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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
Barry Arrington: Much better to believe that everything is ultimately meaningless; that you are ultimately unaccountable for anything; and there is no ultimate standard by which to discern whether any of your actions are right or wrong. Why this fascination with ultimate? Many things are meaningful to me in my life, and some are meaningful thereafter. I am accountable for what I do and don't do in my life: to myself, to my loved ones, and to the society I live in. I do have a standard by which to judge if my actions are right or wrong. I don't see what I am missing at all. Much better to believe that the concepts of “wrong” and “moral conviction” are inherently meaningless. That a sure and firm foundation for adjusting views. My concepts of right and wrong are not at all meaningless to me. They directly affect how I behave every single day of my life. I can adjust my views if reflection, discussion and overall life experiences convince me to do so. I cherish this freedom of thought. Do you not permit yourself the same freedom? Much better to believe in no foundation at all for ethics. That will free you up to be a Mao or a Stalin and engage in wholesale slaughter on the scale of tens of millions. I do not believe that there are no foundations at all for ethics, so I am puzzled why you direct this comment to me. It is also quite possible that Mao and Stalin believed in objective morality - just a different one from the one you believe in (I presume). As I said, there is not a lot standing in the way between a belief in objective morality and fanaticism. Witness Islamic terrorists, who undoubtedly believe they are acting for the good and glory of their God. fGfaded_Glory
January 31, 2015
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Here's a recap for those who don't have time to read/understand WJM's OP and my response: 1) WJM acknowledges that there is no objective moral code that is objectively discernable. 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 3) WJM counters that when a subjectivist morally intervenes, they are being logically inconsistent. 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 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". WJM I hope you think that is a fair summary, please tell me if I've (inadvertently!) misrepresented you view. Barry, StephenB - I know you are both ardent defenders of objectivism. Do either of you have anything to say relevant to the debate? Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
January 31, 2015
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WJM #18
I fail to see how that example corresponds to the debate. Are you saying you would feel like you would have a moral right to disobey the law and physically prevent him from a legal demolishment? We do not normally adjudicate differences in beauty perception through force or by breaking the law.
In England it would be legal for a planner to get the police to physically prevent a developer from destroying a building on the grounds that it was beautiful. But why be so extreme. Interventions do not have to be physical – suppose you saw some kids about to burn a painting you considered very beautiful for fun – Would you not intervene vocally? Would it not be morally justified? The fact is that we do intervene about subjective issues and there is nothing illogical about it and under some circumstances it may be moral.
Then since your principle sources no presumed objective commodity, it boils down to a form of “because I feel like it”, even if those feelings are unlike other feelings and are stronger than other feelings. “Because I feel like it” is an obviously immoral principle.
You want the debate to be about how subjectivists do not behave as subjectivists, but this point makes it clear that first you have to be clear what subjectivism is. To describe it as “because I feel like it” makes it sound as it were a selfish whim. If you rephrase it as “because I abhor that kind of cruelty” then it sounds moral and reasonable to intervene.
Calling one’s internal, preferential feelings “morality” as if simply using that term justified forcing your preferences on others is an obfuscation;
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.
what principle gives you the right to force what you admit is just your own personal, subjective morality on others?
I just explained the principle would depend on the morality of the person. In my case, I believe it right to force my morality on the Islamic State  because I believe their morality causes excessive suffering and subjectively I find that very wrong. There is no inconsistency on that.Mark Frank
January 31, 2015
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Mark Frank said:
I don’t understand whether you think it is irrational or immoral for a subjectivist to intervene and impose their moral views on others – you seem to move between the two.
I move from one to the other by arguing that the only logically consistent justifications available under moral subjectivism would themselves be considered immoral - as illustrated in the following:
However, either way it is often perfectly rational and moral to intervene and impose your subjective assessment of what is beautiful. Suppose you are a planner and a developer with no taste is intending to knock down a beautiful 18th century terrace and replace it with a multistorey car park.
I fail to see how that example corresponds to the debate. Are you saying you would feel like you would have a moral right to disobey the law and physically prevent him from a legal demolishment? We do not normally adjudicate differences in beauty perception through force or by breaking the law.
You also seem to want a principle for a subjectivist to intervene. It would be whatever moral principles they subjectively believe in. I subjectively find it wrong to prevent girls having the same education as boys, so I find it morally right to intervene to the extent I can with those who subjectively think it right. That is perfectly consistent and rational.
Then since your principle sources no presumed objective commodity, it boils down to a form of "because I feel like it", even if those feelings are unlike other feelings and are stronger than other feelings. "Because I feel like it" is an obviously immoral principle. Calling one's internal, preferential feelings "morality" as if simply using that term justified forcing your preferences on others is an obfuscation; what principle gives you the right to force what you admit is just your own personal, subjective morality on others?William J Murray
January 31, 2015
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Why should our lives have meaning if they are not part of any purpose? How can we form an overall purpose?Joe
January 31, 2015
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Why should our lives only have meaning if they are part of someone - or something - else's purpose? What's wrong with forming our own purpose? If they can do it why can't we? Why should subjectivism or atheism entail nihilism or anarchy? We have common needs, common interests on which to base a consensus morality and society. And, yes, Mao, Stalin, Pol Pot and Hitler killed millions. But before them, through millennia of history, practically all societies were religious in one form or another. Didn't stop them engaging in wholesale slaughter when it suited them. Sure, the numbers killed were smaller but so were the populations. There were a lot fewer people around and the means of killing them were a lot less efficient, that was all. The will was still there, religion or not. And the big unanswered question is still, whose morality gets to be the objective one?Seversky
January 31, 2015
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FG @ 13:
I actually see dangers in assuming that morality is objective.
Much better to believe that everything is ultimately meaningless; that you are ultimately unaccountable for anything; and there is no ultimate standard by which to discern whether any of your actions are right or wrong.
It might make it harder to contemplate if one might be wrong about one’s moral convictions and adjust one’s views.
Much better to believe that the concepts of "wrong" and "moral conviction" are inherently meaningless. That a sure and firm foundation for adjusting views.
There is not a lot standing between a belief in objective morality and fanaticism.
Much better to believe in no foundation at all for ethics. That will free you up to be a Mao or a Stalin and engage in wholesale slaughter on the scale of tens of millions.Barry Arrington
January 31, 2015
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I think that subjectivists intervene in moral issues in order to remake the world in their own image and likeness. The objective moral law is, after all, a reproach on their behavior. If the world became subjectivist, there would be no one left to prick their guilty conscience.StephenB
January 31, 2015
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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. fGfaded_Glory
January 31, 2015
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WJM
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”?
I don’t understand whether you think it is irrational or immoral for a subjectivist to intervene and impose their  moral views on others – you seem to move between the two. However, either way it is often perfectly rational and moral to intervene and impose your subjective assessment of what is beautiful. Suppose you are a planner and a developer with no taste is intending to knock down a beautiful 18th century terrace and replace it with a multistorey car park. You also seem to want a principle for a subjectivist to intervene. It would be whatever moral principles they subjectively believe in. I subjectively find it wrong to prevent girls having the same education as boys, so I find it morally right to intervene to the extent I can with those who subjectively think it right. That is perfectly consistent and rational.Mark Frank
January 30, 2015
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Hi William J Murray,
First, I’d like apologize to RDFish...
I appreciate that greatly, let's get back to the debate!
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.... 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.
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. 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. Neither is the distinction between preference and experience relevant. "Preference" is a way to describe what we are wont to do. To say "I prefer two cubes of sugar" is to say "I am wont to use two cubes of sugar". Well, we are all generally wont to prevent immoral acts (some of us more than others of course). I prefer to save weddings from being ruined by salty cakes, to prevent people from being blown up by bombs, and so on. I act on these preferences without regard to the objective reality (or lack of same) of principles that drive me to do these things. In fact, I would be hard-pressed to articulate the moral principles behind the first act (Thou shalt not let people make bad-tasting cakes, especially on important occasions?) What about the difference between moderating one's own behavior vs. interceding in someone else's? Our moral sense is perturbed by acts of other human beings - that is what we are ultimately perceiving. Thus the response that is evoked by this particular sense involves the acts of other human beings- endorsing, protesting, or attempting to mitigate them. Our sense of beauty involves our seeing (or hearing) particular forms, shapes, tones, textures, and other features of the world, so our response would have nothing to do with the acts of other human beings. Instead, our response to beauty is typically to pursue and enjoy it.
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.
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): 1) Sweetness - simpler perception of one particular class of chemical compounds 2) Color - more complex perception of a variety of objective properties (reflected wavelengths, ambient light, background, etc) and other subjective properties (prior experience of colored objects, expectations, etc) 3) Beauty - very complex perception of various objective physical features (symmetry, proportion, etc), influenced by many psychological factors, and also social/cultural factors 4) Morality - very complex perception of a myriad of objective facts (regarding suffering, inequality, etc), influenced by many psychological factors, and also social/cultural/religious factors Notice that of all of these examples, morality would actually seem to be the one that has the least clear mapping to objective things in the world. While sweetness, color, and beauty are greatly influenced by concrete, physical, measureable objective properties, morality is sensed by perceiving very abstract properies of situations and circumstances such as "inequality" or "responsibility" or "compassion".
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.
Why would a different perception produce the same kind of behavior? My perception of a red apple does not usually provoke the same behavior as would my perception of a beautiful woman. Why would it? Each type of subjective perception might evoke a different response - perceiving something disgusting may evoke retching and avoidance, someone sexy may evoke arousal and pursuit, something sweet may evoke salivating and eating, and something immoral may evoke outrage and intervention. None of this has anything to do with our ideas regarding the objective reality of what we are perceiving.
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).
Yes, I agree - this is just what I was saying about the fact that morality had the most obscure mapping to physically real events and objects than any of the other sorts of perceptions we've discussed.
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.
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.
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.
All of the types of perceptions we've discussed are valid to compare, as I've illustrated in the list above.
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)...
Once again I must correct this: Color and beauty are reasonably similar on the objective/subjective dimension! Our judgements of beauty are culturally influenced whereas (as far as I know) color perception is not, and it is more abstract, but these are matters of degreee, not a qualitative distinction vis-a-vis objective realism. Color - more complex perception of a variety of objective properties (reflected wavelengths, ambient light, background, etc) and other subjective properties (prior experience of colored objects, expectations, etc) Beauty - very complex perception of various objective physical features (symmetry, proportion, etc), influenced by many psychological factors, and also social/cultural factors
...justifies intervening in the moral affairs of others, when we would never intervene if morality was, in our experience, actually like “beauty”?
You are asking for a principle that is consistent with subjectivism that justifies moral interventions. I answer that there is no objective principle that is consistent with subjectivism that justifies moral interventions. I also answer that there is no objective principle that is consistent with objectivism that justifies moral interventions. There are only subjective principles that justify these interventions, and it makes no difference if one assumes objectivism or not, because we cannot discern objective principles of morality the way we independently discern e-m wavelengths or high cheekbones or glucose. In order to objectively justify moral actions, we need to have an objectively justified morality. You have attempted to connect our willingness to respond to moral perceptions by intervening in others' affairs with our judgement regarding the objective reality of the object of our perception, but I've shown that our responses are not predicated on this at all. And without attempting to actually show that some moral code is in fact objectively discernable, you can't possibly provide an objective justification for moral intervention - just like I can't. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
January 30, 2015
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Barry, are we more civilsed than barbaric USA?
No, your decadence has lead to moral enervatation, of which you seem to be quite proud. The really interesting thing is that your comment implies that your country is morally correct and the USA is morally wrong -- even barbaric -- to allow capital punishment. To the question in the OP, if it were in your power to impose your will on the USA, would you force it to stop capital punishment? Assuming the answer is yes, how would you justify imposing your subjective preference on a whole country?Barry Arrington
January 30, 2015
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rvb8 said:
Question for WJM: And what if we are ‘colour blind’?
Morality-blind humans exist. They're called sociopaths, people without a conscience.William J Murray
January 30, 2015
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rvb8: As a subjectivist I would say to Napier, you are also taking a life when hanging. You think Napier ought to have some objective reason to agree with you?Mung
January 30, 2015
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I suggest we can agree that color perception or the sense of taste are illustrative analogies but they fail in one important respect. They are representations in our subjective models of aspects of objective reality, of what is. They say nothing about how we should behave. Morals do. Whatever their source, that is their function. They serve to regulate how people behave towards one another. They are both an acknowledgement of human capacity for causing harm to others and a means of preventing it. Those who argue that there is no meaningful way to distinguish between the psychopath who has no moral qualms about raping and murdering others and the rest of us who strongly object to such behavior are missing the point. The psychopath derives pleasure from behavior that causes harm to others. He may argue that frustrating that purpose causes him harm but we may argue that i we gave him free rein he would cause much more harm to many more people. Preventing the greater harm and preventing any harm without good cause are adequate justifications. In my view Of course, all this generalized discussion about morality is carefully skirting the elephant standing in the middle of the room - exactly whose morality is the objective one? Let's see now, Australian Aborigine? In your dreams. Native American? No chance. Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Taoist? Not even close. Muslim? Be serious. The only morality in the running here for objective status is Christian, nothing more, nothing less. So while all this discussion about morality is interesting it's also a bit pointless because the outcome is a foregone conclusion for most here.Seversky
January 30, 2015
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Barry, As a subjectivist I would say to Napier, you are also taking a life when hanging. If you give up execution as a punishment we will give up Suti as a religious necessity. In my country execution is viewed as barbaric, so much so that even when criminals have been caught (and upon occasion it has, I am very sorry to say, has happened) raping and murdering elderly women, the vast majority of my country men and women (upwards of 65%, and growing) strongly oppose capital punishment. Barry, are we more civilsed than barbaric USA? I prefer subjectivism to the obvious truths, of other ancient thought processess. Question for WJM: And what if we are 'colour blind'? Perhaps a standard man made colour test and system of measuring for 'standard' colours could be used. As our knowledge of what colour truly is we could modify this system to come into line with our new understandings.rvb8
January 30, 2015
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If I see (say) a group of children bullying a classmate or torturing a cat, I would intervene. I would not consider it an absolute, sourced elsewhere (the Mind of God or Natural Law) Truth that their behaviour was wrong in order to do so (Subconciously? No. Not buying that either). This seems to be the perennial sticking point (and I doubt we will ever move on from that). The repetitious assertion is that a subjectivist who intervenes is doing so 'as if' there is an objective moral code. Or, if not, they are a sociopath. Both of these are wrong. The subjectivist would likely intervene if their morality is based upon personal distress at the suffering of others - whether caused by themselves or by others. What God, or Natural Law, or even other people have to say on the matter is not relevant. The sociopath, meanwhile, does not even recognise the concept of morality, other than a sense others report themselves as possessing, so I don't know where he comes into the picture.Hangonasec
January 30, 2015
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*crickets* This post really deserves more attention. Hopefully, folks are busy with other things and are not merely ignoring it because they are incapable of dealing with the points it makes.Phinehas
January 30, 2015
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Zachriel @ 2: You have failed to address the issue raised in the OP. That's OK. Spewing talking points is easy. Thinking and articulating those thoughts is hard work and it is not for everyone.Barry Arrington
January 30, 2015
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Barry Arrington: Was Napier justified in imposing his views on the Hindus? If the subjectivist says “yes he was,” the subjectivist has treated Napier’s moral view as an objective good. No, it just means he shares Napier's moral views. Obviously, the Hindus involved did not.Zachriel
January 30, 2015
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Here is a concrete example that places this debate in context: Hindu priests complained to Charles James Napier about the British prohibition of Sati (burning widows alive on the funeral pyre of their husband). Napier famously replied:
This burning of widows is your custom; prepare the funeral pile. But my nation has also a custom. When men burn women alive we hang them, and confiscate all their property. My carpenters shall therefore erect gibbets on which to hang all concerned when the widow is consumed. Let us all act according to national customs.
Was Napier justified in imposing his views on the Hindus? If the subjectivist says “yes he was,” the subjectivist has treated Napier’s moral view as an objective good.Barry Arrington
January 30, 2015
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