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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
WJM
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. In order to be willing force others to comply, sane, rational and healthy people require their perceptions be about some objectively existent, important commodity.
I disagree. I already gave the example of some kids burning or defacing a picture you found very beautiful. A father may force the family not to play certain games because he doesn’t like the noise. The state will often force some part of the population to comply with the subjective preferences of an elite – as when it requires buildings to comply with certain aesthetic principles. You may disagree with the policy but is the policy of sane, rational, healthy people.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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When someone states that the truth does not exist, it's sometimes effective to ask "is it true that the truth does not exist?" In that line I would like to ask subjectivists "is it wrong to hold that objective morals exist?"Box
February 1, 2015
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RDFish said:
WJM acknowledges that there is no objective moral code that is objectively discernable.
While this may be technically correct, it's a little disingenuous. I've said that nothing is "objectively" discernible and that I don't know if morality refers to an objective commodity or not. It may be "objectively discernible" in a manner similar to how humans have discerned some qualities about phenomena held to be objective in nature.
2) I argue that this means neither the objectivist nor the subjectivist can objectively justify moral interventions, and that we all act on our subjective moral perceptions
This is a rather odd assemblage of words. A justification is never in itself "objective", but rather is held subjectively as referring to an objective commodity. Nothing a human perceives, feels, thinks, reasons, etc. is ever "objective" in nature, but rather is categorized as referring to phenomena presumed or believed to be objective or subjetive in nature.
3) WJM counters that when a subjectivist morally intervenes, they are being logically inconsistent [if their intervention is held to be based on any principle otgher than "because I prefer/feel like it"- WJM]. In this thread he bases that argument on the fact that we are only compelled to intervene in matters where we believe that the object of our perception (the perception that evokes our moral response) is objectively real. Therefore, in order to be logically consistent, we need to consider our moral perceptions to be of something that is objectively real.
4) I counter that it isn’t true that we only intervene when we think our perceptions are real, and that our responses to our subjective moral perceptions are merely one of an array of responses appropriate to various sorts of perceptions
You've taken the term "intervention" out of context. The context I use it in is forcing compliance on others; in your supposed counter-examples you use it in a generic sense of simply doing things in the world - like climbing a mountain or having an affair presumably with an agreeable married woman. In those situations you are not forcing compliance on anyone and as soon as we consider forcing compliance in those situations on others we recognize it as immoral.
5. I conclude that assuming objectivism in order to avoid logical inconsistency is itself illogical because: (a) Subjectivism has no inherent logical inconsistency, and (b) Even if there was an inconsistency, it can’t be remedied by the subjectively choosing to believe in some moral code that cannot be objectively identified and then calling it “objective”.
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. IOW, you either agree that you coerce others to your morality for no reason other than, ultimately, "because I feel like it", or you are being inconsistent with moral subjectivism. Saying that there is no justifying principle is the same as saying "because I prefer it" or "because I feel like it". Those become your de facto, subjective justifications. However, it seems to me that RDFish has agreed to this; how he reacts to stimuli is de facto justification for carrying out that reaction, without consideration for whether or not that stimuli refers to objective or subjective phenomena. Essentally, then, it seems to me that RDFish is agreeing that subjectivist morality ultimately boils down to "because I prefer it" or "because I feel like it" because he need not even consider if his reactions pertain to any objectively existent commodity or not. I submit to viewers that no rational, sane person actually acts as if it is irrelevant whether or not their perceptions/sensations/feelings are of subjective or objective commodities and that indeed those two categories necessarily produce entirely different kinds of behavior in response. 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. In order to be willing force others to comply, sane, rational and healthy people require their perceptions be about some objectively existent, important commodity.William J Murray
February 1, 2015
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#58 WJM I am glad you concur that there is nothing inconsistent about a subjectivist forcing others to concur with their moral principles. We only differ in that I think that in the end everyone's moral principles including yours come to down to "because I prefer it". You prefer fulfilling God's purpose or fulfilling what it is to be a human being or however you like to describe it. I prefer limiting the suffering of sentient beings and various other related things. We are both prepared to use force to make others to conform to those preferences if the alternative is too extreme. It is really not such a big difference.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank said:
But subjectivism is the claim that morality (and thus justifications for anything) in the end comes down to internal preferential feelings. So whatever your objections, it is perfectly consistent to force my principles on others.
Mark, I agree that holding as justification the principle of "because I prefer it" is logically consistent with moral subjectivism. If you consider "because I prefer it" a sound moral principle, there is nothing more we need debate and I'm happy to leave it there for others to consider. I have repeatedly pointed out that this is the only logically sound principle ultimately available (logically) to the subjectvist.William J Murray
February 1, 2015
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William J Murray: 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. You might stop someone from throwing paint at the Mona Lisa, or desecrating a Grave to the Glorious Dead, even though the value of these artworks is purely subjective. People ascribe value to things, whether people or children or flags or coke bottles. They will then defend that valuable thing. "A strange feeling of shame had come over the family." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCQIGiXf0JAZachriel
February 1, 2015
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RDFish said:
No, our willingness to intervene is not determined by whether or not we believe there is an objective reality to what we perceive. I believe that electrons objectively exist, but if someone acted as though they didn’t, I would not be motivated to forcibly coerce them.
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?
Why is the subjectivist compelled to intercede in only moral matters? Subjectivists do pursue their moral goals, even at personal risk and cost. But people pursue lots of goals like this – we might risk great personal loss to climb a mountain, or to have sex with a married woman, or to experience a drug-induced high, or to prove our life’s work to be worthwhile, and so on. Preventing immoral acts is only one of many things that compel human beings with great emotional force. None of this has anything to do with objectivity/subjectivity that we believe is behind our perception.
I am certainly not arguing that people do not intervene in the lives of others due to purely subjective motivations or compulsions, 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. Most of what you described above is nothing but people pursuing their own personal goals within the framework of the other involved people freely going along with such choices. This is an argument about what can justify moral interventions, not what can justify personal choices even if dangerous. By moral intervention, I mean forcing compliance.
Yes, I argue that our moral sense is analogous to our sense of beauty. Just to clarify this issue, let’s look at all of our recent examples of things that we subjectively perceive (a bit simplified of course):
Once again, this is not an argument about what morality "is like" in any sense other than resulting behavior . 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. While you might risk your own life to climb to the top of a mountain, would it be moral to force others who are unwilling to do so? If you are working hard to have sex with a married woman, would it be moral or sane of you to force her compliance with that personal preference?
Why would a different perception produce the same kind of behavior?
Depends on the "kinds of behaviors" one is using as categories. I have two different, IMO exhaustively complete categories of behavior; (1) our behavior when what we are acting or reacting in reference to is a commodity presumed to be objectively existent, and (2)our behavior wrt what we consider to be subjective commodities, like personal flavor preferences or personal aesthetic preferences. It is my position that: 1. 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.) 2. In all other cases than morality, subjective preferences or "wonts", as you say, are not only insufficient grounds to force compliance, but that it is immoral to force compliance in accordance with such peronal wonts. Since the argument is about what moral behavior compares to, moral behavior cannot be used as an example of personal "wont" or preference behavior. It's the thing under debate. Your attempt to categorize moral behavior as a "wont" is assuming your conclusion. IOW, you are attempting to make the case that morality is in fact like a sense of beauty, even though the two produce entirely different behavioral patterns, when in my argument it doesn't matter what morality factually is, what matters is that the two produce categorically different behaviors. 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.
I really don’t find this argument valid at all, William. Again, whether or not my response to some perception results in my pursuing, avoiding, destroying, eating, mating, encouraging, preventing, or whatever has nothing to do with my thoughts regarding the objective, physical reality of whatever it is I’ve perceived. We do things that are appropriate to our perceptions: We eat sweet things, avoid disgusting things, pursue beautiful things, and prevent immoral things.
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? 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. If you actually live a life where the presumed objective and subjective nature of categories of experience are irrelevant to how you actually behave, then you would be the functional equivalent of an solipsist (not the belief-equivalent), where your responses to perceptions/sensations are considered inherently justified/valid simply because you have them. To be up front, though, I don't believe you actually think/live that way, but I'm willing to accept it at least arguendo. 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.
... but I’ve shown that our responses are not predicated on this at all.
I don't see where; as far as I can tell, every example you have given me can be clearly categorized as either 1. Willing to intervene due to some presumed objective commodity, or 2. intervenntion is inappropriate due to the subective nature of the commodity in question.] I've seen you assert that commodities are the same, but I have not seen a comparison that produces similar behavior - in fact, you have argued that even though two compared things produce different behavioral outcomes, they are factually the same, as if this addresses my argument when it does not. However, if you are indeed an "objectiopath", I can see how your line of reasoning follows the particular path it does, as an objectiopath wouldn't consider the objective/subjective qualities of perceptions; they would just react however they react, whether it included forcing personal preferences of objective guidelines on others - they would both be the same thing. 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.William J Murray
February 1, 2015
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Box
Mark Frank, can you explain where subjectivism differs from nihilism?
Yes but it is quite hard work. I might do it once you give me your definition of justification.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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AS: You can take it that I see you as no different from me in being able to justify your personal ethos any more objectively than I can.
Aha, so you admit that you cannot justify your actions. And, as a side issue, you assume that the same goes for me. edit: AS, Box stays on topic and refuses to get sidetracked.Box
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank, can you explain where subjectivism differs from nihilism?
Nihilism rejects the distinction between acts that are morally permitted, morally forbidden, and morally required. Nihilism tells us not that we can’t know which moral judgments are right, but that they are all wrong. More exactly, it claims, they are all based on false, groundless presuppositions. Nihilism says that the whole idea of “morally permissible” is untenable nonsense. As such, it can hardly be accused of holding that “everything is morally permissible.” That, too, is untenable nonsense. Moreover, nihilism denies that there is really any such thing as intrinsic moral value. [A.Rosenberg]
Box
February 1, 2015
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Nihilists! ******! I mean, say what you want about the tenets of National Socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos.Piotr
February 1, 2015
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#42 Box Why the sudden switch to nihilism? We were talking about subjectivism.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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Box
What can be a reason for believing an action is moral? Any reason perhaps? IOW anything can be a “justification”?
I guess that logically pretty much anything can be offered as a justification although in practice the set is much more limited. It is logically possible that some nutter somewhere has justified hanging someone on the grounds it is a Tuesday. If the speaker genuinely thought it was a good reason for hanging someone then from their point of view (and we are subjectivists) it is a justification.
If so, doesn’t that render “justification” meaningless?
No – because the defining characteristic of a justification is not ithe set of things that can be offered as justifications, but the role that those things play in the activity of justifying. Consider an analogy - a promise can refer to almost any kind of commitment – what makes it a promise is not the set of things that can be promised but the role that the words play in the activity of promising. Now please. I have worked quite hard to explain my definition of justification which I think corresponds to every day usage. What is your definition?Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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First, nihilism can’t condemn Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, or those who fomented the Armenian genocide or the Rwandan one. If there is no such thing as “morally forbidden,” then what Mohamed Atta did on September 11, 2001, was not morally forbidden. Of course, it was not permitted either. But still, don’t we want to have grounds to condemn these monsters? Nihilism seems to cut that ground out from under us. Second, if we admit to being nihilists, then people won’t trust us. We won’t be left alone when there is loose change around. We won’t be relied on to be sure small children stay out of trouble. Third, and worst of all, if nihilism gets any traction, society will be destroyed. We will find ourselves back in Thomas Hobbes’s famous state of nature, where “the life of man is solitary, mean, nasty, brutish and short.” Surely, we don’t want to be nihilists if we can possibly avoid it. (Or at least, we don’t want the other people around us to be nihilists.) Scientism can’t avoid nihilism. We need to make the best of it. For our own self-respect, we need to show that nihilism doesn’t have the three problems just mentioned—no grounds to condemn Hitler, lots of reasons for other people to distrust us, and even reasons why no one should trust anyone else. We need to be convinced that these unacceptable outcomes are not ones that atheism and scientism are committed to. Such outcomes would be more than merely a public relations nightmare for scientism. They might prevent us from swallowing nihilism ourselves, and that would start unraveling scientism. To avoid these outcomes, people have been searching for scientifically respectable justification of morality for least a century and a half. The trouble is that over the same 150 years or so, the reasons for nihilism have continued to mount. Both the failure to find an ethics that everyone can agree on and the scientific explanation of the origin and persistence of moral norms have made nihilism more and more plausible while remaining just as unappetizing. [A.Rosenberg]
Box
February 1, 2015
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Aurelio Smith: And how is your position different?
I take it that this is your way of expressing agreement. So I take it that you admit that under subjective moralism there is no justification for your actions. IOW anything goes.Box
February 1, 2015
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RDFish
RDFishSubjectivists acknowledge that noone has any way of establishing the objective truth of moral statements, and so do not presume to claim objective justifications for their actions.
On this subtopic, I will weigh in just long enough to say that I agree. The subjectivist can provide no justification (as the objectivist defines the term) for intervening on moral issues. I would add that the objectivist uses the word as it is normally understood: "the action of showing something to be right or reasonable." Obviously, "right or reasonable" refers to an objective standard. So it is with the word "Justice," from which we get "justify." Justice, by definition, means objectively just, just as fair, by definition, means objectively fair--as opposed to "just for me," or "fair to me," both of which are subjective. Thus, if the word justify has any meaning at all, we can say that the subjectivist can provide no justification for interceding in moral issues.StephenB
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank,
MF: I mean it in the same way the vast majority of the English speaking world – in a moral context “reason for believing an action is moral”.
What can be a reason for believing an action is moral? Any reason perhaps? IOW anything can be a "justification"? If so, doesn't that render "justification" meaningless?Box
February 1, 2015
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Aurelio Smith,
AS: My justification for a set of ethics would be fairness, respect for the life of individuals, consensus.
However under moral subjectivism these are baseless words, since opposite values are also "justifications". So that brings us to the question: what do you mean by justification? Can you define it?Box
February 1, 2015
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#33 Box
Please define “justification”. You are using the word as if it means something under subjectivism. The question is what.
I mean it in the same way the vast majority of the English speaking world - in a moral context "reason for believing an action is moral". You don't seem to count "reduces suffering" as a justification which the vast majority of people would accept. So I think perhaps you should define "justification" not me.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank,
MF: A subjectivist accepts reducing suffering, being fair, sticking to committments etc as justifications – recognising that these come down to personal values.
Why are these justifications? They are just as much "justifications" as the opposite values. And that's the whole point isn't it? Simply terming them "justifications" doesn't make them so.
MF: A subjectivist believes that there can be no such ultimate justification (for any given justification you can always demand that it be justified) and that in the end it has to come down some basic things we abhor or admire.
Why are you speaking about 'no ultimate justification' when there is no justification at all? And why are you speaking about "justification" when there is no such thing under subjective moralism? Critics don't ask you to justify justifications, they are asking you to justify moral intervention.
MF: A subjectivist only requires a justification in terms of their own moral principles as is the case for any other action they might take.
Please define "justification". You are using the word as if it means something under subjectivism. The question is what.Box
February 1, 2015
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#30 Box
However this “justification” is no actual justification. Remember?
I don't remember any such thing. That was just what you asserted. I guess we could describe the difference between objectivism and subjectivism in terms of what is an acceptable moral justification. A subjectivist accepts reducing suffering, being fair, sticking to committments etc as justifications - recognising that these come down to personal values. An objectivist requires that there be some ultimate justification for these different principles (even though they differ as to what that ultimate justification is). A subjectivist believes that there can be no such ultimate justification (for any given justification you can always demand that it be justified) and that in the end it has to come down some basic things we abhor or admire. Just repeating that such beliefs are no justification is simply repeating the objectivist position and amounts to no more than saying "we are right and you are wrong". WJM's angle on this - that it is somehow illogical or immoral for a subjectivist to compell someone to behave according to their moral principles is a red-herring. He is requiring some kind of objective justification for such an action. But that is assuming objectivism. A subjectivist only requires a justification in terms of their own moral principles as is the case for any other action the might take.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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Mark Frank,
MF: You are right the “impelled” is not a justification.
IOW you agree with your critics that you have no justification for moral intervention.
MF: “Impelled” answers the question “why would a subjectivist intervene” in the sense of what motivates them.
However, as you just acknowledged, there is no justification for this intervention.
MF: The justification would be something like e.g. preventing suffering, distributing rewards fairly, whatever.
Whatever indeed. However this "justification" is no actual justification. Remember?
MF: Compelling someone to conform to your moral principles is just one of many ways that you might act in accordance with your moral principles – along with giving to the poor, campaigning for gay rights, and not being late for dinner parties.
Whatever. Under moral subjectivism there is no justification for compelling someone to conform to your moral principles other than 'might is right'.
MF: It just so happens that in this case it brings you into conflict with someone else’s moral principles.
May the force be with you.Box
February 1, 2015
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Mark @28 -
It is an endless struggle to get objectivists to understand the subjectivist position.
+1Hangonasec
February 1, 2015
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HeKS It is an endless struggle to get objectivists to understand the subjectivist position. I will add my little bit to the excellent comments from RDFish and FG in case another perspective finally causes the penny to drop.
The Moral Subjectivist has no such justification to offer. And the claim that he or she feels impelled to force their subjective moral preferences on others is no justification at all. Rather, it is merely a description of what they are doing, and a simple restatement of the problem facing Moral Subjectivism
You are right the "impelled" is not a justification. "Impelled" answers the question "why would a subjectivist intervene" in the sense of what motivates them. The justification would be something like e.g. preventing suffering, distributing rewards fairly, whatever. Compelling someone to conform to your moral principles is just one of many ways that you might act in accordance with your moral principles - along with giving to the poor, campaigning for gay rights, and not being late for dinner parties. It just so happens that in this case it brings you into conflict with someone else's moral principles.Mark Frank
February 1, 2015
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I would just like to point out that the statement in bold is incoherent. If objective moral values and duties do not actually exist then it makes no sense whatsoever to speak of the potential for one’s moral convictions to be “wrong”. Sigh... always the same confusion with you guys... It makes sense in the same way I can say that I was wrong thinking it was a good idea entering these debates about morality. fGfaded_Glory
January 31, 2015
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Hi HeKS,
In each case that you use the word “compelled”, I think you mean “impelled”.
That may be a better word choice, although it's commonly said that one is compelled by one's own conscience, for example.
So, the question is, what justification do you have for compelling other people to conform to your subjectively held moral convictions, perhaps over and above their own?
The answer I've given many times here is that by "justification" you presumably mean "objective justification", which is not available to anyone, since nobody has any way of objectively determining morality.
When interceding in particularly egregious instances of immoral behavior (such as significant harm done to others), the justification that Moral Objectivists would offer for their intercession and their choice to compel a different moral behavior in another person would be their belief that they were not compelling someone to act in accord merely with their own subjectively held personal preferences, but rather to act in accord with objectively existent moral values and duties that are truly binding on that other person, even if the person had been ignoring that fact.
I'm aware that this is the justification offered by the objectivist. My point here is that in order for that justification to be valid, there must actually be an objectively existent moral code. There is no way to determine the existence of such a thing, and so the objectivists' justification fails.
The Moral Subjectivist has no such justification to offer.
Subjectivists acknowledge that noone has any way of establishing the objective truth of moral statements, and so do not presume to claim objective justifications for their actions.
And the claim that he or she feels impelled to force their subjective moral preferences on others is no justification at all.
Again, if the word is taken to refer to objective justification, it should be obvious that the subjectivist holds that no objective moral justification is possible. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
January 31, 2015
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@RDFish #11 I unfortunately don't have time to really jump into this discussion, but I'd like to address one of your comments. You said:
Why do I intercede in moral matters, but not aesthetic matters? It isn’t because morality is objective and aesthetics is subjective. Rather, it is because I am compelled to prevent immorality, but I am not compelled to prevent poor aesthetic judgement. Why is the subjectivist compelled to intercede in only moral matters? Subjectivists do pursue their moral goals, even at personal risk and cost. But people pursue lots of goals like this – we might risk great personal loss to climb a mountain, or to have sex with a married woman, or to experience a drug-induced high, or to prove our life’s work to be worthwhile, and so on. Preventing immoral acts is only one of many things that compel human beings with great emotional force. None of this has anything to do with objectivity/subjectivity that we believe is behind our perception.
I think there's a problem of terminology here. Consider this portion of your comment:
Why do I intercede in moral matters, but not aesthetic matters? It isn’t because morality is objective and aesthetics is subjective. Rather, it is because I am compelled to prevent immorality, but I am not compelled to prevent poor aesthetic judgement. Why is the subjectivist compelled to intercede in only moral matters?
In each case that you use the word "compelled", I think you mean "impelled". Certainly this is what you mean you say:
people pursue lots of goals like this – we might risk great personal loss to climb a mountain, or to have sex with a married woman, or to experience a drug-induced high, or to prove our life’s work to be worthwhile, and so on.
People feel impelled (strongly motivated from within themselves) to do the types of things you mention. On the other hand, being "compelled" refers to external pressure that forces someone to do something. When you intercede in moral matters to cause others to change their actions, you are compelling them to act differently, and perhaps in conflict with their own subjectively held moral convictions. So, the question is, what justification do you have for compelling other people to conform to your subjectively held moral convictions, perhaps over and above their own? When interceding in particularly egregious instances of immoral behavior (such as significant harm done to others), the justification that Moral Objectivists would offer for their intercession and their choice to compel a different moral behavior in another person would be their belief that they were not compelling someone to act in accord merely with their own subjectively held personal preferences, but rather to act in accord with objectively existent moral values and duties that are truly binding on that other person, even if the person had been ignoring that fact. The Moral Subjectivist has no such justification to offer. And the claim that he or she feels impelled to force their subjective moral preferences on others is no justification at all. Rather, it is merely a description of what they are doing, and a simple restatement of the problem facing Moral Subjectivism.HeKS
January 31, 2015
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faded_Glory @ 13 said:
I actually see dangers in assuming that morality is objective. It might make it harder to contemplate if one might be wrong about one’s moral convictions and adjust one’s views. There is not a lot standing between a belief in objective morality and fanaticism.
I would just like to point out that the statement in bold is incoherent. If objective moral values and duties do not actually exist then it makes no sense whatsoever to speak of the potential for one's moral convictions to be "wrong". If morality is simply subjective then moral convictions are merely what any person feels about matters that they have categorized as being relevant to something we've agreed to call "morality". As such, to contemplate that one might be "wrong" about their moral convictions is to contemplate that what they feel about some "moral issue" might not be what they feel about that "moral issue".HeKS
January 31, 2015
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StephenB:
I think that beauty and morality are both objective and detectable (and that red is a property of things).
I won't get into the moral debates, but red being a property of things sounds a bit odd. If you look at this photograph, is red the property of the wall?skram
January 31, 2015
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RDFish
Barry, StephenB – I know you are both ardent defenders of objectivism. Do either of you have anything to say relevant to the debate?
While I agree with WJM's argument that subjectivists live as if objectivism was true. I need to stay out of the discussion for the following reason: I think that beauty and morality are both objective and detectable (and that red is a property of things). So, I can't really relate to the dichotomy that you folks have set up or the analogies that you are using. All I would do is create a big mess.StephenB
January 31, 2015
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