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Well, So Long As They Are Not Just Any Old Preferences

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This will be my last post on this subject.  In the comments to my prior post, groovamos wrote a comment that contains a personal history followed by a gut wrenching story (which is in bold):

I am in no sense as qualified as most on this thread to debate philosophy. However as one who embraced materialism TWICE in my youth, separated by a 3 year period of interest in mysticism, I’ll have a go.

At the end of sophomore year I had converted to the typical campus leftist stance of the day, cultural zeitgeist being the driver, sexual license sealing the deal. Not outwardly religious as a kid, I quickly gave up belief in a supreme being. And just as naturally I gave up any belief in ‘truth’ as something relevant to all human activity, and sure enough out the window was any belief in ‘evil’ as a concept. Soon enough I found that lying was acceptable as long as it was me doing it. Especially since I was self assured as one with a degree in a difficult discipline (hip too, self-styled). And who enjoyed hedonistic pursuits and shallow short term relationships. And lying sort of fit into the whole picture.

But here is the interesting part looking back on it. Whenever I would read in the news of acts of insane depravity and wickedness, I would go into a mentally confused state and would feel like I had no bearings in order to process what I had just encountered. It was extremely uncomfortable. I’m talking about the acts of Jeffery Dahmer, and others. One of these I remember that particularly caused me disorientation as if I, the atheist, were the one that might risk insanity just thinking about it (in the early ’80′s).

In this particular case the police arrived at a house where a man had just dismembered and sliced up his mom, her screams having been heard by neighbors. The man did not notice the police had entered and was found masturbating with a section of rectum he had excised. When asked how he had disposed of his mother’s breasts, he said “I think I ate them”.

Congrats to any atheist on here finding the story ‘unfavorable’. Congrats on your faith that someday ‘science’ will discover every event in the long chain for that experience. ‘Science’, answering all questions, will describe for you every neural, synaptic event, every action potential, every detailed cascade of chemical analogues and concentration gradients in your visual system and brain. And you will know EXACTLY the complete ‘science’ behind your disfavoring the story, so it will fit like a glove over your materialist philosophy, and maybe even reveal why the guy did it. And if you are a little disoriented, like I seriously was, you may be saved from that in future by ‘science’.

In the very next comment Mark Frank writes (Mark added the bold, not I):

The OP quotes me but omits a paragraph which I think is important. Here is the complete text:

As a materialist and subjectivist I agree with Seversky:

A ) Personal preferences can be reduced to the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain.

B) There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

C) Statements about good and evil are expressions of personal preferences.

(I would add the proviso that these are not any old preferences. They are altruistic preferences that are deeply seated in human nature and are supported by evidence and reasoning. They are also widely, but not universally, shared preferences so they are often not competing.)

Now, of course, the point of this entire exercise has been to demonstrate a truth, which I will illustrate by the following hypothetical dialogue between Mark and the man in groovamos’s story (let’s call him “John” for convenience):***

Mark: John, dismembering and eating your mother is evil, and by ‘evil’ I mean ‘that which I do not personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

John: But Mark, I preferred to dismember and eat my mother. Otherwise I would not have done it; no one forced me to after all. Therefore, under your own definition of good and evil it was “good,” which you tell me means ‘that which I personally prefer as a result of impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain.”

Mark: Not so fast John, I would add a proviso that my preference is not just any old preference. It is an altruistic preference that is deeply seated in human nature and is supported by evidence and reasoning. It is also widely, but not universally, shared. And your preference is none of these things.

John: Are you saying that your preference not to dismember and eat your mother, which preference resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of your brain, is objectively and demonstrably good, and that therefore my preference to dismember and eat my mother, which preference also resulted from the impulses caused by the electro-chemical processes of my brain, is objectively and demonstrably evil?

Mark: Of course not. There is no such thing as objective good and evil.

John: Well at least you are being consistent, because we both know the electro-chemical system in your brain just is. And as Hume demonstrated long ago, “ought” cannot be grounded in “is.” Your preference just is. My preference just is. Neither is objectively superior to the other.

Mark: Certainly that follows from my premises.

John: You can say your preference is “good” but if good is defined as that which you prefer you are saying nothing more than “my preference is my preference.” Your little proviso, Mark, does not make your preference anything other than your preference; certainly it does not demonstrate that it is in any way more good than my preference. So, my question to you is, why do you insist on the proviso?

Mark: _____________ [I will let Mark answer that]

I will give my answer as to why Mark insists on his proviso. He has the same problem Russell did: “I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values, but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don’t like it.” Russell on Ethics 165/Papers 11: 310–11.

Russell was incapable of believing the conclusions that followed ineluctably from his own premises. Dissonance ensued. For most people materialism requires self deception to deal with the dissonance of saying they believe something that it is not possible for a sane person to believe. Thus WJM’s dictum: “No sane person acts as if materialism is true.”

So why does Mark insist on his proviso that in the end makes absolutely zero difference to the conclusion that must follow from his premises? He is trying to cope with his dissonance.

If my premises required me to engage in acts of self-deception in order to cope with dissonance, I hope I would reexamine them.

___________
***I am not saying Mark has said or would say any of these things. I am saying that the words I put in his mouth follow from his premises. If he does not believe they do, I invite him to demonstrate why they do not

Comments
REC @ 42: I missed the part where you explained how the expression of “wants and desires and preferences” obligated me to anything…ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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Eigenstate: Beautifully done.Reciprocating Bill
April 16, 2015
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"You never explained why a rock or a bolt of lightning are less worthy of our obedience and consideration as “moral” standard-givers than are any “evolved” reactions to wanton cruelty." Do rocks and lightning express wants and desires and preferences to you? Do you have conversations with inert objects? Do you need help?REC
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 37:
To be sure, ethical and moral questions abound that have subjective qualities, and depend on the particulars of the viewer (or the “considerer”). But that doesn’t negate evolved human nature, our nature which invests each human born with “empathy” and “selfishness” and “desire to be loved” and “greed”, etc.
Let me get this straight. We owe reverent obedience to “evolved human nature”? How are we sure that it evolved in the correct way? And mustn’t we be glad that it didn’t evolve in another way, which would not have told us to consider the killing of a fellow human “wrong”?
The processes are all, at the core “just physics”. But the actual inputs and outputs in these processes vary greatly, and those differences are often quite dramatic.
so? Their being different doesn’t distinguish them as good or bad. You never explained why a rock or a bolt of lightning are less worthy of our obedience and consideration as “moral” standard-givers than are any “evolved” reactions to wanton cruelty.ebenezer
April 16, 2015
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"REC, again, you are correct. The materialist position boils down to might makes right." As does yours. I admit I might be wrong. You claim to be the diviner of transcendent objective morality. Which frightens me more? Oh, and Barry, we never revisited what you meant by intersubjective truth so many threads ago.....REC
April 16, 2015
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"Why is there Evil in the World? Why? Why?" Dude, there is no evil. Just atoms & void. Just kidding, there IS evil and it is spectacularly bad. Very very bad.ppolish
April 16, 2015
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nightlight:
Without agreeing on what that exactly means, there cannot be meaningful discussion.
Is that objectively true? Let's say you and I both agree that the moon is made of cheese, and we both agree on what that exactly means. What sort of meaningful discussion might proceed from that agreement?Mung
April 16, 2015
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@Barry,
In the materialist understanding, objective morality means that a person is bound to prefer what the electro-chemical processes of his brain impel him to prefer. OK. But it should be obvious that this gets you exactly nowhere in terms of Russell’s dilemma. You objectively prefer what you prefer. Yes indeed you do. So?
This quote that someone else introduced into a previous thread helps:
I cannot see how to refute the arguments for the subjectivity of ethical values but I find myself incapable of believing that all that is wrong with wanton cruelty is that I don’t like it.” -Bertrand Russell
There's no dilemma, if one looks at humans scientifically, as evolved animals. Russell, like many atheists and materialists, succumb to "dualist thinking" regularly, supposing that "philosophy as philosophy" might provide some insight into some questions. It does not and cannot, and can only make headway insofar as it comprehends humans as evolved animals. To be sure, ethical and moral questions abound that have subjective qualities, and depend on the particulars of the viewer (or the "considerer"). But that doesn't negate evolved human nature, our nature which invests each human born with "empathy" and "selfishness" and "desire to be loved" and "greed", etc. Neither Russell or anyone else need look any farther than that to understand any anxiety experienced at the thought (or experience) of wanton cruelty. No "argument" is needed, or even appropriate, the reaction can be traced to empathy (and possibly other drivers) that obtain objectively in our nature. It's "wired into us", and can't be argued for or against any more than the color of our irises. Russell's problem is not a problem in the first place, if you view humans from a science-informed perspective.
Now you are back to saying the same thing over and over. Yes, we can call the electro-chemical processes of your brain “instincts” if you like. This makes “empathy”, and “greed”, objective facts about human populations. Once again, we are back to what you have already said. On the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer what we call “empathy” and not to prefer what we call “greed.”
Please refer to my previous post. Again, you are confusing the drivers for our preferences with the preference (or choices) themselves.
It is not evil for the hawk to kill and eat a mouse. Check. It is evil for “John” to murder and eat his mother, because John has acted against human nature, by which you mean that the electro-chemical processes of John’s brain have impelled him to prefer that which the electro-chemical processes of most people’s brains impelled them not to prefer.
I realize you've bundled this error many times into one post without having read my subsequent reply, but once again, you have confused the driver of our choices with the choices themselves.
Eigenstate, it appears that Mark Frank will not be answering John’s last question from the OP. It appears that you have thought about this a lot. So I hope you will help us out. Let’s say John asks you the following question: John: Eigenstate, you say it is evil for me to have murdered and eaten my mother, because I was acting against human nature, by which you mean that the electro-chemical processes of my brain have impelled me to prefer that which the electro-chemical processes of most people’s brains impelled them not to prefer. Eigenstate: Yes. John: Suppose I am the only person in the world who prefers chocolate ice cream and everyone else prefers vanilla ice cream. Under your reasoning that would make it evil for me to prefer chocolate ice cream.
Insofar as that choice has consequences for interests, well being and flourishing of myself and others, it's a moral question. As you've cast it, it does not appear to have moral consequences, and thus not a moral question at all.
Eigenstate: On no. That is very different. As Mark Frank has said, our preference not to murder and eat your mother is not just any old preference. It is based on empathy and fairness. John: But “empathetic” and “fair” mean only that the electro-chemical processes of your brain have impelled you to prefer not to murder and eat your mother. That is no different from those same processes impelling you to prefer vanilla. Both preferences are based on nothing more than what teh electro-chemical processes of your brain have impelled you to prefer.
"Nothing more" signals a profound misunderstanding of the processes and the outcomes. A rock and a bolt of lightning are both "just matter and energy in space/time". That's true, but this should not having us confusing one for the other. They are both manifestations -- outcomes -- of the very same physical processes, but they have very different effects and attributes. A choice to murder has profoundly different social impacts than choice to eat vanilla ice cream. Scale it out, if you don't see the different. What are the effects on a society where wonton murder becomes a common choice? How would you contrast that with a mass trend toward choosing vanilla ice cream?
Eigenstate: That’s not true at all. John: Why exactly? Eigenstate: ___________
The processes are all, at the core "just physics". But the actual inputs and outputs in these processes vary greatly, and those differences are often quite dramatic. So, saying "it's just electro-chemical processes" is both technically true, and deeply ignorant. A brain is just atoms, yes, but that is to misunderstand wholly what a brain is, even and especially when that brain is nothing more than matter and energy. "Nothing more than electro-chemical processes" doesn't diminish the scope or the qualities of what it produced, Barry. That's the blind spot your bringing to the discussion. I know that is somehow abhorrent and/or terrifying to the theistic mindset (I was unfortunately raised in a devout Biblical-Christian home, so know this intimately and first hand), but it's no problem for choices to be profound and mundane, complex and simple, inspiringly creative or hopeless banal, all coming from the same platform, the same evolved machines we call humans. So, if I say the most meaningful and profound choices (in terms of human understanding and consequences) come from the same processes driven by our biological constitution as our most trivial choices, what of it? Why is that a problem for you or anyone, Barry?eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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As a materialist and subjectivist...
Sorry, a bit late in catching up. How can one be both a materialist and a subjectivist? Seems contradictory.Mung
April 16, 2015
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#14 SteRusJon "“But once you decide on what utility function to use” sounds kinda subjective to me. Just wondering how you can get an objective superiority out of a subjective decision? " I am talking about "deciding" on the meaning of the term "objectively superior" (moral code). Without agreeing on what that exactly means, there cannot be meaningful discussion. But there is nothing subjective or arbitrary about programs and algorithms implementing moral codes in the neural networks of human brains. Much of that program you get from the fertilized egg which built your body, with additional locale specific customizations filled in by the early experiences and upbringing.These programs and their outputs (im/moral actions) are are as objective as apple falling from a tree by Newton's laws. And no, that's not something you can just flip-flop at your whim. Disgust and revulsion you feel in some situations are responses computed by those programs over which you don't have any more control than you have over your intestinal or kidney activity, urination, your feeling of thirst, hunger, need for air, etc. What Barry was really trying to say is not 'objective morality' (or its superiority) but externally imposed/imprinted morality and its criteria. Further, it's not just any external authority that he had in mind, but all that was supposedly imposed on humans few millennia ago by a very particular deity he happens to worship and anyone who disagrees is "immoral", by his tautology. That's what he keeps calling "objective" morality i.e. the one for which the "science is settled and debate is over" (it is "objective" after all), hence it ought to be worshiped by all of us.nightlight
April 16, 2015
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There are five or more men in a room which they all have the moral disposition to murder those that don't like sock-hops. There is one man (Marshall) in the room that doesn't like sock-hops. They bind Marshall to their morality and proceed to make Mr. Anti Sock-Hop extinct. Society. Your worldview rocks!ENich
April 16, 2015
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@Barry
Indeed. That is the materialist mantra. Another way to say the exact same thing is that the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain impel them to prefer certain things and not to prefer other things. That is exactly what the OP says. I am glad you agree.
So far, so good.
Now you are saying Mark Frank’s “provio” in different words. On the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer a certain thing we call fairness. OK; so far you have not strayed from the logic of the OP.
Ho hum. Yes.
It is an objective fact that on the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer a certain thing we call fairness, and that fact is accounted for by evolution. Yes, that is what materialists say.
Check.
If we call the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains their “wiring,” then it is clear that their wiring impels them to prefer what we might call “moral sensibilities.” Yes, you are saying the same thing over and over. But you are not saying anything different from the OP.
"Impels them to prefer" is problematic. "Prefer", as I understand the term, entails some freedom of choice. The moral instincts I'm referring to, the disposition that is wired in, is itself a constant, "infrastructure" of human psychology. Human choices are informed by these instincts, but it's not correct to say that any particular preference is "impelled" (the incoherence of that combination you used notwithstanding, granting what I think you mean). Our choices are the products of multiple competing values. For many questions, there is a competition, for example, between empathy and greed. I'm unavoidably influenced by both, but the particulars of one situation vs. another may yield choices that are alternately more "empathetic" or "greedy". "Prefer" and "preference" aren't implicated in what I'm offering. If you think that's the case, please read that again, and let me state it clearly: The moral disposition of humans as a matter of biology may *inform* preferences, but is not itself an instance of preference.
This moral disposition of humans – i.e., the fact on the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer having a moral disposition – is just biology in action. Yes, that is what materialist say. Again, this is what the OP says.
No, you are conflating the drivers that inform our choices, our preferences, with the choices and preferences themselves. Empathy may inform my preference for doing nice things for friends, neighbors or complete strangers, but empathy itself is not a preference, not in any sense of the term. As I read back into the earliest threads in this chain of... posts, it's clear this is you are confused about, as regards humans as natural, evolved, social beings.
Now, you’ve finally said something interesting. What do you mean by “binding”? That is, of course, the $64,000 question. As a materialist you cannot possibly mean that one person’s moral disposition caused by the electro-chemical processes of his brain is binding on anyone but that person.
It's not evening "binding" on that person in the sense you are apparently using. It's "binding" in the sense that gravity is "binding" on mass. But these moral instincts are not iconoclastic, any more than their DNA is. Your DNA is not the same as mine, but you are essentially identical. A "moral instinct" cannot be particular in isolation for one individual, as its an effect of our shared biology. So we are physical beings, operating under physical processes, and we have individual variations, just as we have varying hair colors. But these are variations of common themes that humans as species share.
I take it, therefore, that you mean that a person is bound to prefer what the electro-chemical processes of his brain impel him to prefer. OK. Again, that is exactly what the OP says.
If you are "bound to prefer", then you don't really have a preference.I can guess there's some perceived rhetorical value you saw with your lawyering eye in that term, but it's undermining the point you are trying to make. If one does not have a choice, one does not "prefer". Here's what Google tells me about "prefer":
like (one thing or person) better than another or others; tend to choose.
There's no "tendency" or "choose" as you are using the term, here. Find a word that fits what you actually mean. Here's handy guideline: if you are tempted to write "impel to prefer" or some variation of that phrase, you are confused, and should consider terms that work toward clarity and coherence in making your point. I will continue my reply in another post a little later.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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REC, again, you are correct. The materialist position boils down to might makes right.Barry Arrington
April 16, 2015
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Eigenstate:
Lastly, it’s worth pointing out that the question then is not “What makes those evolved dispositions ‘good’”. That has it backwards. “Good” or “Evil” are only grounded semantically in our objective, natural, evolved psychology. It’s not “evil” for a hawk to “murder” a mouse it catches in a field — that poor innocent mouse. To suppose so is to confuse human nature for “hawk nature”. What we are, objectively, is the basis for “good” and “bad”. It is the grounds for our values, not the other way around.
You're sorely mistaken. It is not evil for a hawk to kill a mouse, not because it's the nature of the hawk, but because neither mice nor hawks have spirits/souls/consciousness. They're just meat robots running their genetically programmed instincts. Again, spiritual entities (good, bad, immoral, ugly, beautiful, etc.) are not and cannot be properties of physical matter, emergent or otherwise. This is true by definition because we know what the properties of matter are. Materialism relentlessly comes short in the explanation department. It's a religion for dirt worshippers with a chip on their shoulders.Mapou
April 16, 2015
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This is off-topic, but I don't know how to create a new thread. Barry, would you please move (or delete) this post as you see fit? Over at http://www.evolutionnews.org/2015/04/dillahunty_on_d095271.html there's a video where Matt Dillahunty "describes a standard 52-card deck with 13 cards in 4 different suits. After dealing all 52 cards of a randomized deck into 4 hands, Dillahunty asks, what are the odds that one person will receive all 13 spades? He calculates the number of possible hands as 635,013,559,600, and notes that only one of those is comprised of all 13 spades." That probability calculation is not correct. Any one of the 4 hands could be all spades, so the probability is 4 times greater than Dillahunty's calculation. Since Dillahunty says in the video that he is not a mathematician and "not great at math" I wonder who he asked to vet that computation before making that video. .cantor
April 16, 2015
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A "hawk eating a mouse". Eigenstate you crack me up:) Hawks don't know good from evil. They have no soul. Soul is a much more evolved state. Higher form of consciousness, soul is. Connecting with the Creator. Eating mice lol again.ppolish
April 16, 2015
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"As a materialist you cannot possibly mean that one person’s moral disposition caused by the electro-chemical processes of his brain is binding on anyone but that person." Get 5 more people with the same moral disposition in the room, and and it could be 'binding' on the odd man out. Society.REC
April 16, 2015
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@JDH
Have either of you heard of the term “begging the question”? Just wondering, because it looks like all of your arguments boil down to. 1. Assume as a given by superiority of our intellect and education that Barry is wrong and there is no God and no objective morality. 2. Therefore there is no God and no objective morality. Show me where I am wrong.
It's not my objective to argue the scientific case here. It's not needed, or germane. The bare fact that you grant there is a question to be begged is all I need, and if you affirm that as you have, Barry's project collapses. Remember: the claim is that materialism cannot, in principle, ground its moral value. You can harumph all you like (if you like) about your problems with biological science, but it doesn't help Barry: right there in plain view is the objective basis for moral values in human beings. If you (or Barry, or someone else) wants to argue the facts, I'm all for it, but it's playing with the casino's money in any case, then. As soon as we agree it's a question, Barry's whole series of posts here are hollowed out, with nothing left but his epithets and venom. So please tell me this is a matter of begging that question, and I can fairly declare Barry's project a bust, here.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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RDFish,
You’ve misread my position – I have made the point many, many times in these discussions that we cannot change our moral perceptions any more than we can change our perceptions of color or temperature, Barry’s cartoonish parody of subjectivism as “mere personal preference” notwithstanding.
OK, I accept that at face value, and apologize for the misreading. Reading back a little bit, I find several stark examples of that point being made by you.
I simply deny that there are objective (external to our beliefs, desires, perceptions, and emotions) moral rules.
I don't think there's a meaningful quibble to be had on this. Phrased as you have it, I'd agree as well. There are no objective moral rules. But the fail in that claim is "rules" -- that's a word choice that succumbs to the theistic mistake, that there is a "ruler" to issue a "rule". I think it is not difficult to show that "moral impulses" -- I think that's a better term -- exist in human populations, and that these impulses obtain objectively; the existence of such is not dependent on any mind, personality or preference. That makes it at least "inter-subjective", but in my view qualifies it as an "objective trait of humans", no more and no less an objective quality of humans than their body plan (spine, two arms, two legs, etc.). If you believe "body plan rules" (to try and wedge the word you used in there) exist for humans, and these obtain objectively, then "human moral rules" obtain in the same sense.eigenstate
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate @ 12: I believe that you believe everything you wrote in perfect good faith. Which means that you are exceptionally accomplished at self-deception. Let’s pick this apart:
Scientifically, and empirically, humans have ingrained, visceral, natural dispositions
Indeed. That is the materialist mantra. Another way to say the exact same thing is that the electro-chemical processes of each person’s brain impel them to prefer certain things and not to prefer other things. That is exactly what the OP says. I am glad you agree.
Such experiments evoke an emotional and cognitive predisposition toward what we generally call “fairness”
Now you are saying Mark Frank’s “provio” in different words. On the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer a certain thing we call fairness. OK; so far you have not strayed from the logic of the OP.
This is an objective fact about evolved human nature.
It is an objective fact that on the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer a certain thing we call fairness, and that fact is accounted for by evolution. Yes, that is what materialists say.
We are wired with what we might call “moral sensibilities”. Demonstrably.
If we call the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains their “wiring,” then it is clear that their wiring impels them to prefer what we might call “moral sensibilities.” Yes, you are saying the same thing over and over. But you are not saying anything different from the OP.
this moral disposition of humans is just biology in action.
This moral disposition of humans – i.e., the fact on the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer having a moral disposition – is just biology in action. Yes, that is what materialist say. Again, this is what the OP says.
It’s perfectly binding on the human — no human mind or preference can make the disposition otherwise.
Now, you’ve finally said something interesting. What do you mean by “binding”? That is, of course, the $64,000 question. As a materialist you cannot possibly mean that one person’s moral disposition caused by the electro-chemical processes of his brain is binding on anyone but that person. I take it, therefore, that you mean that a person is bound to prefer what the electro-chemical processes of his brain impel him to prefer. OK. Again, that is exactly what the OP says.
This is “objective morality” in the materialist understanding.
In the materialist understanding, objective morality means that a person is bound to prefer what the electro-chemical processes of his brain impel him to prefer. OK. But it should be obvious that this gets you exactly nowhere in terms of Russell’s dilemma. You objectively prefer what you prefer. Yes indeed you do. So?
They are “instincts” and operate at more fundamental and often subliminal levels.
Now you are back to saying the same thing over and over. Yes, we can call the electro-chemical processes of your brain “instincts” if you like.
This makes “empathy”, and “greed”, objective facts about human populations.
Once again, we are back to what you have already said. On the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer what we call “empathy” and not to prefer what we call “greed.”
So there is no “good’ and ‘bad’ in the childish, cartoonish sense imagined by Christians. “Objective morality” in that sense is a fiction, an imaginary construct.
Yes, that is certainly what the materialist says.
But man as evolved animal is inescapably bound to moral dispositions at the core of his (collective) nature.
You’ve repeated this several times now. This moral disposition of humans – i.e., the fact on the whole the electro-chemical processes of people’s brains impel them to prefer having a moral disposition – is at the core of human nature and people are bound by it. (“Bound” in the sense we have already stated: a person is bound to prefer what the electro-chemical processes of his brain impel him to prefer).
But we are wired for moral thinking and moral responses by evolution, just as we are wired for two arms and two legs.
Sigh. Saying something over and over and over and over and over does not make it any more or less true.
And no god needed for any this.
Yes, that is certainly what the materialist says.
It’s not “evil” for a hawk to “murder” a mouse it catches in a field — that poor innocent mouse. To suppose so is to confuse human nature for “hawk nature”.
It is not evil for the hawk to kill and eat a mouse. Check. It is evil for “John” to murder and eat his mother, because John has acted against human nature, by which you mean that the electro-chemical processes of John’s brain have impelled him to prefer that which the electro-chemical processes of most people’s brains impelled them not to prefer. Eigenstate, it appears that Mark Frank will not be answering John’s last question from the OP. It appears that you have thought about this a lot. So I hope you will help us out. Let’s say John asks you the following question: John: Eigenstate, you say it is evil for me to have murdered and eaten my mother, because I was acting against human nature, by which you mean that the electro-chemical processes of my brain have impelled me to prefer that which the electro-chemical processes of most people’s brains impelled them not to prefer. Eigenstate: Yes. John: Suppose I am the only person in the world who prefers chocolate ice cream and everyone else prefers vanilla ice cream. Under your reasoning that would make it evil for me to prefer chocolate ice cream. Eigenstate: On no. That is very different. As Mark Frank has said, our preference not to murder and eat your mother is not just any old preference. It is based on empathy and fairness. John: But “empathetic” and “fair” mean only that the electro-chemical processes of your brain have impelled you to prefer not to murder and eat your mother. That is no different from those same processes impelling you to prefer vanilla. Both preferences are based on nothing more than what teh electro-chemical processes of your brain have impelled you to prefer. Eigenstate: That’s not true at all. John: Why exactly? Eigenstate: ___________Barry Arrington
April 16, 2015
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RDFish & eigenstate Have either of you heard of the term "begging the question"? Just wondering, because it looks like all of your arguments boil down to. 1. Assume as a given by superiority of our intellect and education that Barry is wrong and there is no God and no objective morality. 2. Therefore there is no God and no objective morality. Show me where I am wrong.JDH
April 16, 2015
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Comment #18 would be so much more effective if theists didn't selectively ignore or conveniently "interpret" large swathes of their supposedly divinely-ordained moral codes. Matthew 7:1, for instance, or Matthew 19:21. RoyRoy
April 16, 2015
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RDFish, the thing that is most conspicuous about your posts is that you absolutely refuse to address the topic in the OP. You don't seem to be able to grasp this even though I devoted a whole post trying to explain it to you, but I will say it one more time (hope does spring eternal):
Responding to an argument that is not made is not a response to an argument that is made.
Barry Arrington
April 16, 2015
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Hi Alicia Renard - thank you! :-) RDFish
April 16, 2015
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Hi StephenB,
Well, RD, let’s face it. A man’s moral Grade Point Average will be a lot higher when he grades his own papers than when a true moral authority does the evaluating.
There is no "true moral authority". There is also no Santa Claus, and no tooth fairy.
Very few atheists are afraid that they will flunk their own self-styled, self-administered moral exams, which are calculated to rationalize their current behavior.
This is so delusional. If you believe that I - or anyone - has sat down and chosen morals to match some base desires, you are frighteningly ignorant of human nature. It makes me think that if you wanted to, you could simply decide to believe that torture was moral. I know that I couldn't do that. What is wrong with you? Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
April 16, 2015
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Hi eignenstate, You've misread my position - I have made the point many, many times in these discussions that we cannot change our moral perceptions any more than we can change our perceptions of color or temperature, Barry's cartoonish parody of subjectivism as "mere personal preference" notwithstanding. I simply deny that there are objective (external to our beliefs, desires, perceptions, and emotions) moral rules. Cheers, RDFish/AIGuyRDFish
April 16, 2015
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RDFish
Why don’t we skip the strawmen and semantic games and get to the point you really want to make: Materialists (by which you really mean atheists) have no fear of God, which makes them more likely to do bad things.
Well, RD, let's face it. A man's moral Grade Point Average will be a lot higher when he grades his own papers than when a true moral authority does the evaluating. Very few atheists are afraid that they will flunk their own self-styled, self-administered moral exams, which are calculated to rationalize their current behavior. As one philosopher put it, "it you hit the center ring every time, you are standing too close to the target."StephenB
April 16, 2015
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I have no desire to enter into a debate with anyone whose debate style includes abandoning discussions and starting new threads entitled "X is an idiot", particularly since the potential debatee ignored my initial request for clarification, and has repeatedly refused to allow their own views on the subject to be scrutinised, instead insisting that only the views of others are to be debated. The only reason I can think for limiting debate in this way is because the debatee knows their own views are untenable and will be ripped to shreds. If you want a substantial point, then consider that (i) you are still defining "good" from a materialist p.o.v as "that which you prefer", despite several references being made to alternative definitions, and (ii) despite your comment in a previous thread, there are different levels of preference, and - I dislike X, but have no objection to others doing it and - I have very strong views against X and do not think it should be allowed by anyone are not, despite your attempt to claim otherwise, equivalent. RoyRoy
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate: we are wired for moral thinking and moral responses by evolution That, in 1 phrase, summarises everything. Barry, et al, please read that phrase over and over and over until it sinks in.Graham2
April 16, 2015
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eigenstate:
From a materialist standpoint, the conversation here has been conspicuously “non-scientific”, from the materialist side.
Materialism is non-scientific. What science is there to discuss?
But we are wired for moral thinking and moral responses by evolution,...
Talk about non-scientific declarations...Joe
April 16, 2015
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