Uncommon Descent Serving The Intelligent Design Community

WJM on Talking to Rocks

Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Flipboard
Print
Email

UDEditors:  WJM’s devastating rebuttal to Aleta’s materialism deserves its own post.  Everything that follows is WJM’s:

Aleta said:

William, I know that your view is that unless morality is somehow grounded (purportedly) in some objective reality to which we have access, then it is merely subjective, and that then people have no reason not to to do anything they want: it’s not just a slippery slope, but rather a black-and-white precipice to nihilism.So actually discussing this with you, which we did at length one other time, is not worth my time.

It’s odd that you say that it is not worth your time apparently because you already know my position. If the only thing that makes a discussion “worth your time” is finding out the other person’s position on a matter, then surely most of what you write here is “not worth your time” because you already know the views of most of the participants here you engage with. Correct?

Is it “not worth your time” to engage in a discussion in order to demonstrate to onlookers (and this site has quite a few thousand onlookers) the rational soundness of your views?

1. I believe human beings have evolved to have moral nature, and that this has been part of our evolution as a social animal.

But I believe we are materially-based biological organisms, and that there is no non-material dualistic aspect to our existence.

There are questions here, right off the bat, to consider about your worldview. First is the question of if whether or not a being produced entirely from unliving, material forces and necessarily, entirely obeying the naturalistic forces of chemistry and physics can even meaningfully be said to have a “moral” nature at all. This depends on what one is using the term “moral” to mean.

If one uses the classic definition, then morality is about how one ought behave; but under the naturalist view of human behavior, humans always act how they must act – according to what physics and chemistry demands. Indeed, under the naturalist view, there is no other available cause for any thought or behavior.

The idea that an entirely physics and chemistry-driven being ought do something other than what physics and chemistry actually drive that entity to do cannot, to my knowledge, be rationally supported. Care to give it a try?

Also, you appear to definitionally link morality to the social aspect of human interaction, when the classic definition of morality draws no such parameter around what “morality” entails. You’re free to believe that, of course, but the rest of us have no reason to consider that limitation valid.

2. I believe that our moral belief system, and our desire to behave morally (which varies among individuals), develops just as many other aspects of us do: through a combination of developmental biology (nature) and learning from our surroundings (nurture.)

So morality is a combination of innate tendencies to judge right from wrong with a great deal of cultural influences about the particular details of right and wrong.

Here you have terminologically strayed from your original premise of humans being the result of the evolutionary processes of material forces acting in biology. IMO, re-labeling “physics and chemistry” as “innate tendencies”, “nurture” and “cultural influences” serves to obfuscate what is actually going on in your worldview: physics and chemistry generating effects via the interaction of various physical commodities.

So, when you say: “judge right from wrong”, it invokes a classical perspective that is unavailable to you. Perhaps you mean it in a different way, but the problem is what the terms appear to mean. Under your worldview, it is perhaps more accurate to say that a physical entity is driven by physics and chemistry to feel it ought do one thing, and ought not do another, and that you are calling this aspect of physics & chemistry driven activity “morality”.

However, also people mature, and just as children go from concrete to abstract thinking, morality goes from being primarily influenced by feeling pressure from the judgments of adults and the desire to avoid punishment (external sources) to an internalized sense of willful choice informed at least in part by reason and education.

Under your naturalism, all of the above is nothing more than terminological re-characterizations of the same fundamental, exclusive driving force of human behavior (energies and particles interacting according to physics and chemistry) in order to gain conceptual distance from the naturalist facts of your view of morality.

In other words, calling some group of those forces interacting “nurture” and “judgement” and “morality” and an “internalized sense of willful choice” doesn’t change the fact that what is going on is nothing more than the brute, ongoing effects of the processes of physics and chemistry.

For example, because I might terminologically refer to what computer-generated characters do in a video game as their “judgement” and “internalized sense of choice” and “nurture” doesn’t change the fact that everything in the video game is just acting as the code dictates. I can say the code is “making a choice” or “making a judgement”, but under the classic understanding of those terms, it is no more making a “choice” or a “judgement” than river water makes a choice or a judgement about which way to go; the outcome is dictated by physics (and/or chemistry).

You go on through your statements furthering your re-characterization of “physics and chemistry” in broader terms to make it seem like something else is going on, but the problem is that everything you say later is rationally laid to ruin by the nature of your premise: naturalism ultimately insists that all human behavior is generated by physics and chemistry and not by a locus of consciousness that has any top-down free will power. The terms you use throughout your statements to re-characterize your naturalist premise are terms that deeply implicate, classically and traditionally speaking, metaphysics your naturalism doesn’t have access to.

So, what you must mean by them boils down to “the cause and effect of physics and chemistry”, which ruins renders the moral judgement of humans equitable to the moral judgement of rocks rolling down hills or the choice of river water about where to flow. That physics and chemistry happen to also make humans feel as if they have some sort of top-down choice and feel as if they are responsible and feel as if they have a conscience and moral obligations is irrelevant because all of those sensations are also physics and chemistry driven instances of physical cause and effect, just like the actions of rocks rolling down hills and river water taking any particular curve.

You say in your statement that you think I and others are “wrong” about where we think morality comes from and what it is. Why should I care what a physics and chemistry-driven biological automaton utters? Like anyone else under your paradigm, you would think and say whatever physics and chemistry commands; you would feel and believe whatever physics and chemistry dictate. If chemistry and physics dictate that you bark like dog and believe you have said something profoundly wise, that is what you will do. If physics and chemistry dictate that you rape little boys and mutilate little girls an believe that to be a good, moral thing, that is what you will do. Period.

If those things are what physics and chemistry commanded, that is what you would be doing and arguing for today, and there would be absolutely no external standard by which you, let alone anyone else, could judge your behavior and beliefs wrong, nor would you have any objective, top-down access or capacity for making such a judgment even if such a standard existed, let alone change your behavior.

That is the sad dilemma you find yourself in, Aleta, whether you know it or not. Under your paradigm, you and KF and Stephen and Gandhi and Obama and George Wallace and everyone else are just streams of water going wherever physics and chemistry dictates – yet here you are, arguing as if any of us could do anything other than what physics and chemistry commands.

Do you also try to argue rivers out of their course, or try to convince the weather to change?

Comments
Aleta: But we do have a different type of organically grounded ability to make choices (...)
Not according to naturalism. According to naturalism, these organs are determined by chemistry, which is notoriously incapable of making choices.
(...) that are a product of our holistic being.
Naturalism holds that there is nothing over and beyond fermions and bosons, it follows that any 'holistic being' is fully produced by chemistry. Chemistry is not capable of making choices.Origenes
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
11:15 AM
11
11
15
AM
PDT
Aleta:
Eskimos, and many primitive nomadic people, traditionally have left people behind and alone in the wilderness to die. Is this moral? Numerous cultures at times kill girl babies because they are a detriment to the family in some ways that boys aren’t. Is this moral?
What is your definition of morality? I can't answer your question about whether or not something is moral until you tell me what morality is?StephenB
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
11:12 AM
11
11
12
AM
PDT
Eskimos have their own religious views about their human nature: they aren't materialists. Is what they do with old people moral?Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:54 AM
10
10
54
AM
PDT
No. That is a whole other topic, but my response is similar. The kind of metaphysical "freedom" that you believe exists doesn't exist: there is no dualistic non-material spirit or will that somehow is free from our material biological nature. But we do have a different type of organically grounded ability to make choices that are a product of our holistic being. This is way too big of a topic for me to want to get into, though.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:52 AM
10
10
52
AM
PDT
Aleta: Eskimos, and many primitive nomadic people, traditionally have left people behind and alone in the wilderness to die. Is this moral?
The question "is this moral?" is meaningless if eskimos have no choice — if naturalism is true and eskimo behavior is fully determined by chemistry. Do you agree?Origenes
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:41 AM
10
10
41
AM
PDT
Origenes writes,
What is acknowledged is that under materialism there is no morality at all.
No, but I will soon quit repeating myself. The kind of morality that you think exists, and want to exist, doesn't exist. A different type of morality exists: one grounded in innate biological human propensities and in human cultures. To you, that is the same as no morality at all. But if the morality you want to exist doesn't in fact exist, and the morality I am describing does exist, then that is the morality we have: not liking it doesn't make it go away.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:41 AM
10
10
41
AM
PDT
Andre: Who says it’s bad? The Ten-Commandments theist, the Shintoist, and the atheist.Zachriel
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:37 AM
10
10
37
AM
PDT
Eskimos, and many primitive nomadic people, traditionally have left people behind and alone in the wilderness to die. Is this moral? Numerous cultures at times kill girl babies because they are a detriment to the family in some ways that boys aren't. Is this moral? We dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Was that moral? In some cultures, including America in the past, women are/were routinely beaten by their husbands without consequence. Is that moral? In some states one can now get assistance in choosing to die under certain circumstances. Is that moral? We sometimes execute people for crimes we think they committed, even though there are a significant number of cases where people have been exonerated after years of imprisonment Is that moral? And I could go on ... There is no set of "objective" moral rules that answers all these questions.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:36 AM
10
10
36
AM
PDT
Andre: What do rocks think about? Dream about? Colorless green ideas sleeping furiously.Zachriel
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:35 AM
10
10
35
AM
PDT
Zachriel What do rocks think about? Dream about?Andre
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:33 AM
10
10
33
AM
PDT
Zachriel Who says it's bad? The majority? Might makes right then?Andre
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:32 AM
10
10
32
AM
PDT
William J Murray: Indeed, under the naturalist view, there is no other available cause for any thought or behavior. That's clearly incorrect. Thought occurs when integrating new experiences.Zachriel
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:30 AM
10
10
30
AM
PDT
William J Murray: Why should I care what a physics and chemistry-driven biological automaton utters? The reason people care is because they share many of the same basic moral feelings, and can express these feelings through words. A Ten-Commandments theist, a Shintoist, and an atheist, may all share a revulsion to needless death, calling it "bad". Having discovered they share this revulsion, they may all agree to work together to prevent this "bad" thing from happening.Zachriel
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:26 AM
10
10
26
AM
PDT
Aleta How does communication work? What do you need? It seems to me that you have a very simplistic view on this. So let me ask you again; for any type of communication to work what do you need?Andre
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:22 AM
10
10
22
AM
PDT
Aleta: The persistent error in all these objections is you are judging morality from your perspective that there is an objective morality, so a point of view that doesn’t acknowledge that [there] is no morality at all.
What is acknowledged is that under materialism there is no morality at all. For several reasons. Let's discuss one of them: Naturalism cannot ground freedom of choice. And isn't that a prerequisite to morality? If people don't have freedom of choice how can they be accountable for their actions?
WJM: If one uses the classic definition, then morality is about how one ought behave; but under the naturalist view of human behavior, humans always act how they must act – according to what physics and chemistry demands. Indeed, under the naturalist view, there is no other available cause for any thought or behavior. The idea that an entirely physics and chemistry-driven being ought do something other than what physics and chemistry actually drive that entity to do cannot, to my knowledge, be rationally supported. Care to give it a try?
Origenes
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:21 AM
10
10
21
AM
PDT
This doesn't seem like a difficult question, mike. All social animals have ways of interacting so that both the individual members and the group benefit. Human beings use language, symbolic understanding, and learning to create norms that make society function for the health of individuals and the group as a whole. These norms, which include moral judgement and rules, draw upon innate tendencies that all human beings have. All human beings have an innate ability and desire to learn and understand language, and all language have some underlying deep similarities, but the particular language is learned as part of culture. Analogously, as humans have an innate ability and desire to behave morally towards at least a close subset of other humans, and there are some deep universals underlying all people, but the particularities of each culture's moral system can differ. People see moral needs and moral rules - we are not blind, but we don't all see any overriding objective moral world.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:17 AM
10
10
17
AM
PDT
Aleta, You're not even addressing my point: You're not getting it, Aleta. Forget for the moment who is right or wrong about an objective, transcendent morality. More fundamental is how we can have the discussion in the first place. The entire discussion itself is meaningless unless there is an objective, transcendent morality. How could people in a world without eyes come to debate sight vs blindness?mike1962
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:05 AM
10
10
05
AM
PDT
Aleta, when you suggest what if there is no God, what do you mean by that term? An eternal -- and thus necessary -- and maximally great being,the creator and just Lord of all worlds? Or, what? Why? And what does God as serious candidate necessary being imply i/l/o possible, contingent and necessary vs impossible being? KF PS: Given Dawkins, what would morality mean in such a physicalist world as you seem to be putting on the table? As in:
Nature is not cruel, only pitilessly indifferent. This lesson is one of the hardest for humans to learn. We cannot accept that things might be neither good nor evil, neither cruel nor kind, but simply callous: indifferent to all suffering, lacking all purpose . . . . In a universe of electrons and selfish genes, blind physical forces and genetic replication, some people are going to get hurt, other people are going to get lucky, and you won’t find any rhyme or reason in it, nor any justice. The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but pitiless indifference . . . . DNA neither cares nor knows. DNA just is. And we dance to its music. [ “God’s Utility Function,” Sci. Am. Aug 1995, pp. 80 - 85.]
kairosfocus
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
10:04 AM
10
10
04
AM
PDT
No, that's wrong, mike. If human beings are material biological organisms, as I am claiming, morality is still meaningful in respect to how we interact with other human beings, and since we are social beings, that is important. The persistent error in all these objections is you are judging morality from your perspective that there is an objective morality, so a point of view that doesn't acknowledge that is no morality at all. But if you are wrong, as I claim you are, then morality still exists - it's just something different than you want it to be.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:59 AM
9
09
59
AM
PDT
Aleta: No one has addressed several of points: What if there is no God and objective morality I did @5. But I'll say it again, if morality were all physics and chemistry, with no transcendent "good", then nobody would ever discuss "subjective" vs "objective" morality, since both of those terms would be as meaningless as "sight" and "blindness" would be in a world without eyes. Imagine a world without eyes. Now try to imagine beings in that world arguing about "sight" vs "blindness." On what basis could the argument ever arise? What possible meaning could either word have to beings without eyes? So you must ask yourself: if there is no transcendent good, how did beings, such as ourselves, acquire the mental state of meaning of a transcendent good in a universe where there is no such thing as a transcendent good? It's like saying a world without eyes came to the idea of blindness vs sight. There is no grounds for it.mike1962
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:52 AM
9
09
52
AM
PDT
Aleta: No one has addressed several of points: What if there is no God and objective morality – what then?
WJM replied in #8:
If there is no god and no objective source of morality, then everything you say about morality is as irrelevant to others as someone expressing what they feel about the taste of peaches or their preferred color. You’re just another agglomeration of physics and chemistry making the noises such processes cause. I might as well consider what a babbling brook has to say on the matter of morality and how it came to be.
Origenes
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:45 AM
9
09
45
AM
PDT
No one has addressed several of points: What if there is no God and objective morality - what then? And Barry says,
Here is the wonder of it all. What WJM says is not only true; it is glaringly, obviously, undeniably true. The conclusions follow inexorably from the premises.
If the premise is that there is a God and objective morality, then some conclusions follow. But what if the premise is false? There is nothing "devastating" here. There is just statements about unverifiable metaphysical speculations. And no one has addressed the point that the cross-cultural evidence points to the conclusion that different cultures have created their religions and morality systems, and that they are not "objective" in any metaphysical sense.Aleta
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:31 AM
9
09
31
AM
PDT
Been a huge WJM fan for some time now. This is devastating, notwithstanding Aleta's protestations otherwise. It has obvious real world ramifications for those whose worldview is materialistic, yet spend their days taking high offense to things in the current cultural moment. WJM, I know I can get plenty of you here, but are you published elsewhere? The links accessed by clicking on your name are pretty dated. Thank you again, sir!AnimatedDust
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:13 AM
9
09
13
AM
PDT
related note: per Richard Weikart (author of 'From Darwin to Hitler') “Yesterday (May 2) I was on the Eric Metaxas Show discussing my new book, _The Death of Humanity: And the Case for Life_. You can listen to my interview with Eric Metaxas or download the podcast from his website. You have to skip the first ten-and-a-half minutes to get to the segment with me. Then the interview is about a half hour.” https://soundcloud.com/the-eric-metaxas-show/richard-weikart#c=529&t=0:00bornagain77
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:08 AM
9
09
08
AM
PDT
It appears to me as if Aleta does believe in objective morality.Mung
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:03 AM
9
09
03
AM
PDT
Here is the wonder of it all. What WJM says is not only true; it is glaringly, obviously, undeniably true. The conclusions follow inexorably from the premises. Yet Aleta insists on denying them. Once again, the interesting question is not whether WJM is correct. Of course he is. The interesting question is why some people feel compelled to deny the undeniable.Barry Arrington
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
09:00 AM
9
09
00
AM
PDT
Wow!! William J. Murray is in the groove. My favorite paragraph is like a blinding three-punch combination that leaves the deluded Darwinist wobbly against the ropes. And I get to sit ringside to watch the deserved beat-down up close. Life is good!
LOL. This cannot be real.daveS
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
08:48 AM
8
08
48
AM
PDT
Wow!! William J. Murray is in the groove. My favorite paragraph is like a blinding three-punch combination that leaves the deluded Darwinist wobbly against the ropes. And I get to sit ringside to watch the deserved beat-down up close. Life is good! WJM@8: "No. If there is no god and no objective source of morality, then everything you say about morality is as irrelevant to others as someone expressing what they feel about the taste of peaches or their preferred color. You’re just another agglomeration of physics and chemistry making the noises such processes cause. I might as well consider what a babbling brook has to say on the matter of morality and how it came to be."Truth Will Set You Free
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
08:41 AM
8
08
41
AM
PDT
Aleta said:
This remark brings up an important point: what we believe about the metaphysical foundation about the world doesn’t change reality.
Even while insisting her speech is the product of a long history of chance physical interactions under the direction physics and chemistry, and even while insisting that we as listeners must react according to physics and chemistry (and not according to some supposed overriding free will capacity to employ logic to arbit the content of the words over and above the brute chemical reactions they cause), Aleta's words in this post necessarily imply that she and we are somehow able to override brute chemical processes with free will informed be reason.
wjm’s main point seems to be that if there is no objective morality, we are free to do anything we want.
No, my point is that if your paradigm is true, then what humans do is only what the physics and chemistry dictate they do, in every case, whether the system self-labels it as good or as bad, it is all effects and outcomes generated by the happenstance interactions of matter and energy via physics and chemistry. If the system in question labels rape and genocide good, then it is good. If it labels homosexuality and SSM evil, then it is evil, by the only authority that exists - the current state of that particular physical process.
I’ll point out that claiming that something is true because you don’t like the consequences of it not being true is not a valid argument.
Then it's a good thing I've never claimed it to be true. I've only ever claimed it to be a fundamental assumption necessary to any rationally sound concept of morality that doesn't ultimately reduce to "because I say so, because I feel like it". That doesn't make it true, but it does make it rationally necessary.William J Murray
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
08:31 AM
8
08
31
AM
PDT
What a beat-down! Thanks for making this a separate post. Darwinists have been getting pummeled for quite some time now...and I could not be happier!Truth Will Set You Free
May 3, 2016
May
05
May
3
03
2016
08:30 AM
8
08
30
AM
PDT
1 3 4 5 6

Leave a Reply