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Old 02-19-2002, 05:23 AM   #21
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Originally posted by echidna:
A question for the materialists and the reductionists :

If consciousness and morality are purely materialist entities, able to be explained in reductionist terms, then presumably it should also be possible to produce some level of objective materialist rules for morality.

Is this true ?

BTW, David as I see it, you’re still stuck that no one can prove the existence of consciousness, artificial or otherwise, so how do you demonstrate that I should protect a machine
Well I think a good framework for looking at moral systems is <a href="http://www.ccp.uchicago.edu/grad/Joseph_Craig/kohlberg.htm" target="_blank">Kohlberg's Stages of Moral Development</a>. The later stages involve a person seeking connectedness with humanity. I think "connectedness" (or belonging) is a fundamental human desire, like newness and relief. So people want to find connectedness with something. Depending on their upbringing, they would probably find this with fellow human beings. Sociopaths on the other hand don't have a normal human connectedness desire.
Anyway, our brains are forced to do whatever is the most pleasurable and/or the least painful course of action. If the person was raised fairly well then this would translate to a "healthy" socially responsible morality. Another thing about connectedness is that we have a desire to imitate (at least as an infant) - it's about "monkey see, monkey do".
If they were raised in a dungeon by cruel parents they mightn't be very caring at all. But that would be a normal morality for them.

So basically people develop morality depending on their upbringing, and also their brain chemistry. There is nothing in physics that says that it is impossible for people to kill their own parents or eat their children, etc, even though these kinds of people are rare.
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Old 02-19-2002, 05:59 AM   #22
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Quote:
Originally posted by Tom Piper:
<strong>Pug,

I assume you will allow that there are objective legal facts. All that is necessary for there to be such facts is a 'process', a means, by which these facts come into existence, as it were.

It is wrong to turn right on a red light unless you have come to a full stop first. This is an example of an objective legal fact in some parts of the United States.

Will you then agree that if there is such a process, a means, by which moral facts come into existence, then there will be objective moral facts.

Tom

[ February 17, 2002: Message edited by: Tom Piper ]</strong>
(Note: in accordance with standard moral philosophy, I shall refer to "moral facts" and not "objective moral facts." Part of the definition of "moral facts" is that they are objective.)

An interesting question is whether the concept of "coming into existence" is even compatible with moral facts. I'm not sure what it would mean for a moral fact to "come into existence." What would the scenario be? How would it come into existence? Would the moral fact have a cause? If so, what?

Indeed, it seems to me that if there are moral facts at all, they no more "come into existence" than the law of noncontradiction. Moral facts should be understood as necessary truths.

Let me illustrate by an example. To say that morality is objective is to make a metaethical claim. To say that some particular action, say, rape, is wrong is to make a normative claim. Since most people who accept moral objectivism accept that normative claim, this seems like a legitimate example. Here's the problem for the person who says both that moral facts "came into existence" and that morality is objective. In the case of rape, that person must say that there was a time when rape was wrong and then a later time (after the fact of the wrongness of rape "came into existence") when rape became wrong. But the relevant properties of the act of rape were identical in both instances. Thus, either both acts of rape are objectively wrong, or neither is.
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Old 02-19-2002, 06:08 AM   #23
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Originally posted by Tom Piper:
<strong>Pug846,

I will tell you what I meant by 'objective'. Then you tell me what you meant by 'objective'.

I meant something such as, '...deriving from experience with actual objects, phenomena, or conditions'; '...expressing or dealing with facts or conditions perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations'; '...real independent of any particular individual mind'.

The various traffic laws are whatever they happen to be whether I know what they are or not. The rules for monopoly are what they are indpendent of what I happen to think that they are.
Various words of an ordinary language mean what they mean independent of what I happen to think that they mean.

(snip)</strong>
While I agree with your definition of objective, I don't think any of your examples (traffic laws, monopoly rules, etc.) fit that definition. The point of objectivism is not just such rules exist independently of anyone's opinion, but that the validity of such rules holds independently of anyone's opinion. This is not the case with traffic laws and monopoly rules. The 'validity' of traffic laws and monopoly rules is derived from human opinion: the opinions of the legislators who made the traffic laws and the people who invented the game of Monopoly. So those examples aren't the examples you want. In fact, subjectivists would argue that your examples are perfect examples of how they think about morality: a set of rules invented by humans.
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Old 02-19-2002, 06:17 AM   #24
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Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
<strong>pug846:
(snip)

(2) There’s a difference between knowing (or even being able to prove) that there are facts of a certain kind and being able to identify which propositions of that kind are true. Thus, no doubt some meaningful propositions about the weather that will be occurring at a given latitude/longitude at 11 AM on August 22, 2671 are true, but I have no way of identifying which ones they are.

I won’t go into this further since it isn’t especially relevant to the present discussion. Saying that there are objectively true moral propositions but there’s no way in principle to identify them, even with a reasonable degree of confidence, does seem to be indistinguishable from saying that there are no objectively true moral propositions.</strong>
This is very well said. I have just one nitpick with your last sentence. Saying that there are objectively true moral propositions but there is no way in principle to identify them, even with a reasonable degree of confidence, is NOT "indistinguishable from saying that there are no objectively true moral propositions." The difference is that objectivists don't believe that human opinion is what makes true moral propositions true. I would agree with you, though, that for practical purposes, the two are effectively the same.

Quote:
<strong>(3) Talking about “objective moral facts” is putting the cart before the horse. We should begin by talking about objectively valid moral principles. And the thing to notice about moral principles is that they are not properly understood as “factual” statements at all; they are principles of action. This distinction is not unique to ethics. For example, the “Principle of Induction” is not a fact at all, objective or otherwise; it’s a principle of action. What it says, essentially, is: “If B has been observed to follow A on every one of the numerous occasions when A has occurred in the past, expect it to follow A in the future.” This is a good rule to follow, but by its very nature it cannot be a “fact”; it doesn’t even appear on its face to express a proposition – i.e., to say something that might be true or false – any more than “Close the door!” does. Similarly, Occam’s Razor says essentially “Of all the explanations that fit the facts, choose the simplest.” Neither of these is completely unambiguous by any means, but they’re still valuable principles of action.</strong>
I don't think the laws of logic and especially Occam's Razor are principles of action.

(snip)

Quote:
<strong>But the meaning I defined for “P is an objective moral truth” is the generally accepted one in moral philosophy. If someone wants to defend the notion of objective moral truths, he must, at a minimum, defend the claim that there are statements of the form “X should do Y” that are true for everyone, regardless of what they might think or feel. And anyone who wants to argue that morality is not objective must say that there are no such truths: that the Holocaust, for example, cannot be said to have been “wrong” except in the trivial sense that he personally disapproves of it, or that some group of people disapproves of it.</strong>
Exactly.
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Old 02-19-2002, 06:25 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally posted by David Gould:
<strong>If the survival of the human consciousness is the basis for objective morality</strong>
Who said that human consciousness is the basis for objective morality? Why should we believe that?

Quote:
<strong>, how can a conscious non human unaware of the existence of humans be moral?</strong>
Only moral agents can be praised as moral or condemned as immoral. While I see no reason in principle why a nonhuman animal cannot be a moral agent, it seems to me that humans are the only known animals that are moral agents.

Quote:
<strong>What about an artifical consciousness? Does that have to follow the objective standard in order to be considered moral?</strong>
Again, if the thing in question meets the definition of a moral agent, then it would need to follow the standard to be considered moral. The issue is whether the artificial intelligence has free will. It doesn't seem to make much sense to (morally) judge the 'actions' of a thing that lacks free will.

(snip)
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Old 02-19-2002, 06:32 AM   #26
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Originally posted by pug846:
<strong>But I have to agree to play the game first – why should I play this game instead of another one and adopt those set of rules?</strong>
This is an important question. But note that this question has absolutely nothing to do with the question of whether moral facts exist, since moral realism does not entail internalism. It could be the case that there are moral facts, but that the mere existence of such facts is insufficient to motivate moral behavior. There's a rich tradition in moral theory of externalist moral realism.
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Old 02-19-2002, 06:43 AM   #27
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jlowder,

Two points:

1. When I offered my explanation of objective facts,I said, among other things, '...real independent of any particularindividual mind'(my emphasis). All I meant was that the traffic laws, for example, are the laws, even if I don't believe that they are, even if you don't believe they are. The laws are not whatever any individual happens to think they are-- thus distinguishing them from a vulgar, but nevertheless popular-among-undergrads notion of moral subjectivism. In this respect, my examples are relevant. The laws are the laws, even if Ithink they are not, even though they derive from humans. I have not offered any view about the origin of the moral laws.

2. Your point about 'coming into existence' and the rightness/wrongness of rape (I think you left out a 'not' in setting up the problem)holds only if the rightness/wrongness depends upon the 'properties of the act of rape'. If this isn't so, then there is no problem.

Tom

[ February 19, 2002: Message edited by: Tom Piper ]</p>
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Old 02-19-2002, 07:21 AM   #28
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Quote:
Originally posted by Tom Piper:
<strong>jlowder,

Two points:

1. When I offered my explanation of objective facts,I said, among other things, '...real independent of any particularindividual mind'(my emphasis). All I meant was that the traffic laws, for example, are the laws, even if I don't believe that they are, even if you don't believe they are. The laws are not whatever any individual happens to think they are-- thus distinguishing them from a vulgar, but nevertheless popular-among-undergrads notion of moral subjectivism. In this respect, my examples are relevant. The laws are the laws, even if Ithink they are not, even though they derive from humans. I have not offered any view about the origin of the moral laws.</strong>
Fair enough. But in moral philosophy, the adjective 'objective' is normally used to describe the foundation or validity of moral principles.

Quote:
<strong>2. Your point about 'coming into existence' and the rightness/wrongness of rape (I think you left out a 'not' in setting up the problem)holds only if the rightness/wrongness depends upon the 'properties of the act of rape'. If this isn't so, then there is no problem.</strong>
Right. My point is that moral realists, by definition, hold that moral rightness/wrongness depends upon the properties of acts.
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Old 02-19-2002, 07:37 AM   #29
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Just about traffic laws:

Laws aren't necessarily about morality.

See <a href="http://www.ccp.uchicago.edu/grad/Joseph_Craig/kohlberg.htm" target="_blank">Kohlberg's Stages of Moral Development</a>.

At the higher stages, people, like Gandhi, might think that it is moral to break certain laws or immoral to obey certain laws. e.g. it could be the law for an officer to kill a defenceless person.

In the middle stages, morality and the law are the same thing. At the lowest stage, things are only wrong if you get caught.

Anyway, since people can have different moralities - some see law and morality as the same thing (e.g. Hitler says it's the law, so it's good to kill Jews, etc) and others disagree.

So remember that laws and morality can sometimes be the same thing for some people, but this isn't so for many people. Therefore laws aren't an "objective moral fact" for everyone since everyone doesn't rely on laws as their sole source of morality.
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Old 02-19-2002, 08:17 AM   #30
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I am going to respond by arguing for free will.

We can all objectively recognize universal morality by acknowledging that every conscious human being has free will (volition).

Simply put, immorality means going against the free will of others, and this is called initiation of violence.

I find it hard if not impossible to reject this objective fact if you still believe in free will. After all moral choices are available precisely because we have free will.

There is also confusion about moral conventions. I don't think it is immoral for example to do whatever you please even if this goes against moral conventions as long as it does not go against the free will of others. Subjectivists seem to confuse moral conventions (subjective morality) with real objective morality.
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