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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
Can we drop this “might makes right” stuff? It is a glib phrase but it adds nothing to the debate. Might does not make right according to any account of morality. Might allows person X to force person Y to behave according to X’s idea of what is right. But X cannot force Y to believe he is right. This applies equally under a subjective or objective account of morality.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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SB #66  
Mark Frank: I already gave the example of some kids burning or defacing a picture you found very beautiful. SB: Mark, I don’t think you understand. In his opinion, the vandal’s subjective morality justifies his destructive behavior. If, by holding a different subjective morality, you are entitled to enforce your preferences at his expense, why is he not entitled to enforce his preferences at your expense?
This example and the others that went with it were nothing to do with entitlement. They were simply offered as counter-examples to WJM’s suggestion that:
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.
We have here a subjective issue – whether a picture is beautiful – and I would suggest it would be entirely sane, healthy, rational and moral to stop kids, who do not think it is beautiful, burning it. This would be true whatever your account of morality.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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Let me add that WJM is not making this argument. Accordingly, I ask everyone refrain from asking him to defend it. He is going to a different place and I encourage everyone to follow him–not me. WJM's argument has a fatal flaw, which is very pervasive here. It is that somehow there needs to be a further justification to act on one's moral convictions beyond having such convictions in the first place. Acting on one's moral convictions is part of being human. This is a self-evident truth and there can be no further rationale for it. fGfaded_Glory
February 1, 2015
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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.
You forget that you were taught the laws of logic, just as you were taught your morals. Objectivists think they were born as adults, apparently.Daniel King
February 1, 2015
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How do objectivists determine that their morality is objectively true? Simple, because your existence is objective and your life is objectively true. If morality was subjective you couldn't be able to follow subjective morals because you wouldn't exist, the objectivity of your existence is proof that someone cared about you and loved you and raised you and didn't leave you to die as a baby or even as an embryo. The fact that you are alive proves that morality can only be objective because objective morality creates life. The only thing you can do to deny that is to became a ghost and somehow argue that your existence can be in a different form therefor morality is subjective.JimFit
February 1, 2015
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RDFish, As one who works in the textile industry and works with color all the time, there is absolutely nothing subjective about color. There may be a dispute as to what the chemical composition should be for the substrates that create the 'standard' red, but red is not in dispute. How can we produce purple, green, and orange if blue, red, and yellow are subjective? It seems as if only pedantry could possibly stand in one's way of nailing down the chemical formula that produces red. Mind you, there are thousands of variations on red, blue, and yellow which makes for limitless variations. And colorist have a field day and sometimes severe headaches giving names to all the variations. But there is only one red, one blue, one yellow. So it seems you are conflating your perception of color with the emotive effect it has on your mood, modifying your behavior. By the way, color-blindness only speaks to defects in the eye that obstructs the perception of color. It is the rods and cones in the eye that tell us color exists objectively. Otherwise, no rods and cones. And how about one particular shrimp. How do we know it can see more colors than we can? Probably because it has other mechanisms in addition to rods and cones. How wonderful it would be to see like that little shrimp! .......see that little flower in the field. none is arrayed like one of these..........jesus, light of lights, logos 'through' whom the world was madeSteve
February 1, 2015
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RDFish: Frustrating, aint it ? Ive given up. Its 'self evident' to the devout, and that's it, no further discussion required.Graham2
February 1, 2015
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Hangonasec #86, You have missed the point I was making by a wide margin.Box
February 1, 2015
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Box @84 - the 'objective' component to subjectivist morality is that human experience is assumed to be broadly the same - we share a very common revulsion to 'harm', particularly where children are involved. So one assumes, when one has a conversation with someone about moral matters, that they share some of that sense. But of course on some details - masturbation, homosexuality, bodily modesty etc - there is more variation.Hangonasec
February 1, 2015
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Something I'd like to see - for a change - is a discussion between two objectivists: Divine Command and Natural Law. These are two different things, leading to different places, yet the proponents here seem only to wish to unite against the common enemy - the dreaded 'subjectivist'. (It's reminiscent of the fact that different views of ID are never thrashed out). Here's my 2c: Divine Command moralists are just deferring to the ultimate Subjectivist - God.Hangonasec
February 1, 2015
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RDFish #82 How about the fact that one is forced to accept certain moral concepts as true in order to function rationally? That moral concepts must be assumed to be true in order for rationality to be possible at all? Doesn't that - at the very least - hint at objectivity? See Silver Asiatic #70Box
February 1, 2015
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RDFish
How do objectivists determine that their morality is objectively true?
Hi RD. As you well know, these discussions always go to the same place. The dialogue goes something like this: S: How do you know that your morality is objectively true? O: 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. S: Prove that you can apprehend them. Prove that they are self evident. O: By definition, they cannot be proven. They are the starting point by which everything else is proven. Any time you prove anything, you must, in the end, rely on a self-evident first principle that cannot be demonstrated. The very fact that you would ask me to prove them indicates that you do not understand them. S: Well, I don't apprehend them, so it seems unlikely that you do. I don't accept "your" rules of reason and your rules morality. O: Well, I do apprehend them, so it seems unlikely that you don't. They aren't "my" rules of reason and rationality. I didn't invent them, I discovered them, the same way Aristotle did over 2000 years ago. It is impossible to not know them. S: I don't believe you when you say that you can apprehend them, and it is not impossible to not know them because I don't know them. Philosophers have disagreed about these things for centuries. O: I don't believe you when you say that you can't apprehend them. They are self-evidently true. Philosophers, like anyone else, can deny what they know to be true for self-serving reasons. And so it goes. What's the point of having that discussion again? Let me add that WJM is not making this argument. Accordingly, I ask everyone refrain from asking him to defend it. He is going to a different place and I encourage everyone to follow him--not me. He knows where these kinds of discussions go as well as I do. That is probably why he designed his argument as he did. So please do not use my answer to avoid his questions.StephenB
February 1, 2015
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Silver Asiatic, Box, StephenB, mrchristo, Barry: It is incredibly revealing that NONE OF YOU will even try to explain how you determine that your moral code is objective! Do all of you then concede that your moral code can't be objectively determined after all? Come on - When Mr Smith tells me that his objective moral code holds that torturing puppies is good, how can you determine that his objective moral code is wrong? ANYONE? Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
February 1, 2015
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Silver Asiatic: Ok, your subjective moral standard is yours. It cannot allow or forbid others since they are not governed by your standard. This does not follow from anything. My moral standards govern how I view the actions of everybody in the world (including myself). Many people will disagree with some or all of it, but since when do we need agreement between the parties on the moral quality of an action before we can approve or condemn it? This doesn't even make sense from an objective position, let alone a subjective one. fGfaded_Glory
February 1, 2015
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mrchristo: To say a persons behaviour is wrong presupposes an objective standard of how they ought to behave. No. All that is required is a standard. It doesn't matter if the standard resides inside or outside of a person's mind. fGfaded_Glory
February 1, 2015
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StephenB, winning does not equal being right. fGfaded_Glory
February 1, 2015
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Silver Asiatic: Subjectivism would explain that telling the truth or telling falsehoods are potentially morally equivalent.
Zac: No. Just because values are subjective doesn’t mean most people, including subjectivists, don’t share certain values.
?? SA does not deny in any shape or form that most people share certain values. Why do you act as if he does? What he is saying is that under subjectivism "telling the truth or telling falsehoods are potentially morally equivalent."
Silver Asiatic: Morally, telling a false statement would be equal to telling a true one.
Zac: No. Just because someone thinks morality is subjective doesn’t mean they won’t defend what is important to them.
Again you are totally unresponsive to what SA is saying.Box
February 1, 2015
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StephenB:
Of course, you will try to resist, and the other subjectivist will resist right back, meaning that the strongest party will win. It’s called “might makes right.” I am surprised that you don’t understand this.
So what happens when two objectivists have such a contest?Hangonasec
February 1, 2015
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It has become apparent that no matter what explanations, illustrations, corrections, and repetitions are offered, the objectivists here cannot understand that there is no logical inconsistency or hypocrisy associated with subjectivism. Let's agree to disagree on that point. Can any of the objectivists here, then, answer the question that all of you have assiduously avoided for the entire debate? How do objectivists determine that their morality is objectively true? Perhaps this will help... Mr. Smith is sitting next to me, and has told me that he is an objectivist. He just said "I objectively know that torturing puppies is morally commendable in all circumstances". Subjectively, I perceive this as being terribly wrong, but I don't know how to convince him that he ought to revisit his stance, since he claims that his view is objectively true and refuses to even consider any other position. Perhaps one of the objectivists can help me show Mr. Smith that his view is not objectively true? I'd appreciate it!RDFish
February 1, 2015
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"No. Just because someone thinks morality is subjective doesn’t mean they won’t defend what is important to them." That would make you a hypocrite. If morality is subjective and people decide for themselves how they ought to behave then you are not being consistent when you tell them they should behave as you claim they should. Furthermore you are not living as if morality is subjective, If right and wrong for moral conduct were subjective then why would you get upset and tell others how they should behave? To say a persons behaviour is wrong presupposes an objective standard of how they ought to behave. You can't argue or live consistently with the position you advocate.mrchristo
February 1, 2015
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Nihilism. Relativism. Er ... name things subjectivism should not be confused with, Alex?Hangonasec
February 1, 2015
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Silver Asiatic: Subjectivism would explain that telling the truth or telling falsehoods are potentially morally equivalent. No. Just because values are subjective doesn't mean most people, including subjectivists, don't share certain values. Silver Asiatic: But subjectivism cannot even be formulated or evaluated as a system if truth is not an objective moral value. The simplest way to construct such a coherent system is to assign values to things people believe are important. Silver Asiatic: Morally, telling a false statement would be equal to telling a true one. No. Just because someone thinks morality is subjective doesn't mean they won't defend what is important to them.Zachriel
February 1, 2015
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faded glory:
If I may, this one is easy: my moral standard does not allow others to force their preferences upon me if these go against my sense of right and wrong.
It is, indeed, easy, but not the way you think.
Therefore I will attempt to resist.
Of course, you will try to resist, and the other subjectivist will resist right back, meaning that the strongest party will win. It's called "might makes right." I am surprised that you don't understand this.
StephenB, to understand our position you have to try and think like a subjectivist, even if just for a minute. If you do, you will appreciate how it is internally consistent, contrary to what WJM claims. You will never understand it from your objectivist’s position.
Clearly, it is you who does not understand. Subjectivism, like relativism, always leads to might makes right.StephenB
February 1, 2015
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faded_Glory
my moral standard does not allow others to force their preferences upon me if these go against my sense of right and wrong.
It would help me understand if you phrased this differently. "My moral standard ..." - what is right and wrong for me. "does not allow ..." -- my standard refers to me. So, my moral standard 'does not allow me ...' "does not allow others to force ..." Ok, your subjective moral standard is yours. It cannot allow or forbid others since they are not governed by your standard. You could say, however, "my moral standard requires me to forbid others ..." What are you required to forbid? "others to force their preferences". But now the question is why does your moral standard require that? Restated: My moral standard requires me to forbid others from acting in a way that my moral system recognizes as morally good for them. So, you're required to forbid people from acting in a morally good way.Silver Asiatic
February 1, 2015
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Box
We may not know for sure if speaking the truth is objectively right. However we cannot function if we don’t accept its rightness.
Exactly. Subjectivism would explain that telling the truth or telling falsehoods are potentially morally equivalent. But subjectivism cannot even be formulated or evaluated as a system if truth is not an objective moral value. It assumes that truth is an objective moral value - thus it explains itself consistently. If truth is morally equivalent to falsehood then a person could not be understood if he says "I am a subjectivist". There would be no reason even to choose a truth or falsehood consistently. If truth is not an objective moral value, then it would be unreasonable to always choose truth-telling over falsehoods - especially since there are an infinite number of falsehoods to choose for every single true statement. Morally, telling a false statement would be equal to telling a true one.Silver Asiatic
February 1, 2015
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StephenB: Mark, I don’t think you understand. In his opinion, the vandal’s subjective morality justifies his destructive behavior. If, by holding a different subjective morality, you are entitled to enforce your preferences at his expense, why is he not entitled to enforce his preferences at your expense? If I may, this one is easy: my moral standard does not allow others to force their preferences upon me if these go against my sense of right and wrong. Therefore I will attempt to resist. StephenB, to understand our position you have to try and think like a subjectivist, even if just for a minute. If you do, you will appreciate how it is internally consistent, contrary to what WJM claims. You will never understand it from your objectivist's position. fGfaded_Glory
February 1, 2015
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Conditional to this discussion - and to any intelligent undertaking - is that we must act as if it is objectively morally right to speak the truth - in order to find the truth. We may not know for sure if speaking the truth is objectively right. However we cannot function if we don't accept its rightness. IMHO this is in line with what WJM is saying "moral humans must act as if morality refers to an objective commodity".Box
February 1, 2015
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Aurelio Smith
WJM does not seem overly concerned about the rights of others to live a quiet life unmolested by psychopaths and busybodies.
Wait a minute. Not so fast. Where did those "rights" come from? Without objective morality, there are no rights, or at least no inalienable rights.StephenB
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank
I already gave the example of some kids burning or defacing a picture you found very beautiful.
Mark, I don't think you understand. In his opinion, the vandal's subjective morality justifies his destructive behavior. If, by holding a different subjective morality, you are entitled to enforce your preferences at his expense, why is he not entitled to enforce his preferences at your expense?StephenB
February 1, 2015
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Hi William J Murray,
RDF: No, our willingness to intervene is not determined by whether or not we believe there is an objective reality to what we perceive. WJM: If someone was about to grab a live wire, or stick a tool into a live socket because they didn’t believe that electrons exist, you wouldn’t intervene?
Yes of course, just as you would. Now, if somebody was about to run over a cliff because they were ill and hallucinating that demons were chasing them, wouldn't you try to stop them? Of course you would, even though the demons were not objectively real. This should be enough right here to illustrate that this principle of intervention that you're trying to formulate is invalid. Our willingness to intervene is simply not predicated on our judgement of what is objectively real.
I’m making the case that rational, good people do not force others to comply with those views unless they hold their view to represent an objectively real and important commodity in the world.
As I've shown repeatedly, this simply is not the case. Instead, people force others to comply with their views when they feel compelled to by their moral sense. This is true for everyone. People do not justify their moral interventions by analyzing the objective reality of moral principles - most people who aren't familiar with moral theory have never given it a thought, and wouldn't even immediately understand the issue.
Unless you can compare morality to some other human capacity/experience/sense/feeling that carries with it the same kind of willingness to intervene (force compliance) on anyone else you encounter engaging in important immoral behavior, that does not refer to an objective commodity that justifies such intervention, then my argument that rational, moral humans must act as if morality refers to an objective commodity stands unrebutted.
I explained that different perceptions are associated with different behaviors, and our moral perceptions are those that are connected with others' actions, and so it follows that our respones to moral perceptions are going to involve dealing with others' actions. That is a valid rebuttal to your argument, but you don't see it, so here's another reason why you're wrong: Recall that you said it isn't the actual reality of the perceived thing that is relevant here, but only our own particular judgement about whether or not the object of our perception is objectively real that determines our willingness to intervene. Well, I am willing to intervene when my subjective moral sense compels me to, and yet my judgement of morality is that it is not objectively real at all. You argue that this means I am acting as though I'm an objectivist, but that is nonsense: I am actually acting like a subjectivist, and I morally intervene even though I believe that there is no objective reality to my moral principles. This refutes your thesis head-on: Contrary to what you are trying to argue, people do not intervene in others' affairs only when they believe their moral principles are objectively real.
In all cases other than morality, subjectivists agree that it is only in the case of presumed objective commodities and important potential consequences that forced compliance is acceptable (building codes, health codes, people unwittingly endangering themselves, etc.)
No, subjectivists do not agree that only "objective commodities" make interventions acceptable. The issue of objective vs. subjective reality and epistemology never enters the picture at all. In contrast to our (yours and mine) view that beauty is a subjective perception, StephenB here has informed us that he believes beauty to be objective property(!), which shows that even objectivists can't agree on what is objectively real. And yet you, me, and StephenB all would be willing to intervene to prevent rape, murder, and so on. Again, your attempt to use our judgement of the objective reality of things to try and establish that we should consider morality to be objective fails at the outset. It isn't what people do. And it actually even is worse for your argument than that. Aside from the fact that I've argued intervention is appropriate to moral perceptions in the same way that eating is appropriate to sweetness perceptions, and aside from the fact that I've shown people don't actually base their willingness to intervene based on their judgement of what is objectively real, and aside from the fact that people (even objectivists) don't even agree on what is objectively real, you have yet another problem: Let us arguendo accept your premise that people's willingness to intervene is predicated on their judgement of what is objective real. So what? This is nothing but a descriptive (and faulty) observation of yours, not some sort of prescriptive principle that you've established that ought to be adhered to. What does it matter what "people do" in general when it comes to objective morality? It doesn't matter, because an objective morality cannot be based on descriptive ethics. If my moral code prescribed that I intervene only when objective commodities were involved except "in moral cases", can you show that is objectively wrong? And yes, I'm afraid your argument is even more confused than this. You argue that "In all cases other than morality, subjectivists agree that it is only in the case of presumed objective commodities and important potential consequences that forced compliance is acceptable...". But what is it that distinguishes that something is a "case other then morality"? Do you have some objective way of determining when some case is is a moral case and when it isn't? Of course you do not! Your only criteria is when people choose to intervene and when they don't! So what your argument here boils down to is this: Subjectivists only intervene when they believe an objective commodity is involved, except when they don't. I wouldn't argue with that :-) It does not, however, mean that subjectivists are somehow inconsistent, or that we should consider morality to be objective. You have simply made a rule up for subjectivists to follow, and declared us inconsistent because we don't. Again, neither subjectivists nor objectivists base their willingness to intercede on their judgement of "objective commodities". It is a complete red herring.
To make your case, you must use a comparison or make a case where forcing compliance due to personal preference or wont is acceptable behavior.
This is nonsense, since none of us would feel compelled to force compliance due to mere personal preference. When you use the word "acceptable" here, of course you are equivocating about whether we determine that acceptability objectively or subjectively. I acknowledge that this acceptability is a subjective moral judgement, while you continue to assert that it is objective (but you can't say why). My subjective morality recoils at the thought of forcing somebody to agree with my own personal sense of beauty, for example. And StephenB, who believes beauty is an objective feature found "out there" in the world, agrees (presumably) that we ought not force others to agree with our aesthetic sense.
I’m not sure what “appropriate” would mean here. Perhaps you mean that we do things which are deterministic outcomes produced by our perceptions? If not, what determines what act is “appropriate” wrt the perception?
Let's not get into to determinism/free will issues here. What I meant is simply that certain responses are relevant to - make sense with regard to - certain perceptions. It would not be appropriate, in that sense, for our sense of beauty to compel us to eat a painting, or our sense of sweetness to compel us to mate with a cupcake, or our sense of (im)morality to compel us to exclaim "purple!".
If you are saying here that your daily behavior ignores whether or not a perception is categorized as being of something objective in nature, or something subjective in nature, resulting in entirely different kinds of behavior as a response, then your kind of existence lies so far outside of my experience and my experience of other people that I don’t see how we can continue a debate about it.
This is both overly dramatic and completely unfounded. StephenB and I disagree about the nature of beauty - I believe it is in the eye of the beholder, while StephenB believes that it is an objectively detectable real property of things in the world. I was in fact surprised when StephenB revealed his view on this, but I would hardly say this means that his kind of existence is so radically different than mine.
Accepting it arguendo, I’m not sure if you would classify as “sane” in any reasonable sense. It almost seems to me to be a kind of sociopathy, but more correctly termed objectiopathy, where you do not care nor react as if there is any objective justification for any behavior, and you consider any behavior factually justified by the nature of the reaction itself.
I won't dignify this type of rhetoric with a response.
By the way I don’t mean that term in a derogatory way, just a shorthand way of referring to someone who presumably holds no categorical distinctions between perceptions of objective or subjective commodities wrt their resulting behavior.
When you suggest that your opponent may not classify as "sane", you should expect that it will be taken in a derogatory way. It adds nothing to your argument to assert that my views are pathological (sociopathy, etc). Finally, all of the subjectivists here continually ask the same question: How does the objectivist purport to be able to establish the objective truth of their own moral code? The explanation for the silence of objectivists on the matter is easy to explain, because there is no way for them to establish anything of the sort. This one simple truth actually obviates all the rest of your machinations: Since neither one of us can show that our own particular moral sentiments are objectively true, nobody can claim that their moral interventions are objectively justified. The subjectivist acknowledges this truth; the objectivist does not. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
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