one “top”, and one and only one “best” way to reach the top of the mountain.
Now, are you actually unaware of the glaring failure of your analogy, or are you just hoping we won't spot it? Assuming the former, I will explain your problem: While in your analogy it is known that there is one summit and one best approach, the analogous question here (the existence of an objective morality) is actually what we are debating. Sigh.
Let us also stipulate that people who follow the “best” way, or “nearly” the best way, will make it to the top, and not only survive the challenge, but experience the least amount of pain, suffering, and anguish along the way.
It seems as though you were intending to make a point with this, but then forgot to say what it was.
Hopefully this helps you see the silliness of your position.
If my position is taken to be "It might be productive to debate on UD", then I must admit you've got me. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 2, 2015
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Barry, no, no, no, you just don't get it. We don't 'know' it in any objective sense whatever. All our moral decisions are based on our personal judgement. You are the one loading up the word 'know', not me. Jeeez.Graham2
February 2, 2015
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Hi Barry,
I agree that you have asserted this over and over. You don’t really believe it.
This is certainly a novel debating strategy: Simply insist that your opponent agrees with you, despite their protestations, and declare victory! Well done! Why are you unwilling to address the points I've raised, Barry? William started this thread because he believed my points deserved serious reply, yet you refuse to concede or attempt to rebut them. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 2, 2015
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Shorter me: The Subjectivists above are intellectual Subjectivists, but functional Objectivists, but can't admit it, because functional subjectivism is psychopathic.drc466
February 2, 2015
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BarryA
This debate really has degenerated to StephenB courageously and patiently trying to reason with the materialists; only to be met repeatedly with the verbal equivalent of feces flinging. I don’t know why you subject yourself to this Stephen.
Barry, I knew in advance (as you did) that the responses would be irrational and evasive. However, I have compassion for those onlookers who have been subjected to the poison of postmodernism. They deserve to know that subjectivism leads to the same kind of intellectual and moral chaos that has been put on display.StephenB
February 2, 2015
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RDFish et. al.,
We have no objective means by which to decide what moral code ought to be considered objective, rendering objectivism either false or moot.
I'm nominating you for my "most ridiculous quote of the day award" today, for this statement. An analogy: Let us imagine that we are engaged in the race to the top of the mountain. There is, objectively speaking, one and only one "top", and one and only one "best" way to reach the top of the mountain. However, let us also stipulate that we lack the knowledge to determine what that single, objectively best way to reach the top is. We are thus left to our own, subjective methods of trying to determine the best way to the top. Let us also stipulate that people who follow the "best" way, or "nearly" the best way, will make it to the top, and not only survive the challenge, but experience the least amount of pain, suffering, and anguish along the way. If we go by your statement above, we conclude that, since we cannot determine the objectively best path to the top, it is therefore false or moot to state that there is a single, objectively best path to the top. Thus, by your statement, there is no sense in trying to determine what that object path is, or attempt to convince other people to follow our understanding of the best way. The objectivist states that even though I cannot KNOW the best way, that in no way changes the fact there IS a best way. The OP thus resolves to this: Objectivist: There is one, objectively best way to the top, and we need to use that understanding to encourage other people to follow the path that we believe is that objective, best way. Subjectivist: I don't believe that there is one, objectively best way to the top. However, even though I believe that there isn't one objectively best way, I'm going to encourage people to follow my way (hence, the logical incoherence). RDFish addition: Since the Objectivist can't KNOW the best way to the top, it is foolish or moot for them to point out that there is one. Hopefully this helps you see the silliness of your position. It does leave, however your follow-up statement as an open question:
We – all of us – have only our subjective moral sensibilities to go on.
Using a continuation of our analogy above, is this true? No, but it does in some sense require that "morality" have a purpose or direction. In my analogy above, the direction is reaching the top, with a purpose of minimizing the difficulties of the travellers. An Objectivist is superior to the Subjectivist because the Objectivist not only believes there is a "best path", but is able to rationally, logically define an "objective" goal - reach the top, minimize suffering. Could the objectivist have the wrong goal, or be on the wrong path, or disagree with other objectivists as to which goal/path is the objectively best one? Sure - but it doesn't change the fact that there is one best goal and one best path, and the objectivist belief is a rational one. On the other hand, a true Subjectivist is left to suggest that not only is there no best path, there is also no real goal - the masochists goal of a slide down a thousand-foot razorblade into a pool of iodine is just as valid a goal as the objectivists ride in the Cadillac up to the ski resort at the top. Which makes the subjectivist desire to encourage people to climb the mountain even more logically incoherent. So this leaves you, and the other non-objectivists above, basically claiming that, since we can't know that the top is the best place to be, and since we can't know which is the best path to get there, and that there really isn't a best place or path anyway, that we should not try to get to the top, and we should not try to get people to follow the path that we believe to be the best. All while attempting to make people follow your path to your destination, because you think it is best.drc466
February 2, 2015
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Graham2
The subjectivists have been making the point over and over and over that its simply impossible to detect that a given moral choice lines up with ‘objective morality’.
I agree that you have asserted this over and over. You don't really believe it. You know for a certain fact that torturing an infant for personal pleasure is evil at all places, at all times, for all people. It is literally impossible to imagine any circumstance under which that act would be other than evil. Yet you continue to insist that there is not one moral proposition that can be demonstrated to be objectively true. The patent falsity of your position has been pointed out to you many times; yet you cling to it ever more tenaciously. As for your question, as StephenB has patiently explained to you many times, your failure to perceive an objective truth does not cause it to cease to exist.Barry Arrington
February 2, 2015
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RDFish: We – all of us – have only our subjective moral sensibilities to go on. That an objective fact, is it?Mung
February 2, 2015
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