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WJM on Talking to Rocks

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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
WJM, how can someone look a squirrel in the eye and eat him? I say this in the context of a story by a Guyanese friend about a captured sloth. An utterly unhurried animal. But, when the captor came, sharpening the knives in its sight, it began to weep. I know, under such circumstances I simply could not eat of it. And there are monkeys that when the hunters come, will hold up their infants in front of them as if to say, will you now kill a mother and make her child an orphan? KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2016
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From the other thread: Aleta said:
But, I reply, if there is no God and thus no objective source of morality, and in fact human beings are as I describe them, then your argument is empty.
If there is no objective source of morality, my argument doesn't "fail", because what I argue about what that presumed state of affairs rationally entails is still valid.
In that case, the things I have to say about about an innate evolved moral nature are relevant.
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. But, that's what you seem to not be able to grasp. Your worldview of what morality is and what human beings are utterly undermines any potential validity or relevance and makes the whole debate process a meaningless spectacle as physics and chemistry march on to whatever end happens to be made manifest. If physics and chemistry commands it, my views or yours will change, whether words you say happen to be the magic ingredient to effect such a change, or whether it was that piece of roasted squirrel I ate yesterday. For all you know, through physics and chemistry whiff of a new perfume will make you become a devout, fanatical muslim tomorrow and you will put on a suicide vest and go blow something up. That is the absurd, necessary ramification of your naturalist worldview.William J Murray
May 3, 2016
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PS: Locke's alternative, citing Hooker:
[2nd Treatise on Civil Gov't, Ch 2 sec. 5:] . . . if I cannot but wish to receive good, even as much at every man's hands, as any man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be careful to satisfy the like desire which is undoubtedly in other men . . . my desire, therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of bearing to themward fully the like affection. From which relation of equality between ourselves and them that are as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is ignorant . . . [This directly echoes St. Paul in Rom 2: "14 For when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do what the law requires, they are a law to themselves, even though they do not have the law. 15 They show that the work of the law is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts accuse or even excuse them . . . " and 13: "9 For the commandments, “You shall not commit adultery, You shall not murder, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,” and any other commandment, are summed up in this word: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” 10 Love does no wrong to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfilling of the law . . . " Hooker then continues, citing Aristotle in The Nicomachean Ethics, Bk 8:] as namely, That because we would take no harm, we must therefore do none; That since we would not be in any thing extremely dealt with, we must ourselves avoid all extremity in our dealings; That from all violence and wrong we are utterly to abstain, with such-like . . . ] [Eccl. Polity ,preface, Bk I, "ch." 8, p.80, cf. here. Emphasis added.] [Augmented citation, Locke, Second Treatise on Civil Government, Ch 2 Sect. 5. ]
kairosfocus
May 3, 2016
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F/N: Plato's warning, c 360 BC:
Ath. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical "material" elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ --> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . . [Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-
[ --> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by "winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . " cf a video on Plato's parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]
These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,
[ --> Evolutionary materialism -- having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT -- leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for "OUGHT" is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in "spin") . . . ]
and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ --> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality "naturally" leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ --> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, "naturally" tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush -- as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them.
Yup, the one influenced by what is amoral has the ability to think objectively about morality clouded. The answer is obvious, but facing the incoherence and amorality and uprooting them is hard once these have put down roots. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2016
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Aleta: But, I reply, if there is no God transcendent source of morality and thus no objective source of morality, and in fact human beings are as I describe them, then your argument is empty. If we were as you say, nobody would be having this conversation. Morality is meaningless to robots in the classical sense of the term "moral", just like "sight" and "blindness" are meaningless in a world where there are no beings with eyes. The fact that you perceive the difference means that you are merely in denial.mike1962
May 3, 2016
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Devastating WJM as usual. Now, if only there were a real person named Aleta, instead of just an illusion named Aleta, that could accept the bankruptcy of his/her/its position and move on.bornagain77
May 3, 2016
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No matter how diverse the rock's path is... No matter how many twists and turns the river takes... There is no choice. It's all "just physics and chemistry." No matter how convuluted, this is the materialist's "morality."mike1962
May 3, 2016
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This is not devastating. Here was part of my reply to wjm, and some more: Your arguments boil down to "if everything is just physics and chemistry, one doesn't have any ground for morality." But, I reply, if there is no God and thus no objective source of morality, and in fact human beings are as I describe them, then your argument is empty. In that case, the things I have to say about about an innate evolved moral nature are relevant. Origenes wrote above:
Materialism cannot ground morality. Sure. No argument here. But which is it? Has everyone the same access to the Natural Law, as PaV suggests, whether they acknowledge its existence or not, or are materialists cut off from Natural Law and are they therefore, by definition, wrong about SSM and everything else?
This remark brings up an important point: what we believe about the metaphysical foundation about the world doesn't change reality. It may change how we think and act: as wjm said later, it "it can cloud your conscience and reason just as any unsound belief can, just as emotions can", but whatever the truth about human nature is, it applies to us all irrespective of the differences in our beliefs about it. So I consider the standard "it's all just physics and chemistry" objection to the perspective that we are biological, material creatures, to be part of the "cloud" produced by a belief that there is an objective morality and we have access to it. When I look at the history and scope of human belief and behavior, I see lots of evidence for my position that humans have an innate propensity for morality, but that the details of both morality and religion are cultural creations. I see very little evidence that there is some "objective morality" that all people have access to. wjm's main point seems to be that if there is no objective morality, we are free to do anything we want. 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.Aleta
May 3, 2016
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Ba, well headlined. KFkairosfocus
May 3, 2016
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