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Responding to Sev: “Moral claims are not about what is but about how we ought to behave, primarily towards one another. They are not capable of being either true or false”

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Again, it is vital for us to see what today’s evolutionary materialism, scientism, athiestical advocates and fellow travellers are thinking in their own words, and we must answer them on the merits.

Where, as captioned, it is being argued in the intersubjective consensus thread, that there is no such thing as moral truth. This means, as our frequent objector Sev then goes on to argue in the same comment:

SEV, 29:  >> a consensus morality is neither true nor false, right or wrong in any objective sense. If the consensus is that a society is made safer, more stable and generally beneficial by the voluntary adherence of all to agreed moral principles, then you could argue they are right in the sense of leading to what most if not all agree is a desirable outcome but that is all.>>

All of this sounds so familiar, and seems so plausible — science is about facts and knowledge but morality is about values and community consensus, how can somebody object to it?

Because — while such a view is indeed dominant in many circles — it is fundamentally, irretrievably flawed, false in its roots and opens the door to what is ruinous, that’s how.

For one, let’s take a closer look at the captioned remark:

Sev: “Moral claims are not about what is but about how we ought to behave, primarily towards one another. They are not capable of being either true or false.”

What sort of claims, claims that it is true that we ought to behave in a certain way X, though of course that may be ignored. Challenges for morally governed creatures such as we are.  Where, as Aristotle long since pointed out, truth says of what is that it is, and of what is not, that it is not.  Truth accurately describes reality, whether concrete and observable, or abstract and intelligible by means of rational reflection. In this case, we are concerned about truths about our duties. Is it so that we OUGHT to do X, but as responsibly and rationally free creatures we may not?

From this angle, it is clear that Sev’s remark above is a truth claim and it is a truth claim about duties. Namely, it claims that every truth claim of form we ought to X (but may not), is false. So, Sev’s claim is self-referential and is a case that if P is a proposition, its denial, ~P — perforce — is one too.

We therefore have a moral truth claim, a truth claim about the world of duty, of ought-ness, that denies that such claims can be true or false.

That is, the claim is self-referentially incoherent and self-falsifying.

To try to make a truth claim that denies the possibility of moral truth claims is to make a moral truth claim that there are in fact no binding duties. It refutes itself.

And yes, I know this will take time to soak in.

Take the time, please.

Going on, let us look at the more detailed clip again, this time highlighting certain key appeals:

>> a consensus morality is neither true nor false, right or wrong in any objective sense. If the consensus is that a society is made safer, more stable and generally beneficial by the voluntary adherence of all to agreed moral principles, then you could argue they are right in the sense of leading to what most if not all agree is a desirable outcome but that is all.>>

Notice the bright red highlights? Each assumes or implies that we acknowledge certain valuable outcomes as GOOD, i.e. as having positive moral status and value such that we should prize them. The darker red phrases are persuasive appeals that imply that we ought to be objective, logical, cooperative and pro-social. In short, the seemingly neutral “IS” appeals are full of OUGHTS too.

This points right back to my oft repeated point that we must bridge and fuse IS and OUGHT in the world root.

Going further, I argued also:

KF, 31: >>mathematical realities are not empirically observable but are very real, i.e. you are failing to recognise abstracta as having reality. It is subjects who perceive and reason out mathematical realities per first principles and logic, and the results hold objectivity by means of logical warrant. And yes, they have empirical consequences; so much so, that mathematical reasoning on the logic of structure and quantity is deeply embedded in the sciences. Where also, by being connected to the coherence of being, that abstract reasoning by subjects brings out powerful insights and predictive power. BTW, to observe and infer successful prediction are also subjective mental acts. To share such in writings and talks etc using textual or visual or aural symbols is again a mental process involving subjects. And more. So, it should be no surprise to see a direct parallel from the world of maths to moral first principles, logical reasoning on such principles, requisites of coherence in the world of agents and predictable consequences. Indeed, as a famous case in point, Kant’s Categorical Imperative in part highlights that a sound maxim of action is universalisable and by contrast, evils are not — they parasite off the premise that most people most times do not act like that. For instance, even in Crete, truth is the dominant form of communication, or else communication and community would utterly break down. (And BTW, that solves the so called liar paradox.) So, moral principles can be truths, referring accurately to the order of reality experienced, sensed and logically reflected on by agents. Indeed, without this, Mathematics, Science, Medicine, Jurisprudence etc would break down, as they all turn on the premise that our mental life is pervaded by duties to truth, reason/logic, prudence, justice etc. So, not only is moral truth real truth, but it is a critical component of our world of thought and thoughtful action, undergirding the engines of progress for our civilisation. The undermining of moral thought, knowledge, truth and action is therefore counter to the long term good of our civilisation.>>

And, at 34:

>>I add, I have nowhere suggested infallibilism. I have by clipping provided a cogent summary of why cultural and subjectivist relativism fail. In short, they are not credible bases for moral reasoning. Such reasoning, instead needs to seek solid first principles and then should use correct logical principles to construct a knowledge base. Such can be held by an individual and by members of a community. But it is not the who but the what of logic, principles, premises and inferences tested against logic that warrant the knowledge framework. For that process, key test cases such as the one I have used about a kidnapped, sexually abused, murdered child are instructive. They help us elucidate key principles and to reason about them in a coherent fashion. That is how bodies of objective, credible knowledge are built up. Of course, that this has to be said at all shows just how deep is our confusion as a civilisation.>>

In short, there is every good reason to see that — contrary to many popular views — objective moral truths exist and that in moral suasion, we routinely appeal to such.

Food for thought. END

F/N: It seems worth the while to also clip from another OP, based on a headlined answer to frequent objector AK on the error of thinking in terms of who determines who is right (instead of what determines what is right or true):

>> . . . the very first self-evident, plumbline truth I have stressed is this: error exists.

(The crucial diagnostically decisive error of cultural relativism here being exposed by the reference to WHO determines, rather than WHAT defines and determines the truth and the right.)

It is one thing when we of UD say that we deal with a pattern of thought, talking points and behaviour; it is another thing entirely when we see it in action, live from the horse’s mouth.  Let me clip from the continued discussion in the correcting hyperskepticism thread:

KF, 244:>>I have limited time, so let me clip the following from 229 and respond, as it seems to go to the heart of the matter.

(Oh, BTW, what is needed to “reduce” holocaust of living posterity in the womb is to recognise and move away from a culture that dehumanises targetted members of our race and enables the nihilism of might and manipulation make ‘right’/ ‘truth’/ ‘rights’/ ‘justice’ etc, which then helps us return to sanity. Retaining the culture of holocaust while trying to salve consciences by a substitute target of “reduction” from what the rate of holocaust might otherwise have been is self-undermining. And BTW, steeping the young in the techniques of vice while giving false hope that they can greatly reduce risk of pregnancy and/or STD’s by techniques that require an exactitude and consistency of habits that teens are unlikely to have, will likely INCREASE incidence through greatly heightened exposure levels.)

Okay, let me clip and comment:

>> [KF:] The case of that young child abused and murdered to feed someone’s perverted appetites is highly instructive.

[AK:] Actually, it is not. We all know that there are some twisted individuals who take advantage of others. The secret is to not let those horrendous events dictate how you perceive others. If you will forgive me an observation, you appear to be ruled by your misadventures rather than to be informed by them.>>

RESP:

1: You seem to have forgotten one little part, the issue was that this horror show that played out one afternoon while I was a student was a case where I could SEE the reaction of many people, which across the time it took me to complete my dinner, had already formed search and rescue parties then found the body of the child, showing their patent reaction to self-evident evil.

2: That is a key part of my realisation on how instructive it was, I could actually SEE how ordinary people responded and acted. Thus, it was a clue to see how self-evident evil manifests itself, and thus how we may understand how to deal with it.

3: And above I have already indicated that the child has neither strength nor eloquence to fight or persuade. The right is inherent in the child as a living human being, not in the power structures, agendas and views of the society. Indeed, to try to deny this while standing over a small, violated and shattered body is self-evidently absurd. That is already highly instructive. However, you seem to have failed to take notice.

4: Let me clip how I have further drawn out the lessons elsewhere:

1] The first self evident moral truth is that we are inescapably under the government of ought.

(This is manifest in even an objector’s implication in the questions, challenges and arguments that s/he would advance, that we are in the wrong and there is something to be avoided about that. That is, even the objector inadvertently implies that we OUGHT to do, think, aim for and say the right. Not even the hyperskeptical objector can escape this truth. Patent absurdity on attempted denial.)

2] Second self evident truth, we discern that some things are right and others are wrong by a compass-sense we term conscience which guides our thought. (Again, objectors depend on a sense of guilt/ urgency to be right not wrong on our part to give their points persuasive force. See what would be undermined should conscience be deadened or dismissed universally? Sawing off the branch on which we all must sit. [–> and remember, we are standing by some bushes, over a small, broken, abused, lifeless body. Even now, as the father approaches what remains of the child he sent off to school that morning.])

3] Third, were this sense of conscience and linked sense that we can make responsibly free, rational decisions to be a delusion, we would at once descend into a status of grand delusion in which there is no good ground for confidence in our self-understanding. (That is, we look at an infinite regress of Plato’s cave worlds: once such a principle of grand global delusion is injected, there is no firewall so the perception of level one delusion is subject to the same issue, and this level two perception too, ad infinitum; landing in patent absurdity.)

4] Fourth, we are objectively under obligation of OUGHT. That is, despite any particular person’s (or group’s or august council’s or majority’s) wishes or claims to the contrary, such obligation credibly holds to moral certainty. That is, it would be irresponsible, foolish and unwise for us to act and try to live otherwise.

5] Fifth, this cumulative framework of moral government under OUGHT is the basis for the manifest core principles of the natural moral law under which we find ourselves obligated to the right the good, the true etc. Where also, patently, we struggle to live up to what we acknowledge or imply we ought to do.

6] Sixth, this means we live in a world in which being under core, generally understood principles of natural moral law is coherent and factually adequate, thus calling for a world-understanding in which OUGHT is properly grounded at root level. (Thus worldviews that can soundly meet this test are the only truly viable ones. If a worldview does not have in it a world-root level IS that can simultaneously ground OUGHT — so that IS and OUGHT are inextricably fused at that level, it fails decisively.*)

7] Seventh, in light of the above, even the weakest and most voiceless of us thus has a natural right to life, liberty, the pursuit of fulfillment of one’s sense of what s/he ought to be (“happiness”). This includes the young child, the unborn and more. (We see here the concept that rights are binding moral expectations of others to provide respect in regards to us because of our inherent status as human beings, members of the community of valuable neighbours. Where also who is my neighbour was forever answered by the parable of the Good Samaritan. Likewise, there can be no right to demand of or compel my neighbour that s/he upholds me and enables me in the wrong — including under false colour of law through lawfare; usurping the sword of justice to impose a ruthless policy agenda in fundamental breach of that civil peace which must ever pivot on manifest justice. To justly claim a right, one must first be in the right.)

8] Eighth, like unto the seventh, such may only be circumscribed or limited for good cause. Such as, reciprocal obligation to cherish and not harm neighbour of equal, equally valuable nature in community and in the wider world of the common brotherhood of humanity.

9] Ninth, this is the context in which it becomes self evidently wrong, wicked and evil to kidnap, sexually torture and murder a young child or the like as concrete cases in point that show that might and/or manipulation do not make ‘right,’ ‘truth,’ ‘worth,’ ‘justice,’ ‘fairness,’ ‘law’ etc. That is, anything that expresses or implies the nihilist’s credo is morally absurd.

10] Tenth, this entails that in civil society with government, justice is a principal task of legitimate government. In short, nihilistic will to power untempered by the primacy of justice is its own refutation in any type of state. Where, justice is the due balance of rights, freedoms and responsibilities. (In Aristotle’s terms as cited by Hooker: “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.”) Thus also,

11] Eleventh, that government is and ought to be subject to audit, reformation and if necessary replacement should it fail sufficiently badly and incorrigibly.

(NB: This is a requisite of accountability for justice, and the suggestion or implication of some views across time, that government can reasonably be unaccountable to the governed, is its own refutation, reflecting — again — nihilistic will to power; which is automatically absurd. This truth involves the issue that finite, fallible, morally struggling men acting as civil authorities in the face of changing times and situations as well as in the face of the tendency of power to corrupt, need to be open to remonstrance and reformation — or if they become resistant to reasonable appeal, there must be effective means of replacement. Hence, the principle that the general election is an institutionalised regular solemn assembly of the people for audit and reform or if needs be replacement of government gone bad. But this is by no means an endorsement of the notion that a manipulated mob bent on a march of folly has a right to do as it pleases.)

12] Twelfth, the attempt to deny or dismiss such a general framework of moral governance invariably lands in shipwreck of incoherence and absurdity. As, has been seen in outline. But that does not mean that the attempt is not going to be made, so there is a mutual obligation of frank and fair correction and restraint of evil.

>> [KF:] However, to claim a right, one must first be in the right and this means there can be no right to compel another to uphold or enable you in the wrong (which instantly exposes a lot of what is going on nowadays).

[AK:} But, again, who determines who is in the right? From my reading of your words, you obviously do not brook the possibility that you may be wrong. Which makes it very difficult to have a constructive conversation with you. For example, I admit that I could be wrong in my views about abortion, homosexuality and same sex marriage. Are you willing to admit the same?>>

5: Instantly, you obviously have failed to read or take seriously the force of my discussion on the first self evident truth: error exists.

6: I summarise. The very attempt to deny that error exists instantiates a manifest case of error. Thus it is undeniable on pain of instant patent absurdity, that error exists is true. Which is what self-evidence indicates (and not the strawman caricature of closed minded dogmatism you would substitute). From this, truth exists as what accurately describes reality. This truth is warranted to undeniable certainty so strong form knowledge exists as truths that are warranted, true belief. Perforce, weak form knowledge exists as credibly true, well warranted, reliable belief. Thus schemes of thought, arguments, ideologies and worldviews that deny or undermine such are immediately irretrievably falsified. And, their name is legion.

7: Further, such SETs serve as plumbline tests for our yardstick beliefs, exposing crooked yardsticks. Where, if we measure by a crooked yardstick, what is actually straight [“true”], square, on the level, accurate and upright — yes the terms overlap from carpentry and masonry to weightier matters — cannot pass the test of conformity to crookedness. (Now you know why agit prop strategists want to get us to make crooked yardsticks into our standard.)

8: A plumbline is naturally, undeniably upright and straight, so it restores the due balance. Which is why those who are locked into ideologies of crookedness so stoutly resist, deny or studiously ignore them. Only, to reveal the utter absurdity of their behaviour and thought.

9: The issue of the right then, is not set by the power or mere opinions or rulings of an individual or collective WHO, that is the appeal to might and manipulation make right. Which is the instantly absurd appeal to nihilism.

10: WHAT makes the truth and the right is the nature of the claim, which is tested by plumbline principles and test cases that demonstrate what is sound from what is unsound. The truth says of what is that it is and of what is not that it is not. This holds for history, accounting, arithmetic, philosophy, theology, politics, journalism, education, justice and morality alike.

11: What is just duly balances rights, freedoms and responsibilities. Where, a right is a properly binding moral claim to be respected and protected in a certain particular, based on our inherent dignity and quasi-infinite worth as a living human being. Even the dead have a due right to respect.

12: And as rights must be universalisable, we cannot have a right to demand that others do the wrong or uphold and enable us in the wrong. That would be to impose evil under false colours of rights, often by agit prop and lawfare that perverts justice. Which is exactly what has been going on, starting with the ongoing holocaust of living posterity in the womb. (This is a plumbline case of establishment of evils under false colour of law in our day. But until the crooked yardsticks have been given up, that will not be acknowledged. And, perforce for the avalanche of other perversions of justice and sound society which are ever so fashionable in our time.)

13: So, what is evil? The frustration, perversion, privation or abuse of the good that blocks its due fulfillment of its purpose, which in key cases is naturally evident.

14: The purpose of rationality is to know and do the true, the right, the prudent. So, deception, corruption of education and media, lying, slander and more are evils. The robbing of that child of innocence, violation of body, robbing of life itself are patent evils.

15: And though it is hard for the deluded to acknowledge now, abuse of organs of digestion and excretion in insanitary, unhealthy, disease spreading ways is perversion of proper purpose of those organs and of the proper familially grounded fulfillment of our sexual nature. Likewise, perversion of marriage and sexual identity under false colours of law.

16: Worse, abusing powers of law to compel people of sound conscience to enable such evils under threat of bankruptcy and loss of livelihood; that is early stage tyranny. He who would rob me of innocent livelihood or daily bread would rob me of life. He who would rob me of conscience would rob me of my soul and its proper end.

17: The utter, increasing moral blindness and endarkenment of our day are quite plain.

18: But the point above can be twisted through the Euthyphro dilemma, so called. But the fatal flaw lies in the root of that argument: it addressed pagan gods who are not the root of reality so such could never bridge IS and OUGHT. They are categorically distinct from the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being, who is the root of reality. God is essentially good and truthful, so he will neither do nor say evil, such would be alien to and at utter odds with his being. So, too, when he speaks, he speaks truth, as that too is his nature. and when he judges, he judges by the truth and the right which are inextricably part of his nature.

19: So, the so-called dilemma is misdirected.

20: Further, the real question is, does this God exist? Where, inherently, he would be the necessary being root of existence. So, the question, then is, is such a candidate being impossible, having core characteristics that are mutually contradictory like the case of a square circle.

21: God is a serious candidate necessary being, unlike a flying spaghetti monster (which, being material and composite, CANNOT be anything but contingent; the parody explodes, poof). So, the would-be atheist’s challenge is to show that God is impossible of being. As, a serious NB candidate will either be impossible or actual. As, NB’s are framework to any world existing.

22: And while it was formerly fashionable to trot out the problem of evils, that has collapsed since it was seen as parasitical on the problem of good and on the impact of Plantinga’s free will defense. Once creating freedom allows for a higher order of good, there is a sufficient reason to permit freedoms that can by definition be abused thus resulting in evil. Thus, as that is possible, the claimed contradiction evaporates.

23: We have addressed the core of the matter. Now, let us apply:

>> [KF:] It also means that might and manipulation do not make right, truth, justice etc.

[AK:] Nobody has suggested that it does. But consensus and social agreement can certainly make rules by which we can live and prosper by. >>

24: Just the opposite is the case, just look all around and consult the history of the past 100 years. Nihilism, radical relativism, subjectivism and emotivism — they are all of a piece — have been rampant and have predictably ended in chaos. To the point where they are rhetorically indefensible.

25: Of course, appeal to social “consensus” is a disguised form of just said appeal, cultural relativist from. Let me clip, again, from Lewis Vaughn:

Excerpted chapter summary, on Subjectivism, Relativism, and Emotivism, in Doing Ethics 3rd Edn, by Lewis Vaughn, W W Norton, 2012. [Also see here and here.] Clipping:

. . . Subjective relativism is the view that an action is morally right if one approves of it. A person’s approval makes the action right. This doctrine (as well as cultural relativism) is in stark contrast to moral objectivism, the view that some moral principles are valid for everyone.. Subjective relativism, though, has some troubling implications. It implies that each person is morally infallible and that individuals can never have a genuine moral disagreement

Cultural relativism is the view that an action is morally right if one’s culture approves of it. The argument for this doctrine is based on the diversity of moral judgments among cultures: because people’s judgments about right and wrong differ from culture to culture, right and wrong must be relative to culture, and there are no objective moral principles. This argument is defective, however, because the diversity of moral views does not imply that morality is relative to cultures. In addition, the alleged diversity of basic moral standards among cultures may be only apparent, not real. Societies whose moral judgments conflict may be differing not over moral principles but over nonmoral facts.

Some think that tolerance is entailed by cultural relativism. But there is no necessary connection between tolerance and the doctrine. Indeed, the cultural relativist cannot consistently advocate tolerance while maintaining his relativist standpoint. To advocate tolerance is to advocate an objective moral value. But if tolerance is an objective moral value, then cultural relativism must be false, because it says that there are no objective moral values.

Like subjective relativism, cultural relativism has some disturbing consequences. It implies that cultures are morally infallible, that social reformers can never be morally right, that moral disagreements between individuals in the same culture amount to arguments over whether they disagree with their culture, that other cultures cannot be legitimately criticized, and that moral progress is impossible.

Emotivism is the view that moral utterances are neither true nor false but are expressions of emotions or attitudes. It leads to the conclusion that people can disagree only in attitude, not in beliefs. People cannot disagree over the moral facts, because there are no moral facts. Emotivism also implies that presenting reasons in support of a moral utterance is a matter of offering nonmoral facts that can influence someone’s attitude. It seems that any nonmoral facts will do, as long as they affect attitudes. Perhaps the most far-reaching implication of emotivism is that nothing is actually good or bad. There simply are no properties of goodness and badness. There is only the expression of favorable or unfavorable emotions or attitudes toward something.

>>

 

 

Comments
Again, if there are no "objective" moral truths (and AK and I don't believe there are), then subjective morals are all we got. But we have free will, rationality, and emotions such as love, empathy, and compassion (which are also subjective), so we have the tools to make informed choices about our moral judgments (as we make countless judgments about other things all the time.)jdk
June 3, 2018
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Allan Keith @
AK: Yes, there are people who believe that something is right or wrong and will refuse to change their minds no matter what arguments are used and what evidence is presented.
You must be confused, since, according to your position, there is no evidence against any moral position. Any moral position is subjective in nature and is what it is. Similarly, there is no sense in arguing that one should not like the color red. There aren't any arguments.
AK: But, thankfully for black people, homosexuals and women, there were people who were sufficiently intelligent to realize that they may be wrong.
According to your position there is no wrong or right, so what do you mean?Origenes
June 3, 2018
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Origenes,
What do you mean by “important”? Isn’t it your position that “important”, like everything else, is dependent on perspective, as in: what is important to you may not be important to me; let alone from a universal or earth perspective (if there are such things)?
Yes, it is my opinion. I thought that was obvious. Most of what we talk about here. I didn’t think it was necessary to start the sentence with, “it is my opinion that...”
Given your philosophy, it seems obvious to me that there is nothing to question. Questions like “why do you hold that it is a good thing to castrate homosexuals?” & “why do you hold that it is a good thing that women have no right to vote?” all run into the same answer “because I do.”
Yes, there are people who believe that something is right or wrong and will refuse to change their minds no matter what arguments are used and what evidence is presented. But, thankfully for black people, homosexuals and women, there were people who were sufficiently intelligent to realize that they may be wrong.Allan Keith
June 3, 2018
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(continuing) This is a concept that nearly all of modernity (Materialist/Atheist/Darwinian or Christian or otherwise) has got completely upside down. Most modern theology is based on the assumption that God has to punish sin, implying that sin has no inherent consequence, in turn implying that God is arbitrary, in turn implying that God is merely a man with more power, in turn implying that man made God in our image (and not the reverse), in turn giving aid and comfort to the enemies of God and man. But the truth is as Paul wrote, that those things which are not seen (the spiritual foundations of our existence, including the laws by which existence operates) are the origins of that which is seen. In other words, the spiritual is not less than, derivative from, less real than, or a secondary effect of, the material world - which is the modern atheist's position, but rather the spiritual is primary, foundation, cause, origin, the fundamental reality of which our material existence is a secondary artifact, a reflection of the spiritual nature and character of the Designer. And just as the two unprovable axioms of the modern creation / evolution debate ("There is God." versus "There is no God.") cannot ever be reconciled, so too these positions are irreconcilable. One necessarily arrives at either one or the other and there's no possibility that both can be true or accepted without the aforementioned incoherence of self-contradiction; the surest sign that either your axioms are faulty, your argument is faulty, or both. The foundation of both spiritual and physical laws - what you might call Design law - in the character of the designer is the fundamental truth of both religion and science. "Even a child is known by his doings."ScuzzaMan
June 3, 2018
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@kairosfocus "Yet ethical statements do seem to say something about the realities to which they point." You might be interested in the opening to Emerson's essay on Compensation. After describing his long ambition to pen such a treatise, he writes: "... I was lately confirmed in these desires by hearing a sermon at church. The preacher, a man esteemed for his orthodoxy, unfolded in the ordinary manner the doctrine of the Last Judgment. He assumed that judgment is not executed in this world; that the wicked are successful; that the good are miserable; and then urged from reason and from Scripture a compensation to be made to both parties in the next life. No offence appeared to be taken by the congregation at this doctrine. As far as I could observe when the meeting broke up they separated without remark on the sermon. ... The fallacy lay in the immense concession that the bad are successful; that justice is not done now. The blindness of the preacher consisted in deferring to the base estimate of the market of what constitutes a manly success, instead of confronting and convicting the world from the truth; announcing the Presence of the Soul; the omnipotence of the Will; and so establishing the standard of good and ill, of success and falsehood, and summoning the dead to its present tribunal. I find a similar base tone in the popular religious works of the day and the same doctrines assumed by the literary men when occasionally they treat the related topics. I think that our popular theology has gained in decorum, and not in principle, over the superstitions it has displaced. But men are better than this theology. Their daily life gives it the lie. Every ingenuous and aspiring soul leaves the doctrine behind him in his own experience, and all men feel sometimes the falsehood which they cannot demonstrate. ... " It gets better - I highly recommend it.ScuzzaMan
June 3, 2018
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Headlined: https://uncommondescent.com/philosophy/is-it-time-to-reboot-our-formal-and-informal-education-in-ethics-to-save-our-civilisation/kairosfocus
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Folks, The onward exchanges are interesting, underscoring however the persistent, widespread failure of our current formal and informal ethical education. Thus, instead of being teachers to the world, we need to think afresh and go back to first, mother's milk baby stage steps and principles. Our civilisation is like land that having been well seeded and watered, has been visited by night by one who has sown the well-nurtured field with thistles, thorns and tares and it has now put up a growing crop of toxic weeds that are choking out the hoped for good fruit. Looks like time for drastic measures to scorch the earth and turn weeds and their ruinous seed into fertiliser for a fresh sowing. (Lesse if the classical allusions I just made will be recognised and understood.) In particular, we see how entangled our reasoning about truth, justice/fairness, governance [including law and public policy as well as public morality implicit in such] and action on the ground are with moral considerations. IS and OUGHT are patently inextricably entangled, walk hand in hand in any thought or persuasion situation, then play out in action. This means, it is vital to get them right, to get our thought, governance and action well-aligned to the actuality of what is, to reality. For instance, I saw above a remark that absent us, there is no morally tinged reflection and action. In short, to have such, we need responsibly rational, sufficiently free contemplative creatures who can warrant, reflect, adjust etc. Where of course, such a process is itself inextricably entangled with moral government considerations. But also, our culture is enamoured with the notion that reality is the spacio-temporal, physical domain, which then tends to reduce rational reflection to computation on substrates held to be shaped by forces that are essentially blind and non-rational -- blind chance and/or mechanical causal necessity allegedly moving forward one small trial and error chance improvement at a time . . . implying an appeal to a vast continent of incrementally improvable configurations. Such, despite the strong evidence that functionally specific, configuration based organisation and associated information -- precisely due to the tight requisites of right parts, correctly arranged and coupled -- will come in deeply isolated islands of function. (And often, we don't see the gap between the essentially mechanical and stochastic, non-rational nature of GIGO-driven computation on substrates and the rational insight and imagination required to design and effect such FSCO/I based systems! This is of course a central contention of intelligent design theory.) I suppose, we can now safely speak about "the well-behaved continent of incrementally improvable function" myth or fallacy. The solution to such is precisely the same as we find for the world of Mathematics. As I clipped in the OP:
mathematical realities are not empirically observable but are very real, i.e. you are failing to recognise abstracta as having reality. It is subjects who perceive and reason out mathematical realities per first principles and logic, and the results hold objectivity by means of logical warrant. And yes, they have empirical consequences; so much so, that mathematical reasoning on the logic of structure and quantity is deeply embedded in the sciences. Where also, by being connected to the coherence of being, that abstract reasoning by subjects brings out powerful insights and predictive power. BTW, to observe and infer successful prediction are also subjective mental acts. To share such in writings and talks etc using textual or visual or aural symbols is again a mental process involving subjects. And more. So, it should be no surprise to see a direct parallel from the world of maths to moral first principles, logical reasoning on such principles, requisites of coherence in the world of agents and predictable consequences. Indeed, as a famous case in point, Kant’s Categorical Imperative in part highlights that a sound maxim of action is universalisable and by contrast, evils are not — they parasite off the premise that most people most times do not act like that. For instance, even in Crete, truth is the dominant form of communication, or else communication and community would utterly break down. (And BTW, that solves the so called liar paradox.) So, moral principles can be truths, referring accurately to the order of reality experienced, sensed and logically reflected on by agents. Indeed, without this, Mathematics, Science, Medicine, Jurisprudence etc would break down, as they all turn on the premise that our mental life is pervaded by duties to truth, reason/logic, prudence, justice etc. So, not only is moral truth real truth, but it is a critical component of our world of thought and thoughtful action, undergirding the engines of progress for our civilisation. The undermining of moral thought, knowledge, truth and action is therefore counter to the long term good of our civilisation.
If someone out there imagines that something as complicated and intricately balanced as a social system can be incrementally governed through blind trial and error, something has gone deeply wrong. Updated social darwinism (hoping that altruism and cooperativeness make the key difference) is NOT plausible. Instead, what we can and do find is the possibility of exploring a domain of reality and by discovering its key concepts and principles, with aid of key, paradigm-shaping test cases (see why dismissing that test case is so wrong-headed?) elaborating a body of more or less reliable knowledge of the moral domain. Knowledge, of course, being mostly used in the soft form sense. While there will be plumbline, self-evident core principles, most of the domain is shaped based on provisional but likely reliable warrant. And, as we are as prone to moral error -- which implies moral truth! -- as we are to Mathematical error, careful expert thinking counts, as does being open to well-warranted correction and reforms. In short, we have laid out the skeleton for an organised body of objective moral knowledge that can then form a tradition. Yes, we can see emergence of a disciplined field of study, not a science but a valid domain of knowledge. In particular, a branch of philosophy (and of theology, which is closely linked) commonly termed ethics. Here is a quick outline of the focal issues and domains of study, by David Clarke and Robert Rakestraw:
Principles are broad general guidelines that all persons ought to follow. Morality is the dimension of life related to right conduct. It includes virtuous character and honorable intentions as well as the decisions and actions that grow out of them. Ethics on the other hand, is the [philosophical and theological] study of morality . . . [that is,] a higher order discipline that examines moral living in all its facets . . . . on three levels. The first level, descriptive ethics, simply portrays moral actions or virtues. A second level, normative ethics (also called prescriptive ethics), examines the first level, evaluating actions or virtues as morally right or wrong. A third level, metaethics, analyses the second . . . It clarifies the meaning of ethical terms and assesses the principles of ethical argument . . . . Some think, without reflecting on it, that . . . what people actually do is the standard of what is morally right . . . [But, what] actually happens and what ought to happen are quite different [--> the IS-OUGHT gap] . . . . A half century ago, defenders of positivism routinely argued that descriptive statements are meaningful, but prescriptive statements (including all moral claims) are meaningless . . . In other words, ethical claims give no information about the world; they only reveal something about the emotions of the speaker . . . . Yet ethical statements do seem to say something about the realities to which they point. [--> the issue of ethical truth, per accurate description of reality in the domain of life of morally governed creatures] “That’s unfair!” encourages us to attend to circumstances, events, actions, or relationships in the world. We look for a certain quality in the world (not just the speaker’s mind) that we could properly call unfair. [--> objective, intelligible reality conducive to discovery and statement of truth] [Readings in Christian Ethics, Vol. 1: Theory and Method. (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2002), pp. 18 – 19.]
In that context, we can see for example that there are naturally evident ends, such as that the purpose or end of mindedness and its capability of rational, creative contemplation (and of linked discussion) is truth. So, we may understand that what is good for the mind is what promotes, supports or enables that end. What is bad is what undermines, diverts from or frustrates that end. Thus also, evil can be seen as the privation as just summarised. Now, too, that raises the issue of the causal source of that naturally evident end. Yes, but that is an onward issue. (And yes, that points to root of reality issues and the need to bridge and fuse IS and OUGHT. Your candidate is: _______ , and it thrives through comparative difficulties on factual adequacy, coherence and explanatory balance because ________ , justifying that this is inference to best explanation as _____ . Clue no 1, evolutionary materialistic scientism, radical subjectivism, emotivism and socio-cultural relativism do not meet the grade.) Further to all such, we can see that test cases then allow us to further elaborate the principles, e.g. as was further outlined in the OP above through the test case of an unfortunate school child. Let me again clip, as it seems there is a pattern of studiously ignoring:
1] The first self evident moral truth is that we are inescapably under the government of ought. (This is manifest in even an objector’s implication in the questions, challenges and arguments that s/he would advance, that we are in the wrong and there is something to be avoided about that. That is, even the objector inadvertently implies that we OUGHT to do, think, aim for and say the right. Not even the hyperskeptical objector can escape this truth. Patent absurdity on attempted denial.) 2] Second self evident truth, we discern that some things are right and others are wrong by a compass-sense we term conscience which guides our thought. (Again, objectors depend on a sense of guilt/ urgency to be right not wrong on our part to give their points persuasive force. See what would be undermined should conscience be deadened or dismissed universally? Sawing off the branch on which we all must sit. [–> and remember, we are standing by some bushes, over a small, broken, abused, lifeless body. Even now, as the father approaches what remains of the child he sent off to school that morning.]) 3] Third, were this sense of conscience and linked sense that we can make responsibly free, rational decisions to be a delusion, we would at once descend into a status of grand delusion in which there is no good ground for confidence in our self-understanding. (That is, we look at an infinite regress of Plato’s cave worlds: once such a principle of grand global delusion is injected, there is no firewall so the perception of level one delusion is subject to the same issue, and this level two perception too, ad infinitum; landing in patent absurdity.) 4] Fourth, we are objectively under obligation of OUGHT. That is, despite any particular person’s (or group’s or august council’s or majority’s) wishes or claims to the contrary, such obligation credibly holds to moral certainty. That is, it would be irresponsible, foolish and unwise for us to act and try to live otherwise. 5] Fifth, this cumulative framework of moral government under OUGHT is the basis for the manifest core principles of the natural moral law under which we find ourselves obligated to the right the good, the true etc. Where also, patently, we struggle to live up to what we acknowledge or imply we ought to do. 6] Sixth, this means we live in a world in which being under core, generally understood principles of natural moral law is coherent and factually adequate, thus calling for a world-understanding in which OUGHT is properly grounded at root level. (Thus worldviews that can soundly meet this test are the only truly viable ones. If a worldview does not have in it a world-root level IS that can simultaneously ground OUGHT — so that IS and OUGHT are inextricably fused at that level, it fails decisively.*) 7] Seventh, in light of the above, even the weakest and most voiceless of us thus has a natural right to life, liberty, the pursuit of fulfillment of one’s sense of what s/he ought to be (“happiness”). This includes the young child, the unborn and more. (We see here the concept that rights are binding moral expectations of others to provide respect in regards to us because of our inherent status as human beings, members of the community of valuable neighbours. Where also who is my neighbour was forever answered by the parable of the Good Samaritan. Likewise, there can be no right to demand of or compel my neighbour that s/he upholds me and enables me in the wrong — including under false colour of law through lawfare; usurping the sword of justice to impose a ruthless policy agenda in fundamental breach of that civil peace which must ever pivot on manifest justice. To justly claim a right, one must first be in the right.) 8] Eighth, like unto the seventh, such may only be circumscribed or limited for good cause. Such as, reciprocal obligation to cherish and not harm neighbour of equal, equally valuable nature in community and in the wider world of the common brotherhood of humanity. 9] Ninth, this is the context in which it becomes self evidently wrong, wicked and evil to kidnap, sexually torture and murder a young child or the like as concrete cases in point that show that might and/or manipulation do not make ‘right,’ ‘truth,’ ‘worth,’ ‘justice,’ ‘fairness,’ ‘law’ etc. That is, anything that expresses or implies the nihilist’s credo is morally absurd. 10] Tenth, this entails that in civil society with government, justice is a principal task of legitimate government. In short, nihilistic will to power untempered by the primacy of justice is its own refutation in any type of state. Where, justice is the due balance of rights, freedoms and responsibilities. (In Aristotle’s terms as cited by Hooker: “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.”) Thus also, 11] Eleventh, that government is and ought to be subject to audit, reformation and if necessary replacement should it fail sufficiently badly and incorrigibly. (NB: This is a requisite of accountability for justice, and the suggestion or implication of some views across time, that government can reasonably be unaccountable to the governed, is its own refutation, reflecting — again — nihilistic will to power; which is automatically absurd. This truth involves the issue that finite, fallible, morally struggling men acting as civil authorities in the face of changing times and situations as well as in the face of the tendency of power to corrupt, need to be open to remonstrance and reformation — or if they become resistant to reasonable appeal, there must be effective means of replacement. Hence, the principle that the general election is an institutionalised regular solemn assembly of the people for audit and reform or if needs be replacement of government gone bad. But this is by no means an endorsement of the notion that a manipulated mob bent on a march of folly has a right to do as it pleases.) 12] Twelfth, the attempt to deny or dismiss such a general framework of moral governance invariably lands in shipwreck of incoherence and absurdity. As, has been seen in outline. But that does not mean that the attempt is not going to be made, so there is a mutual obligation of frank and fair correction and restraint of evil.
So, can we start afresh? KFkairosfocus
June 2, 2018
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jdk
And I’ll say again, right and wrong as you define them doesn’t exist, but right and wrong as I use those terms does.
Sorry, that will not work. You are misusing the language. As I pointed out earlier, the phrase "is wrong," is a statement about the real world of objective reality, a statement about what IS. The phrase "seems wrong" or is wrong "to me" or "for me, is an statement about appearances - a subjective opinion. Those words and phrases mean what they mean.
If you’re wrong that objective goodness and badness exists, then those words as you use that have no meaning whatsoever.
Bad logic. Whether or not objective right or wrong exists has absolutely nothing to do with the meaning of those words---nothing. Whether or not an Angel or God exists has nothing to do with the meaning of those words. Whether or not a unicorn exists has nothing to do with the meaning of that term.StephenB
June 2, 2018
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Keith: But the important thing is that we constantly question what we now consider “right” or “morally acceptable”.
What do you mean by "important"? Isn't it your position that "important", like everything else, is dependent on perspective, as in: what is important to you may not be important to me; let alone from a universal or earth perspective (if there are such things)?
Keith: If we didn’t do this, we would still have Alavert, women wouldn’t be allowed to vote, women could be legally hit by their husbands, we would still be jailing if castrating homosexuals. There will be missteps, some of them with significant consequences. But that is no reason to stop questioning.
Given your philosophy, it seems obvious to me that there is nothing to question. Questions like "why do you hold that it is a good thing to castrate homosexuals?" & "why do you hold that it is a good thing that women have no right to vote?" all run into the same answer "because I do." Given your philosophy, what a person considers to be “right” and “morally acceptable” is what a person considers to be “right” and “morally acceptable” — end of story. Questioning those things is completely useless and lead nowhere, contrary to your claim that it is important.Origenes
June 2, 2018
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Yes, that is what I'm saying, except they are judgments, not just feelings: that is, they are choices we make based on a wide variety of factors, including values, goals, feelings (for instance, compassion and empathy), as well as more factual understandings about the world.jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK Does the universe that objectively exists based on how one defines it? It doesn’t matter how you use those terms if right or wrong have no objective existence your just using labels to describe your feelings as to how human beings should interact with other human beings. Why is this so difficult to grasp? Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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sb writes,
You can’t say that right/wrong, good/bad doesn’t exist and then say that you judge murder to be wrong.
And I'll say again, right and wrong as you define them doesn't exist, but right and wrong as I use those terms does.jdk
June 2, 2018
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Yes, vivid, I explained that before: those words as you use them would have no meaning. However the words as I use them - individual choices of human beings about how to interact with other humans - would have meaning.jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK Yep there is no good or bad they are just more palatable labels for your personal preferences. To quote you jdk “If you’re wrong that objective goodness and badness exists, then those words as you use that have no meaning whatsoever.” Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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And I’ve pointed out that your insistence that you are right is based on your premise that objection good and badness exists. This is circular reasoning.
You are confused. I am not arguing for the moment that I am right. I did that much earlier. I am arguing that you contradicted yourself, which you clearly did. You can't say that right/wrong, good/bad doesn't exist and then say that you judge murder to be wrong. jdk
If you’re wrong that objective goodness and badness exists, then those words as you use that have no meaning whatsoever.
That isn't true at all. You don't believe that objective reality exists and yet you think that the words [right and wrong good and bad] have meaning. Otherwise, you wouldn't deny that they exist. Unless you are trying to say that objective morality doesn't exist, but you also don't know what objective morality means. Are you that far gone?StephenB
June 2, 2018
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The same with good and bad: they exist within me (and in different ways in each one of us), but they have no independent existence Outside of me, and people in general and in collective ways, there is no such thing as good and bad.jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK You exist, you are the objective existence. Part of your existence entails things that you feel, values you have, outside of you there is no such thing as your love for your family. Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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to vivid. Does my love for my family have an objective existence? If you say no, does that mean my love for them doesn't existence?jdk
June 2, 2018
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And I've pointed out that your insistence that you are right is based on your premise that objection good and badness exists. This is circular reasoning. If you're wrong that objective goodness and badness exists, then those words as you use that have no meaning whatsoever.jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK Even though we dont fully understand the how of its existence that does not obviate the fact that it exists as it is not based on anyone’s beliefs. Different cosmologists have different ideas but all or some do not affect the objective universe that is. I only bring this point up because one of the main criticisms leveled at the existence of there being an objective morality is that there are so many differences as to what that morality would be. It doesn’t matter to the existence of the universe nor to anything else. Anyway it is my position that anything that does not have an objective existence regardless of what you , I or anyone else believes, does not exist. If there is no objective good that exists regardless of what I believe good does not exist, etc. Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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SB: To say something “is wrong” is to say that it is objectively wrong.”
No
YES. You are confused. "Is wrong" is objective; "seems wrong" or is wrong "to me" is subjective.
but I’ve explained why that is wrong enough times in this thread. See 71 and 73, for example.
I have already pointed out the contradictions in your statements and alluded to your misuse of words.StephenB
June 2, 2018
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sb writes, "To say something “is wrong” is to say that it is objectively wrong." No, but I've explained why that is wrong enough times in this thread. See 71 and 73, for example.jdk
June 2, 2018
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Yes, there is an objective universe that exists* The issue is how we know what the objective nature of the universe is. *This answer is complicated by quantum mechanics. I just finished reading the book "What is Real: The Unfinished Quest for the Meaning of Quantum Mechanics", which I found out about from Denise, but I don't think that's the area we are talking about here.jdk
June 2, 2018
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SB: So if a murderer judges that it would be a good thing to kill you, and you judge it would be a bad thing, there is no objective standard to determine who is right? Remarkable.
That's right, Stephen.
I judge that murder is wrong and most people will judge that murder is wrong,...
Like AK, you contradict yourself with almost every entry. You just finished saying that there are no objectively bad or objectively wrong acts. Now you are saying that you judge that murder is wrong. To say something "is wrong" is to say that it is objectively wrong. What you mean to say is that murder is not wrong but rather that you find it personally distasteful. So the next time you describe your philosophy, please do not twist words to make yourself appear more reasonable. You don't judge murder to be wrong. You judge it to be neither right or wrong because you don't believe that any such thing as right or wrong exists.StephenB
June 2, 2018
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JDK re 86 Thank you. Would it be fair to infer from your answer that regardless of what you and Ii believe about the basic nature of the universe it does not change what the nature of the universe that exists” is “because there is actually an objective universe that does exist? Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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re 83, because our thoughts and feelings don't affect the nature of the universe. We have limited affects on the details of the world through our actions, but the basic nature of the universe is not affected by what we think it is, or ought to be.jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK re 84 What I am interested in is a serious discussion about what I write not what you think I write or questions about what I mean by good or bad when the question should be directed at AK. You should ask him what he meant. Then like you sorta did with SB you say you get the feeling that I am not interested in a serious discussion because I refuse to go along with what I consider are comments responding to very little to my position. You seem incapable of even answering a question about what you DID write and you come back with a question for me about something about a New Agey meme, and its me that you feel is not interested in a serious conversation Really?? If you read my post in 82 it is obvious that I dont think that my thoughts and feelings affects how the world is did you miss that? What do think “exactly” means in this context? Now I have answered your question will you respond to mine in 83? Why is that? Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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Vivid, I get the feeling you are not interested in serious discussion. As to your question, do you think your thoughts and feelings about how the world is affects how the world is? What do you think? It's a real New-Agey meme that we can make the world actually be what we want it to be, but I don't believe that. Do you?jdk
June 2, 2018
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JDK “What you or anyone thinks, irrespective of whether your reasoning seems logically impeccable to you, has no effect on how the world really is.” Why is that? Vividvividbleau
June 2, 2018
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JDK “What you or anyone thinks, irrespective of whether your reasoning seems logically impeccable to you, has no effect on how the world really is.” Exactly!! “If there is no God, and no moral component to the universe, then that’s the way it is, and your belief that it is otherwise is irrelevant.” Exactly!! “That may lead to conclusions about human beings that you find totally unacceptable, but the universe doesn’t care about your feelings, or what you think is irrefutable logic.” Exactly!! “The fact that the lack of such a moral nature of the universe might lead to things we here would all agree are horrible is not evidence of a moral nature to the universe” Exactly!! “As the quote above says, if that’s the way it is then we just have to do the best we can with the human nature we’ve got. Tough if you don’t like: what you like is not an argument.” Exactly!! Vividvividbleau
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