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Old 05-29-2002, 09:44 AM   #101
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99Percent:

Quote:
... life is required in order to have consciousness in the first place... consciousness is required in order to be able to make decisions in the first place.
Yes. Life and consciousness are necessary preconditions for anything that any rational person values. That is to say, they are instrumental goods. That was my point.

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Since as humans we have the option of killing ourselves at any moment the better decision would be to say "well, lets see how it goes and I'll decide along the way just how miserable it is and if I want to keep on living".
Irrelevant. It doesn’t matter when I decide not to go on living. The decision will in any case be determined by my evaluation of what the remaining years of my life would be like.

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If there were other fundamental goods that could substitute life and consciousness in order to be able to decide for B then I would accept that life and consciousness are instrumental values, but as it currently stands, life and consciousness are the only means ...
To say that life and consciousness are valued as means is to say that they have instrumental value. Apparently you think that it makes a difference that what they are a necessary means for is making moral decisions, or being a moral agent. But I don’t see why this matters. Either making moral decisions (or being able to) is valuable (either intrinsically or instrumentally) or it isn’t. If it isn’t, the argument is incoherent. If it is, the fact that life and consciousness are preconditions for it makes them instrumental goods.

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So they are fundamental.
You’re conflating two different meanings of “fundamental”. On the one hand, if X causes Y and Y causes Z, X might be said to be a more fundamental cause of Z than Y. Thus, my grass grows because it gets rain, warmth, and light. But it gets all of these things, in the final analysis, because the sun shines. And the sun shines because of fusion. So the fusion occurring deep in the sun is a more “fundamental” cause of my flowers growing than the rain is. On the other hand, if I want X for the sake of having Y and want Y for the sake of having Z, Z is the more “fundamental” desire. Thus if Johnny wants a baseball glove because it’s a precondition for playing on the team, and he wants to play on the team so that he can impress Susie, and he want to impress Suzie because he hopes that it will make her willing to go out with him, his desire to be with Susie is more “fundamental” than his desire for a baseball glove.

A reasonable moral theory is rooted in the things that are desirable for their own sake, not in the things that are desirable merely as means or preconditions for getting or having these things.

Of course, the question of what is the appropriate sense of “desirable” in this statement is one of the major points of contention in moral philosophy. But the statement itself is not controversial.

By the way, it appears that Alonzo and I are using the term “intrinsic value” in different senses. Alonzo says, “Intrinsic value claims assert that something has value independent of desire - that it just is good, even if nobody cares about it.” But when I say that something has “intrinsic value”, I mean simply that it is valued “for itself”, as opposed to having “instrumental value”, meaning that it is valued because of what it may cause, or be used to produce, or be a precondition for. This sense is compatible with subjectivist theories – i.e., it makes perfectly good sense to say that something has intrinsic value to me but not to you. It is also compatible with the notion that nothing has value independent of desire. This is just a difference in terminology, not a disagreement, but it could cause some confusion for the unwary reader.

[Note: I’m working on replies to both your and Alonzo’s longer posts.]
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Old 05-29-2002, 09:56 AM   #102
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Quote:
Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
<strong>Yes. Life and consciousness are necessary preconditions for anything that any rational person values. That is to say, they are instrumental goods. That was my point.</strong>
Your main points against 99percent are accurate, but this statement is not precisely true.

Life and consciousness are not necessary preconditions for fulling the desire to be free of pain, for example.

Also -- as in the case of a soldier sacrificing his life for his country or a parent sacrificing his life to save a child -- a person can find themself in a situation where life and consciousness is incompatible with what one values -- such as the welfare of one's children or the need to protect the institutions that allow the people one cares about to live happy lives.

Such a person will, then, sacrifice his life for his country, to save his children, or for some other goal which, to them, is more important than life itself.

But, generally, yes. Whenever the proposition "A has value in order to B" is used, it identifies A as having instrumental value (for the sake of B) and B as having value for its own sake.

(Note: Technically, B can also have instrumental value for the sake of C, and C for the sake of D, and so forth, but somewhere the chain must end -- and that end is that which has value for its own sake.)


Quote:
Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
<strong>By the way, it appears that Alonzo and I are using the term “intrinsic value” in different senses. </strong>
It seems that way. An 'intrinsic value' means value independent of how the thing evaluated stands in relation to any external property. Desire is an external property, so desire-dependent value is not intrinsic value. But the phrases "good as an end" and "good for its own sake" have reasonable interpretations that are consistent with desire-dependent value.

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: Alonzo Fyfe ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 12:10 PM   #103
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Quote:
Originally posted by bd: Koyaanisqatsi:
You have accused me of intellectual dishonesty
Not accused, per se, demonstrated.

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MORE: - of deliberately misrepresenting what you said.
No, of taking my words out of context in order to accuse me of making arguments I did not make.

Do you see the distinction yet?

I would be hard pressed indeed to find a better example of what you've been doing and continue to do.

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MORE: So I’m taking valuable time from a serious discussion of the issues to rebut this charge.
Of your own making. How typical of what I've been on about.

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MORE: Sadly, I have come to the conclusion that you’re right about one thing: in dealing with you it is necessary to keep quoting the same things over and over, both to avoid being charged with taking things out of context and to clarify the order in which things were said.
And even sadder still is the fact that you've forced me to do it yet again.

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MORE: So let’s review once again what was said, and when.
You mean like what I just did in my last post that you aren't directly addressing?

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MORE: From your post of May 17 (09:49 AM)
So, in other words, not from my first post, where I used a personal example to demonstrate the subjective nature of morality, thereby establishing right out of the gate both my position and the support of my position; you know, the first post among all of my posts that you had claimed you read and could find no examples of my arguing and/or demonstrating the lack of objective morality?

Fine. Let's follow your revision of history and see how you take my words out of context again in order to accuse me of arguments that I never made.

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MORE: [In response to my point that people disagree about the age of the Earth, but that doesn’t show that there is no objective truth about it:]

ME: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

Let's say for the sake of argument (in keeping with my example) that you believe masturbation is "morally wrong" and I believe it is "morally right" (as in, morally acceptable).

Who is "objectively" right or wrong here? No one, because such labels have no intrinsic meaning in regard to morality in the manner that they would in your analogy.

And, come to think of it, your analogy is flawed on another level, because of the confusion of the contextual meanings of the words "right" and "wrong."

From my post of May 20:

[In response to your statement that my analogy is not valid or applicable:]
But your only argument as to why it isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim that there are no objective moral truths.

[later]

The question is whether it makes sense to say that it is objectively true or false (or if you prefer, correct or incorrect) that an act is morally wrong. Stating repeatedly that it doesn’t is not an argument.

From your post of May 21 (10:02 AM):

Then what is the evidence for an objective truth?
[later:]

What would the objective truth be and what's more, how would it be established?

[Still later, in response to my statement that “your only argument as to why it isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim...”:]

Bullshit! You've taken this completely out context. Re-read (and post in entirety) what I posted.

[Even later:]

You had argued (with your analogy) that the earth's age is objectively true independent of what somebody believes and I was demonstrating that the analogy was not valid and not applicable to the argument of objective morality, because objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist independently of "somebody" in the manner that the Earth's age can be.

From my post of May 21 (2:48 PM):

[In response to “You've taken this completely out context. Re-read ... what I posted”:]
I read your post (in fact, all of your posts on this thread) in their entirety before saying this. I stand by it.
Sorry to interrupt, but so far you've made no counter-argument at all.

Everything I posted (including, especially, the details you have been leaving out in support of my arguments) still demonstrates my position perfectly and nothing you have posted counters it, so I'm at a loss so far as to why you consider any of this to have been a response to anything I wrote.

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MORE: [Later, in response to your claim that “I was demonstrating [in the May 17 post] that the analogy was not valid ... because objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist”:]

You didn’t argue that objective morality doesn’t exist because it cannot be demonstrated to exist; in fact, you had never even brought up the question of whether it can be demonstrated to exist until now.
To which I responded by pointing out every single instance in which I was both arguing the lack of objective morality and demonstrating that it cannot possibly exist.

I'm sorry I didn't paint you a picture in bold E Z 2 READ TYPE that connected all the dots back to: therefore, based on everything I have already posted, I have been arguing that objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist.

I would have thought my direct questions to you regarding just one example of an "objectively moral" scenario that could:
<ol type="A">[*] exist[*] be demonstrated to exist through providing us all with the mechanism of that objectivity[/list=a]

would have done it.

As you had claimed, you aren't an idiot, so pardon me for assuming that my position was abundantly clarified several times.

Quote:
MORE: Now as to your latest post:

You repeatedly accuse me of representing you as making arguments that you never made.
Again, I didn't accuse you, I demonstrated how you took my words out of their context in order to accuse me of making arguments I did not make.

As I clearly showed in painstaking detail, You accused me of making an argument that I did not make.

Please get it right and never vary from my wording again.

Thank you.

Quote:
MORE: In particular, regarding my May 20 statement that “... your only argument as to why [my analogy to the age of the Earth] isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim that there are no objective moral truths,” you say:

ME: In other words, I did not argue that your analogy was invalid or inapplicable simply because, "I assert there are no objective moral truths."

That is an argument I never made, either directly or indirectly.

YOU: But as can be seen by reading your May 17 post, this was the only argument you made, and you did make it directly.
READ IT AGAIN A THOUSAND TIMES!

Quote:
MY MAY 17TH POST IN BIG E Z 2 READ TYPE:

YOU:Thus, many people believe that Earth has existed for more than a million years, and many others believe that it was created much more recently than that. Both beliefs are in most cases the result of cultural conditioning. It doesn’t follow that there is no objective truth of the matter.

ME: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

Let's say for the sake of argument (in keeping with my example) that you believe masturbation is "morally wrong" and I believe it is "morally right" (as in, morally acceptable).

Who is "objectively" right or wrong here? No one, because such labels have no instrinsic meaning in regard to morallity in the manner that they would in your analogy.
NO INTRINSIC MEANING IN THE MANNER THAT THEY WOULD IN YOUR ANALOGY.

Your analogy was flawed because there is intrinsic meaning to the statement: It is correct to state that the Earth is X years old!

There is, however, NO intrinsic meaning to the statement: It is correct to state that masturbation is morally wrong!

Hence my very next words:

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ME FROM MY OWN POST AGAIN: Who is "objectively" right or wrong here? No one, because such labels have no instrinsic meaning in regard to morallity in the manner that they would in your analogy.

And, come to think of it, your analogy is flawed on another level, because of the confusion of the contextual meanings of the words "right" and "wrong."

In your analogy--regarding the age of the Earth--one is neither "right" nor "wrong" per se, one is either "correct" or "incorrect;" a subtle but salient point.

The Earth is as old as the Earth is, so to state, "I believe it is younger than it actually is" is to be incorrect, but this analogy does not likewise apply to the question of whether or not masturbation can be considered "wrong" or "right" in a moral sense.

One cannot say, for example, that masturbation is "correct" or "incorrect."
There is no way to mistake what I was typing and the distinctions I was making in regard to your analogy and why it was neither valid nor applicable.

Nor is there any way that you could not link what I was arguing to my very first post where I demonstrated through the use of personal experience precisely how and why there is no and can be no such thing as objective morality!

Hence my qualifier:

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ME: Let's say for the sake of argument (in keeping with my example)
!!!Merde!!!

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MORE: You also made some comments about the analogy being “flawed” because of a “confusion of the contextual meanings of the words ‘right’ and ‘wrong.’” But I never even used the words “right” and “wrong” in the analogy, so it’s hard to see how I could have “confused” their “contextual meanings”.
CHRIST ON A POGO STICK! There you go AGAIN!

From my post:
Quote:
ME: And, come to think of it, your analogy is flawed on another level, because of the confusion of the contextual meanings of the words "right" and "wrong."

In your analogy--regarding the age of the Earth--one is neither "right" nor "wrong" per se, one is either "correct" or "incorrect;" a sublte but salient point.

The Earth is as old as the Earth is, so to state, "I believe it is younger than it actually is" is to be incorrect, but this analogy does not likewise apply to the question of whether or not masturbation can be considered "wrong" or "right" in a moral sense.

One cannot say, for example, that masturbation is "correct" or "incorrect."
As you can plainly see, I was deconstructing your analogy in order to demonstrate why it was not valid and not applicable.

GOT IT?

Quote:
MORE: Anyway, your point here, as I understand it, is that one cannot meaningfully use the words “correct” and “incorrect” in the context of moral statements
<img src="graemlins/banghead.gif" border="0" alt="[Bang Head]" /> <img src="graemlins/banghead.gif" border="0" alt="[Bang Head]" /> <img src="graemlins/banghead.gif" border="0" alt="[Bang Head]" />

YOUR ANALOGY OF THE EARTH'S AGE WAS INVALID AND NOT APPLICABLE, BECAUSE THE AGE OF THE EARTH IS AN OBJECTIVE FACT INDEPENDENT OF WHAT SOMEONE DOES OR DOES NOT BELIEVE.

MASTURBATION BEING MORAL AND/OR IMMORAL, HOWEVER, IS NOT AND CANNOT EVER POSSIBLY BE DESCRIBED AS AN OBJECTIVE FACT INDEPENDENT OF WHAT SOMEONE DOES OR DOES NOT BELIEVE.

IT IS IMPOSSIBLE--MEANING NOT POSSIBLE--TO EVER, IN ANY IMAGINED UNIVERSE WITH OR WITHOUT A GOD POSITED AS THE OBJECTIVE MORAL MANDATOR, TO SHOW THAT MASTURBATION IS OBJECTIVELY MORALLY WRONG.

THE TERM "OBJECTIVE MORALITY" IS AN OXYMORON; A CONTRADICTORY, MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE AND THEREFORE INVALID TERM THAT INHERENTLY CANCELS ITSELF OUT AS DEMONSTRATED BY ME, MY ARGUMENTS AND EXAMPLES FROM MY VERY FIRST POST ONWARD.

Is that finally clear now, because that is what I have been arguing either directly, indirectly or tattooed to my friggin' forehead?

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MORE: – the reason being, presumably, that there are no objective moral truths. So you also made this argument implicitly – i.e., indirectly.
NO! I did not. I clearly and readily deconstructed precisely why your analogy was invalid and not applicable and even further clarified my position to Helen in my next posts that you claimed to have read, as I pointed out to you in my last post!

Now I am unquestionably accusing you in my very own words of intellectual dishonesty.

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MORE: And of course this argument doesn’t show in the least that my example is flawed. The point was simply that the fact that people disagree about something doesn’t show in itself that there is no objective truth involved.
And MY POINT WAS THAT MORALITY IS NOT A "THING" AND THEREFORE CANNOT BE SAID TO BE OBJECTIVELY TRUE!

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YOU: Obviously it’s meaningless to say that an action is “correct” in the sense of being true or false. The question is whether it makes sense to say that it is objectively true or false (or if you prefer, correct or incorrect) that an act is morally wrong. Stating repeatedly that it doesn’t is not an argument.

ME: Well, then, I'm glad I didn't do that as is readily apparent in my post.

You had argued (with your analogy) that the earth's age is objectively true independent of what somebody believes and I was demonstrating that the analogy was not valid and not applicable to the argument of objective morality, because objvective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist independently of "somebody" in the manner that the Earth's age can be.

One is a fact. The Earth is X years old. It is not Y years old, so for anybody to say, "I believe the Earth is Y years old," they are simply and irrefutably objectively incorrect in their belief. The Earth is X years old no matter what somebody else believes.

The morality of masturbation, on the other hand is not analogous in the same manner, since there is no objective "X" that can be demonstrated to exist to the question of whether or not masturbation is immoral in the same manner that the Earth is "X" years old.

The only way you could demonstrate such an "objective X" for masturbation is to prove that a god exists who in turn has simply subjectively mandated that masturbation is immoral, in which case you would have simply shifted the exact same subjectivity onto the god.

No matter how you slice it, it is not possible to ever state that masturbation is objectively immoral, even with the proof that a god exists.
Is that crystal clear now?

Quote:
MORE: It did not purport to show that there is necessarily an objective truth involved.
Nice backpedalling, (especially in light of the addendum to your analogy, "It doesn’t follow that there is no objective truth of the matter"), but completely irrelevant to my deconstruction and demonstration of why your analogy was not valid and not applicable to the question of objective morality as has been shown so many times that I'm ready to simply punch my monitor and be done with this.

Your analogy was flawed because the age of the Earth is a fixed number that is either correct or incorrect.

The question of masturbation's morality, however, is not a "fixed number" that is either correct or incorrect, nor can it be since morality is inherently and as a necessary defining quality a personal judgement call.

It can not be demonstrated in any possible universe that masturbation is "objectively good" or "objectively bad," and this extant fact is inherent within the terminology.

If I am incorrect, then I will ask you one last time to provide a single counter argument, because if you cannot, then your statement, "It does not follow that there is no objective truth" is INCORRECT AND MUST BE RESCINDED.

It does in fact "follow" that there is no objective truth behind the declaration, "Masturbation is objectively morrally wrong."

The phrase itself is contradictory and inherently false because it cannot be demonstrated to be true in any possible universe, including one in which a god is posited as the arbitor of objectivity.

Therefore, your statement "It does not follow" and your analogy are, as stated, invalid and not applicable.

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MORE: Obviously it’s possible for people to disagree about something under the impression that there is an objectively correct answer when there really isn’t.
WHO CARES? This has nothing to do with anything we have been discussing and certainly nothing whatsoever to do with my deconstruction of your invalid analogy, the apparent only point still in contention.

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MORE: In fact, you’re the one who is misrepresenting your own argument.
Beg pardon??

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MORE: You now say:

ME: The arguments I did make - that your scenario was inherently subjective "and here's why"; that it would not be possible for you to demonstrate what about it necessarily entailed an objective solution... were simply ignored by you.
Once again, if you're going to quote me, quote me entirely and in context if you friggin' please!

Here's the entirety of my response:

Quote:
ME: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

YOU: But your only argument as to why it isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim that there are no objective moral truths.

ME (RESPONDING IN FULL TO YOUR TAKING MY WORDS OUT OF CONTEXT IN ORDER TO ACCUSE ME OF MAKING AN ARGUMENT I NEVER DID):
<ol type="1">[*] It wasn't the "only" argument[*] I made no "unsupported claims"[*] The arguments I did make--that your scenario was inherently subjective "and here's why"; that it would not be possible for you to demonstrate what about it necessarily entailed an objective solution; that the Earth's age is not ambiguous, but beliefs are by their very nature; that you used improper terminology in your analogy rendering it invalid; etc.--were simply ignored by you in favor of addressing a snippet from my post out of context so that you could "accuse me of making arguments I never did, just so that you can address them according to your own agenda."[/list=a]

In other words, I did not argue that your analogy was invalid or inapplicable simply because, "I assert there are no objective moral truths."

That is an argument I never made, either directly or indirectly.
Clear now, for the third time?

Quote:
YOU: The first point seems to be yet another way of saying that there are no objective moral truths,
How is my demonstrating that your scenario was inherently subjective "seem" in any way, shape or form to be "yet another way of saying that there are no objective moral truths," and, further, how is your continued evasion from addressing my arguments in this manner at all relevant?

If I demonstrate that there can be no objective moral truths, then I have demonstrated that there can be no objective moral truths!

Quote:
MORE: a point that I can hardly be said to have ignored.
Correct. "Evaded" is a much better choice of words.

You are doing it here again. Your comment was not a counter-argument at all and amounts to you stating, in essence and substance, nothing at all.

I demonstrated that your analogy was not valid and not applicable by deconstructing the inherently subjective nature of the actual application of your analogy to the question of masturbation being either morally "right" or morally "wrong" and through that deconstruction established a solid counter-argument that shows quite clearly how and why your analogy is not valid and not applicable.

Your response is to say, "This seems to be yet another way of saying that there are no objective moral truths."

No "seems" about it! Deconstructed, demonstrated, left without counter-argumentation.

I shouldn't have to point out to you that saying, "This seems to be yet another way of saying there are no objective moral truths" does not constitute as counter-argumentation or counter-deconstruction, but obviously I must and therefore, just have.

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MORE: As to the second point, I could hardly have ignored it on May 20 because it hadn’t been made yet.
If you will kindly notice the chronology of my responses, you will see you are incorrect:

Quote:
Originally posted by bd on page three:

ME: We're not talking about a "belief" being formed; we're talking about morality being formed.

YOU: Of course beliefs are often being formed – namely, beliefs that certain things are objective moral truths. If there are no objective moral truths, of course, all such beliefs are false, but they’re still beliefs. The point is that the fact that Smith believes that a given action is “right” and Jones believes that it’s “wrong” is not evidence that there is no objective truth of the matter. There might not be any objective truth of the matter, but if you want to argue that there isn’t you need something better than the mere existence of disagreements.

ME: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

YOU: But your only argument as to why it isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim that there are no objective moral truths.
Compared with:

Quote:
ME: Originally posted by bd: Of course beliefs are often being formed – namely, beliefs that certain things are objective moral truths.

ME: Yes. Beliefs, though, are necessarily subjective!

YOU: If there are no objective moral truths, of course, all such beliefs are false, but they’re still beliefs.

ME: And therefore subjective.

YOU: The point is that the fact that Smith believes that a given action is “right” and Jones believes that it’s “wrong” is not evidence that there is no objective truth of the matter.

ME: Then what is the evidence for an objective truth?
Clear now? Probably not, so let's keep going...

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ME: You've just contradicted yourself by saying that one person can believe (an inherently subjective action) one thing while another believes something else, but that doesn't mean there isn't an "objective" truth.

What would the objective truth be and what's more, how would it be established?
Ring any bells yet?

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MORE: If you say "God" you've immediately disqualified yourself from this conversation.

YOU: There might not be any objective truth of the matter, but if you want to argue that there isn’t you need something better than the mere existence of disagreements.

ME: No, actually, I don't, even though I provided much more than mere disagreements in my post.
Which I then demonstrated by quoting myself from a previous post, a necessity that is getting far too tiresome:

Quote:
ME: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

YOU: But your only argument as to why it isn’t applicable is your unsupported claim that there are no objective moral truths.
Now pay close attention please to see how I responded to this the first time I addressed it, which, for those keeping score at home is from the same post I've been here quoting on page three:

Quote:
ME: Bullshit! You've taken this completely out context. Re-read (and post in entirety) what I posted.

Nevermind, you're apparenlty not trustworthy enough to do so (a subjective judgment call on my behalf borne out of your actions, thereby demonstrating that consensus does indeed establish a semblance of "objectivity," a point I argued repeatedly):

YOU had stated: Thus, many people believe that Earth has existed for more than a million years, and many others believe that it was created much more recently than that. Both beliefs are in most cases the result of cultural conditioning. It doesn’t follow that there is no objective truth of the matter.

And I responded with: Nor is this analogy valid or applicable to the question at hand.

Let's say for the sake of argument (in keeping with my example) that you believe masturbation is "morally wrong" and I believe it is "morally right" (as in, morally acceptable).

Who is "objectively" right or wrong here? No one, because such labels have no instrinsic meaning in regard to morallity in the manner that they would in your analogy.

And, come to think of it, your analogy is flawed on another level, because of the confusion of the contextual meanings of the words "right" and "wrong."

In your analogy--regarding the age of the Earth--one is neither "right" nor "wrong" per se, one is either "correct" or "incorrect;" a sublte but salient point.

The Earth is as old as the Earth is, so to state, "I believe it is younger than it actually is" is to be incorrect, but this analogy does not likewise apply to the question of whether or not masturbation can be considered "wrong" or "right" in a moral sense.

One cannot say, for example, that masturbation is "correct" or "incorrect."

Clear now? I would appreciate it if you didn't selectively choose my words in order to accuse me of making arguments I never did, just so that you can address them according to your own agenda.

Address my arguments as I wrote them, if you please.
See the chronology now? Your response to that post was:

Quote:
You, quoting Me in order to respond:Bullshit! You've taken this completely out context. Re-read (and post in entirety) what I posted.

YOU (responding): As for reposting a long excerpt from the same thread, this strikes me as a waste of time and bandwidth. But I read your post (in fact, all of your posts on this thread) in their entirety before saying this. I stand by it. You say yourself (see blow) that your claim that my analogy isn’t valid is based on the claim that there are no objective moral truths. Since you’re apparently claiming that you made an argument to this effect somewhere, please point it out. Perhaps my reading comprehension skills have declined in my later years.
Is it getting any clearer now? YOU have been deliberately forcing me to chase after my own tail with this bullshit in order to avoid ever directly addressing any of my arguments!

All I've been trying to do is keep the damn thing straight.

Quote:
MORE: A second accusation of the same kind comes a little later in your new post:

ME: This section of my post was in response to a different false argument you had accused me of.

YOU: Apparently the “false argument” you are saying I “accused you” of is “stating repeatedly” that it doesn’t “make sense to say that it is objectively true or false ... that an act is morally wrong”.
How difficult is it to actually quote me so that you don't constantly rewrite what I wrote?

NEVER USE THE WORD "APPARENTLY" AGAIN WHEN ADDRESSING ANY OF MY ARGUMENTS. STATE SPECFICALLY WHAT MY ARGUMENT WAS AND THEN PRESENT COUNTER-ARGUMENTATION IF YOU PLEASE!

Once again, here's the entirety of what I posted:

Quote:
ME (originally): You had argued (with your analogy) that the earth's age is objectively true independent of what somebody believes...

YOUR RESPONSE (interrupting and redacting the thrust of my argument to make an evasionary and worthless point, thereby excusing you, in your mind, from addressing the actual argument I was making): I didn’t argue that the Earth’s age is objective; I took that for granted.

ME (getting things back on track): And here's another perfect example of you doing precisely what I just accused you of; taking snippets of my post out of context in order for you to selectively concoct arguments that fit your agenda.

This section of my post was in response to a different false argument you had accused me of.

Here's the whole goddamned thing again to demonstrate what I'm talking about:
Wherein I quoted a previous post once again in order to demonstrate what you were doing, to which you still have not countered:

Quote:
ME: Address my arguments as I wrote them, if you please.

The following is a perfect example of what I'm talking about:

ME (originally): One cannot say, for example, that masturbation is "correct" or "incorrect."

YOU (responding): Obviously it’s meaningless to say that an action is “correct” in the sense of being true or false. The question is whether it makes sense to say that it is objectively true or false (or if you prefer, correct or incorrect) that an act is morally wrong. Stating repeatedly that it doesn’t is not an argument.

ME (responding): Well, then, I'm glad I didn't do that as is readily apparent in my post.

You had argued (with your analogy) that the earth's age is objectively true independent of what somebody believes and I was demonstrating that the analogy was not valid and not applicable to the argument of objective morality, because objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist independently of "somebody" in the manner that the Earth's age can be.

Got that? That was my argument, which I then went on to support, which you, again have ignored:

ME (supporting my argument): One is a fact. The Earth is X years old. It is not Y years old, so for anybody to say, "I believe the Earth is Y years old," they are simply and irrefutably objectively incorrect in their belief. The Earth is X years old no matter what somebody else believes.
Etc.

Got it? I doubt it, so I'll highlight the salient points:

Quote:
YOU: The question is whether it makes sense to say that it is objectively true or false (or if you prefer, correct or incorrect) that an act is morally wrong. Stating repeatedly that it doesn’t is not an argument.

ME (responding): Well, then, I'm glad I didn't do that as is readily apparent in my post.
That was the "other false argument" you made against me; that all I was doing was stating something repeatedly instead of making any kind of legitimate argument.

I presented my entire deconstruction and the valid reasoning behind it, explaining in detail why your analogy was not valid and not applicable, to which you have not and still will not offer any counter-deconstruction or counter-argument in kind, other than this non-counter-argumentation forcing me to correct your restructuring of posts in order to accuse me of making arguments I never did again and again and again.

It is clearly nothing more than an evasion tactic.

Quote:
MORE (from your latest post): Actually, as I pointed out, this isn’t an argument at all, false or otherwise.
For clarity's sake (and my own headache), bd is referring to his non-argument made previously:

Quote:
bd:Apparently the “false argument” you are saying I “accused you” of is “stating repeatedly” that it doesn’t “make sense to say that it is objectively true or false ... that an act is morally wrong”.
Once again, for clarity, the "false argument" you accused me of was not making any argument; that all I was doing was stating something repeatedly, which was not true.

Quote:
MORE: And at that point (that is, as of May 20) you had yet to offer anything that could be called an argument to this effect, although you had made this assertion repeatedly.
You are incorrect as has been consistently demonstrated; worse you are obviously belaboring this nonsense so that you don't have to address any of the arguments I have made.

Quote:
MORE: In attempting to show that you had made such an argument, you helpfully quoted the relevant passages from your posts that predated my May 20 post, which demonstrate clearly that you made no such argument, and in particular that you never even brought up the question of whether moral statements could be demonstrated to be true.
Trivial, pointless, evasion. My position has been and is abundantly clear as is your evasion from both my arguments and my direct questions to you regarding your unsupportable claim that an inherently subjective "belief" scenario like the one you presented does not preclude an objective moral truth.

Quote:
MORE: To be sure, in your earlier posts you appear to be arguing (though it’s hard to be sure)
Then here's a suggestion for you: QUOTE ME DIRECTLY AND ENTIRELY WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF MY ARGUMENT SO THAT YOU NEVER EVER EVER MAKE THIS PATHETIC EVASION ATTEMPT AGAIN.

How's that?

Quote:
MORE: that (1) the fact that moral beliefs (or attitudes if you prefer) are often socially conditioned shows that there are no objective moral truths, and (2) the fact that people often disagree about moral questions shows that there are no objective moral truths.
What else does it seem I was arguing? Please, I'm curious as to what else my words will sound like coming out of your mouth, as it were. It's fascinating to watch you justify this pointless evasion tactic of yours, you know? Instead of just directly addressing what I did argue?

Quote:
MORE: But as I had pointed out even before my May 20 post, both of these are simply non sequiturs,
You mean, both of the arguments that I seem to have made? Hunh...

And, what of the arguments I actually did make? Will you ever address those? Ever?

Quote:
MORE: which is to say that they aren’t arguments at all.
Wait, so the arguments that I seemed to have been making weren't arguments at all.

Would that be about the time you came up with your analogy? The one that I demonstrated to be inapplicable and invalid that you have never counter-addressed, only evaded in this manner?

So it would seem to me, that I used a personal example of something that had happened in my life to demonstrate that there is no such thing as objective morality and your response was to apparently say that such a personal anecdote does not necessarily preclude objectivity--using an analogy to illustrate your point--to which I then showed how the analogy wasn't applicable and subsequently asked you (if I've got this right) to demonstrate how an inherently subjective judgment call could possibly be considered either morally objective or how such objectivity could possibly be mandated (in keeping with the fact that I had gone into deconstructive detail regarding the inherent subjectivity of all moral judgment calls as well as the reasoning behind the impossibility and contradictory nature inherent within the oxymoronic term "objective morality") and your entire response, so it seems, is to play this stupid game in order to avoid addressing anything salient from my posts.

Hey, this is fun.

Quote:
MORE: So whether or not you meant these points to be taken as arguments, you had not actually made any arguments to the effect that there are no objective moral truths.
Enough of this. I stated in my second and third posts precisely what my position was and precisely what I was arguing.

Quote:
MORE: Of course, you finally got around to making an argument in your May 21 post, namely that objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist. This is a valid point;
And a trivial distinction on your part, as I contend, in order to avoid dealing with anything else I wrote regarding the invalidity and inapplicable nature of your analogy.

More later.

(edited for tone and formatting - Koy)

[ May 30, 2002: Message edited by: Koyaanisqatsi ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 06:19 PM   #104
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Alonzo Fyfe:

When you say that your moral system is “objective”, you seem to mean two things:

(A) Under your system, the question of whether a given action is “right” or “wrong” has a well-defined “correct” answer. That is, at least in principle, anyone with enough information can determine the answer by following a prescribed procedure, and anyone who does so will get the same answer.

(B) This procedure [and thus the moral theory that it implements] is itself “objectively correct”. That is, the answers it gives (and by implication your moral theory) are “objectively true”, and any moral theory that yields different answers is “objectively false”.

In my last two posts I tended to jumble these separate claims, which resulted in a certain loss of focus. In this one I am going to concentrate exclusively on the second.

But first, I want explain why I say that you are making this claim. Although you have never made it explicitly, you have said several things that only make sense on the basis of it.

The first (and strongest) indications are in your May 17, 2:56 PM post. Here you answered the question, ”How do you test the soundness of your theory?”, by saying, ”I look for evidence that any of the propositions within the theory are false or inconsistent.”. Now the “inconsistent” part is straightforward, but unless it is meaningful to say that your theory is objectively true or false, it cannot make sense to talk about “propositions within the theory” being true or false. And of course you contend that you have searched for such false propositions within the theory and found none. And if there aren’t any, all of the propositions within the theory are true, which is to say that the theory itself is objectively true.

A second indication can be found in your May 18, 6:09 AM post:

Quote:
The question that then comes up in my mind is "Whose desires are then relevant in moral propositions? Yours alone? Mine alone? All men? All white people?"

The answer that I defend is that moral values are based on all of the desires that exist, regardless of who has them.
Here you do not say merely that this is your answer, but that this is the answer that you defend. So far as I can see, the only possible meaning of this is that you consider this to be the correct answer. Otherwise, if someone had a different answer there would be no need to “defend” yours, any more than you need to “defend” your preference for apples against someone who prefers oranges.

So it’s pretty clear that you are indeed claiming that your answer is the “correct” one, and all others are “incorrect”. But how are we to evaluate this claim? How do we distinguish between correct and incorrect answers?

For example, in what sense is the statement “The desires of all white people and only white people are relevant to moral propositions” incorrect, as opposed to merely being different from your answer? And how do we know that it’s incorrect? On this point you have had precious little to say.

Of course, as you’ve pointed out many times, this statement takes a “some things considered” point of view, whereas your moral theory is based on an “all things considered” perspective. But why does this matter? Why is an “all things considered” perspective appropriate for a moral theory while a “some things considered” one is not?

The basic problem here is that you essentially ignore the question of the purpose and function of morality. It is impossible to discuss what is morally relevant intelligibly without reference to this question, any more than it is possible to explain why a bicycle tire is typically filled to a higher pressure than an air mattress without considering the purpose and function of the two.

An excellent illustration of the problem is in your May 17, 2:56 PM post, where you give an example of how you “look for evidence that any of the propositions within the theory are false” by considering an objection that turns on the statement “To say that I ought to do the best all things considered means that I must have some reason to do the best all things considered.” Your “refutation” is simply to deny that this is true:

Quote:
[This statement] is true within the context of practical reasoning, but not within the context of moral reasoning.
And why isn’t it true? Why, because your moral theory says so:

Quote:
...moral ought looks at all the reasons that exist for your doing or not doing an action, regardless of who has them.
This is not very enlightening. What are your grounds for saying that “moral ought looks at all the reasons that exist”? And how does one evaluate the implied claim that moral ought looks only at reasons that “exist” in the sense that some actual person has them? Without some account of the purpose and function of morality it would seem to be impossible to make any progress here, because there is no criterion of “correctness”.

Again, in your May 20, 5:40 AM post you say:

Quote:
Typically, I focus on agent-subjectivism in my criticism of subjectivism because a large majority of subjectivists are agent-subjectivists...

If we accept agent subjectivism, and an agent A cares about the well being of patient B, then B's desires will be relevant to A, and A will act to benefit B. But B only has moral significance (for A) to the degree that A cares about B... In short, B's well being is morally relevant only to the degree and only in the manner that A cares about B's well being.
In view of the first paragraph I presume that what follows is intended as a criticism (not merely a description) of agent subjectivism. But what’s the point? Why is the fact that, according to agent subjectivism, B’s well-being is morally relevant only to the degree that A cares about it a defect in this type of moral theory? Why isn’t the fact that under your theory B’s well being is morally relevant regardless of whether A cares about it a defect in your theory?

In this same post you say:

Quote:
The lack of a consensus is a consequence of their "some things considered" moral evaluations. If you were to take a list of numbers, for example, and sum up various subsets of numbers, with different subsets you will get different sums. And there is no way to make these different sums equal. This is the moral reasoning of subjectivists with their "some things considered" moral judgments.
Now of course some subjective theories have the property that the answer depends on who is “doing the sum”. Thus if the “rightness” of an act depends on my attitude toward it (assessor subjectivism) the same act is “right” or “wrong” depending on who is assessing it. But this is not true of agent subjectivism. Nor is it true of cultural subjectivism if there is an objective procedure for determining who is a member of what “culture”.

Thus it appears that your real complaint is not that any one subjective theory necessarily gives different results depending on who is doing the “computation”, but that different subjective theories give different results, which don’t all agree with the results given by your theory. But since this is equally true of any version of agent subjectivism or cultural subjectivism, why isn’t the fact that your theory gives a different result than the one given by (say) some particular version of cultural subjectivism an argument against your theory?

Your analogy with doing a sum is obviously designed to suggest that the “right” answer is obtained by adding all the numbers. But this is hardly self-evident. For example, suppose that the numbers in the list represent the balances in all of the accounts at a given bank, and the question is how much John Q. Smith has on deposit at that bank. In that case the correct answer is obtained by adding only the numbers that correspond to John Q. Smith’s accounts. So again we see that this kind of question does not have a self-evidently correct answer that can be determined without reference to the purpose and function of morality.

To be fair, you have made one comment about the purpose and function of morality, in your May 21, 5:40 AM post:

Quote:
My take on the "very purpose and function of morality" is to minimize harm to others.
But this will hardly do. In fact, I see at least four problems with this statement.

1. It is absurd. The ideal way to minimize harm to others is to kill everyone immediately. True, this will be harming them, but it is a harm they will inevitably suffer anyway. And it avoids all of the other harm that they would otherwise suffer in the meantime. Most important, it prevents the creation of still more people who are doomed to suffer harm.

2. It is inconsistent with your own moral theory. Your theory locates all value in the satisfaction of desires, not in minimizing harm. To put it another way, this “purpose and function” entails negative utilitarianism whereas you advocate preference utilitarianism.

Of course, you could “fix” this by revising your account to say that the purpose and function of morality is to maximize the satisfaction of actual, existing desires. But this would serve only to lay bare a more fundamental problem with this sort of account: it is unavoidably question-begging. It specifies the “morally correct” ultimate end of all human action, which is one of the central questions dealt with by moral theories. What I had in mind was something that could be discovered by analyzing the logic of moral discourse, the contexts in which it is used, etc., which left open the question of what moral theory (if any) was “correct”. Otherwise the very questions for which we need such an account in order to make progress are answered by this very account, which is putting the cart before the horse. In the same way, it would be inappropriate to define the purpose and function of physics as “discovering the laws governing the interactions between quarks and gluons”.

3. It contradicts what you said quite recently on the <a href="http://iidb.org/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=52&t=000165" target="_blank">Morality is Evil</a> thread, as can be seen from the following exchange:

Quote:
AF:
[The] basic incoherence [in moral language as it is commonly used] is this: that morality requires at the same time that moral ought be tied directly to the desires of the agent about whom it is being applied...

bd:
The phrase “tied directly to the desires of the agent” is extremely ambiguous. It could mean that the thing that it is said that one “ought” to do must be something that the agent actually does desire to do, or that it is something that it would be rational for him to desire to do, or that it is something he would desire to do if he’d had a proper upbringing, or something that you are trying to induce or persuade him to desire to do. Or it could mean any number of other things.

AF:
Yes it is. But, in the context where I used the phrase, it applies to every one of the interpretations you mentioned.
So in particular it applies to the last interpretation, that of inducing or persuading the agent to desire to act in a certain way. But if it is logically incoherent to say that the purpose of using moral language (such as “moral ought”) is to induce or persuade an agent to desire to act in a certain way, it is also incoherent to define the purpose and function of morality as “minimizing harm to others”. Moral language could only minimize harm to others by inducing people to desire to avoid harming others, and according to you it is incoherent to suppose that moral language could have any such function.

4. It fails to distinguish between morality and many other things. For example, a great deal of “positive law” is designed to minimize harm to others. But moral discourse relies strictly on the giving of reasons of a certain kind for acting or refraining from acting in certain ways. As soon as the use of force (or even social sanctions) comes into play one has left the realm of morality, except in the sense that one might morally approve of a given use of force. And not even all cases of “giving reasons” qualify as moral discourse. For example, if I point out that doing something will enhance our friendship, or promise to do something for you in return, or point out that it will be to your advantage to do it, I am not engaged in moral discourse.

In summary, I believe that you have failed to give a remotely adequate reason to prefer your moral theory to others, much less to believe that it is “objectively correct” in any intelligible sense. And I believe that you have no chance of doing so until you can offer a reasonable account of the purpose and function of moral discourse.

[ May 29, 2002: Message edited by: bd-from-kg ]</p>
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Old 05-29-2002, 07:03 PM   #105
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Koy,

Your frustration may be warranted, but that does not give you an excuse to resort to insults and expletives.

Either tone down your posts or remove yourself from the discussion. Additional posts with such language will be deleted regardless of how much work you have put into them.

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Old 05-29-2002, 08:10 PM   #106
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Quote:
Originally posted by bd-from-kg:
<strong>When you say that your moral system is "objective", you seem to mean two things:

(A) Under your system, the question of whether a given action is "right" or "wrong" has a well-defined "correct" answer. That is, at least in principle, anyone with enough information can determine the answer by following a prescribed procedure, and anyone who does so will get the same answer.

(B) This procedure [and thus the moral theory that it implements] is itself "objectively correct". That is, the answers it gives (and by implication your moral theory) are "objectively true", and any moral theory that yields different answers is "objectively false".</strong>
(B) is close, but not precisely accurate.

There are two different types of moral theories that I raise objections against. One type presupposes some type of some type of desire-independent moral property, which does not exist, so moral propositions within such a theory are all false. For example, the proposition masturbation is wrong almost always postulates some sort of desire-independent badness in nonprocreative sex. And those types of statements are false. It is hard to argue for a wrongness of masturbation based solely on desire-dependent value.

But there is a second type of theory that allows allows for desire-dependent value, but only considers some subset of desires -- typically, only those of the agent. These some-things- considered moral theories yield true claims -- there is a right answer as to how something stands in relation to this subset of desires. However, their "morality" is one of selfishness, cruelty, violence, abuse, and exploitation, These are members of the "morality is evil" family.

How can different "moral theories" yield different objectively true moral claims? I typically use location as an example. The proposition "the keys are on the table" and "the keys are next to my wallet" can both -- at the same time -- be objectively true. They do not contradict each other.

At which point, you are going to ask me to explain how an "all things considered" description is better than a "some things considered" description. After all, again referring to the location analogy, it is at best odd to say that "the keys are on the table" is more correct than "the keys are next to the wallet" when they are both objectively true.

In answering this question, I call J.L. Mackie to the stand. The word "atom" used to mean "without parts" and used to refer to minute particles of gold, lead, iron, and the like. But we discovered that these minute things were not without parts. Then, we had a choice to make.

(1) To continue to use the word "atom" to mean "without parts" and to say that these bits of gold, lead, iron, etc., were not in fact atoms.

(2) To continue to use the word "atom" to refer to these minute particles of gold, lead, iron, etc. and to change the meaning of the word to allow for the fact that these things do have parts.

(3) Preserve both the meaning and the reference for the word "atom" and assert that the whole of atomic theory is to be discarded because minute particles of gold, lead, iron, and the like that is without parts is a myth -- they do not exist, they never did exist.

Now, at this point, there is no "correct answer" to the question of which option we should take. Language is an invention, and we can invent language as we see fit -- as serves our purpose.

Yet, the absence of a "correct answer" does not make chemistry any less objective. Nor -- as you yourself once pointed out -- does the absence of a "correct answer" imply that there is no "best answer".

Of course, "best" here is a value-laden term, and as such is prone to the same types of issues as all other value-laden terms. The "best answer" must be the most efficient at fulfilling some presumed set of desires. This is all a part of the recursive element of value theory that I have talked about earlier; similar to coherentism in epistemology.

My criticism of some-things-considered moral theories is, as I stated above, that they are an ethic of selfishness, cruelty, violence, abuse, and exploitation. Under a some-things-considered moral theory, these types of acts are ruled out only contingently at best and, at worst, not at all. There is nothing objectively incorrect in defining 'moral' in a some-things-considered sense; language is an invention. Yet, this does not prevent morality -- so defined -- from being a morality of selfishness and abuse.

I cannot say that it is "incorrect" to use the term "moral" in this way, just as it is not "incorrect" to use the word 'atom' to mean 'without parts'. As long as one is willing to accept the implications.

We would also have to seriously alter the types of reasons we offer in moral debate. In these debates, people typically offer reasons that bear no relation at all to the agent's reasons -- they consider everybody. In such a debate, proof of the conclusion "It is morally permissible for A to do X" directly implies that "It would be wrong to prevent A from doing X." This implication makes sense under an all-things-considered theory, but not under a theory that looks only at the reasons the agent has in determining what the agent ought and ought not to do.

Consider the example of Jones killing Smith for his money. In a genuine debate outside of an intellectual forum, this is not a debate over whether Jones has reason or not to kill Smith. It is a debate over whether Smith and the rest of us have a reason to try to stop him. Jones' reasons are considered relevant only insofar as they are reasons we have a reason to encourage or discourage.

This is how it can be wrong for Jones to kill Smith even if he can do so with impunity -- because it remains true that we have reason to try to stop him even if we fail. Such an analysis makes sense of the fact that if we have sufficient reason to try to stop him then he is not, at the same time, at liberty to resist.

You yourself have argued that moral ought has to have something to do with what people have a reason to do. But, again, what justifies the presumption that the relevant question is what Jones has a reason to do, as opposed to a question about what Smith and society at large have sufficient reason to prevent Jones from doing?

In summary, I raise different types of objections against different types of alternative theories.

Moral propositions contained within theories that require some sort of desire-independent value are all false. No such value exists.

Moral propositions contained within a theory that makes evaluations relative only to some desires are capable of being objectively true. But it is also objectively true that they make up a morality of harm, selfishness, cruelty, violence, abuse, and exploitation -- because those who have the desires excluded from moral calculations are mere things to those whose desires are included -- valuable only insofar as they are useful tools for those whose desires are considered. All of these latter terms make unavoidable reference to the desires of the agent's victim, even if we decide to define moral terms in a way that refers necessarily only to the desires of the agent and only contingently to the desires of others.

[ May 30, 2002: Message edited by: Alonzo Fyfe ]</p>
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Old 05-30-2002, 02:46 AM   #107
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Koyaanisqatsi

I'm having difficulty understanding your violent objections to bd's responses.

You have said that people disagree about whether masturbation is "correct" or "right". You have used this as an argument that moral truths do not exist.

bd pointed out, using the "earth age" analogy, that it is quite possible for people to disagree about something for which an objective truth exists.

You discount the "earth age" analogy on the grounds that the earth's age is an objective fact whereas the rightness or wrongness of masturbation is not an objective fact.

Can you not see the circularity of this argument?

By the way, for me, the statement "masturbation is wrong" has about as much moral content as the statement "scratching ones genitals in public is wrong". Many of the challeges to the idea of an objective morality seem to focus on the obvious subjectivity of so-called moral statements without defining morality or what actually constitutes a moral statement.

For me the real debate is about whether any useful objective truths (universal desires and values) can be deduced by examining human morality.

Chris
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Old 05-30-2002, 06:34 AM   #108
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Maverick--

Agreed and accepted. My apologies, bd, but nothing pisses me off faster than someone doing the things you've been doing.

Quote:
Originally posted by The AntiChris:Koyaanisqatsi

I'm having difficulty understanding your violent objections to bd's responses.
It's quite a mess thanks to bd, but my last three posts should have made my objections painfully clear.

Quote:
MORE: You have said that people disagree about whether masturbation is "correct" or "right".
No, I have not. Like bd, I would ask you to re-read my posts and quote me directly instead of incorrectly paraphrasing or summarizing in your own words what my posts state.

Quote:
MORE: You have used this as an argument that moral truths do not exist.
No, I have not. Again, please re-read my posts. I have no intention of cutting and pasting again.

Quote:
MORE: bd pointed out, using the "earth age" analogy, that it is quite possible for people to disagree about something for which an objective truth exists.
And I pointed out (aka, demonstrated why) the analogy is not applicable or valid as well as asked bd to provide just one example and the mechanism that mandates this objective morality.

He chose instead to play evasion games with my posts.

Go figure.

Quote:
MORE: You discount the "earth age" analogy
Just a technical note: I don't "discount" it, I demonstrate why and how it is invalid and not applicable, to which bd still has not countered.

As with bd, I would ask you to use the proper terminology.

Quote:
MORE: on the grounds that the earth's age is an objective fact whereas the rightness or wrongness of masturbation is not an objective fact.

Can you not see the circularity of this argument?
No, I cannot. The Earth's age is not an abstract concept open to interpretation and "exists" independently of the whims of individual belief. The "rightness" or "wrongness" of masturbation, however, is an abstract concept dependent upon interpretation and/or the whims of individual belief, because there is no "fixed number" regarding what is or is not considered to be "right" or "wrong," nor can there ever be a "fixed number" in the same manner as the Earth's age is a "fixed number, even if the factual existence of a god could be proven, since any declaration of that god in regard to masturbation would itself be a subjective declaration.

Contrary and directly to the analogy, even if a god were proved to factually exist, the declaration of that god that the Earth's age is "Y" years old, when we have determined to a reasonable certainty that the Earth's age is actually "X" years old, would not change the Earth's age to "Y" years old.

"Masturbation is wrong," is a decree and inherently subjective, since it is not possible to establish the objective truth of "wrongness."

It is inherently a personal judgment call in all possible universes even if a god were proved to exist, necessarily excluding objectivity by its very nature; therefore "objective morality" is an oxymoron.

As with bd, if you would care to offer a counter argument, please do so, but do not simply state, as bd keeps doing, "That's just another way of saying objective morality doesn't exist," because that is not a counter argument.

Quote:
MORE: By the way, for me, the statement "masturbation is wrong" has about as much moral content as the statement "scratching ones genitals in public is wrong".
Then you concur that "wrongness" and/or "rightness" is inherently a personal judgment call and therefore subjective in nature, excluding the possibility of an objectively true "wrongness" or "rightness" as a necessary quality of the construct, "Morality."

Quote:
MORE: Many of the challeges to the idea of an objective morality seem to focus on the obvious subjectivity of so-called moral statements without defining morality or what actually constitutes a moral statement.
Incorrect. The "challenge" to the idea of an objective morality comes from the fact that the term is self-contradictory.

Quote:
MORE: For me the real debate is about whether any useful objective truths (universal desires and values) can be deduced by examining human morality.
There cannot. It is an impossibility inherent within the terminology, since "desires" and "values" are also terms that are inherently dependent upon subjectivity.

Do you understand now? The terms themselves describe subjective qualities of our existence. That is their purpose and that is their contingent state.

You might as well say, "I'm interested in finding out what color of white a black horse is."

[ May 30, 2002: Message edited by: Koyaanisqatsi ]</p>
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Old 05-30-2002, 07:03 AM   #109
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To the rest of bd's last post to me, in a calmer tone...

Quote:
Originally posted by bd: Of course, you finally got around to making an argument in your May 21 post, namely that objective morality cannot be demonstrated to exist. This is a valid point; in fact, for a logical positivist it is decisive in showing that “objective morality” cannot exist in the same sense that physical objects exist, and that “stealing is wrong”, for example, cannot be objectively true in the same sense that “Chicago is north of Texarkana” is true.
Since you agree with me, I would question why you went on such a pointless and ultimately trivial sidetrack? My very first post demonstrated my position and my second and third clarified my position.

Was it because I demonstrated that your analogy was not applicable and invalid using the exact same analysis that you just used above?

Quote:
MORE: (But as has often been noted, the claim made by logical positivism that a non-tautological statement is only meaningful if it can be verified operationally, at least in principle, is itself a non-tautological statement that cannot be verified operationally, even in principle.
More semantics games?

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MORE: So even a positivist must agree that there is some sense in which a statement which cannot be verified operationally can still meaningfully be said to be true.)
Considering the hopelessly vague terminology you are using, a positivist wouldn't even get that far. They would simply stare at you awaiting specificity of terms.

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MORE: I dealt with this point in a preliminary way in my very next post addressed to you; a fuller answer will have to wait.
Just so long as you specify your terms and stop making analogies that do not apply.

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MORE: But my statement on May 20 that you had made no argument to the effect that there are no objective moral truths was not false or misleading: at that point you hadn’t.
Incorrect as the chronology readily demonstrates.

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MORE: I can put up with a steady stream of pointless verbal abuse and a steady stream of vulgarity,
Considering it was borne out of your posts, that's very big of you.

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MORE: but I do not tolerate being falsely accused of deliberately misrepresenting what someone else has said.
Strawman and not what I was accusing you of initially, but, regardless, I would only counter by saying, "Then don't do it."

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MORE: So our discussion is over.
We were having a "discussion?"

As I saw it, you had incorrectly addressed something I had posted and started this whole nonsense right from the beginning, avoiding and evading any direct counter-argumentation/deconstruction as well as my direct questions in response to what you had posted so that you could force me into chasing after my own tail.

Quote:
MORE: By the way, if you think that "rational belief" is an oxymoron, why were we having a discussion in the first place?
We were not. You were posting trivial flak in order to avoid directly addressing any of my counter-posts.

[ May 30, 2002: Message edited by: Koyaanisqatsi ]</p>
Koyaanisqatsi is offline  
Old 05-30-2002, 09:30 AM   #110
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Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Yes, I have dyslexia. Sue me.
Posts: 6,508
Question

Quote:
Originally posted by dk: I have no idea how “better” could be considered an inherently subjective qualifier.
That's why I asked you the question, "It would serve him better than what and who is the one determining the quality of the 'service' in order to objectively establish that it is, in fact, 'better?'"

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MORE: I used it to mean, superior in merit and rank.
Then you used it in the wrong context. This is what you had posited:

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dk: In the discussion I presented a dilemma. First, an honest person tells the truth when a lie would serve him better; a dishonest person tells a lie when the truth would serve him better. I noted that proportionalism, utilitarianism and relativism might conclude moral equivalency from the dilemma. However, then I explained the reason proportionalism, utilitarianism and relativism fail, and objective morality succeeds. Communication can only succeed with an honest exchange that culminates in understanding.
Let's plug in your stated meanings to the relevant section to truly test your conclusion that communication can only succeed with an honest exchange that culminates in understanding, yes?

Quote:
First, an honest person tells the truth when a lie would serve him in a manner superior in merit or rank; a dishonest person tells a lie when the truth would serve him in a manner superior in merit or rank.
As you can plainly see, by inserting your intended meanings, there is no moral dilemia, just a barely coherent decision. An honest person tells the truth when a lie would have been a superior choice for that person (in an unknown and unqualified state) and a dishonest person tells a lie when the truth would have been a superior choice for that person (in an unknown and unqualified state).

Nothing moral or immoral about it.

The word "better" is a necessarily subjective qualifier, contingent upon personal judgment and the subsequent qualitative application of that personal judgment, as can be readily seen in the example I just provided.

Only when you use the word "better" does the above represent any kind of "moral dillemia," precisely because of the inherent subjectivity the term is contingent upon, as well as the implied comparative quality of the term.

It is "better" than what?

The term is implicitly comparative--regardless of what advertisers have bastardized over the years--that demands qualification.

In your first scenario, for example, by choosing the term "better" you are implicitly arguing that telling the truth for an honest person is qualitatively, judgmentally "better than" telling a lie for that person, yet you offer no rationalle for this qualitative declaration.

What you have so far offered, as my insertion of your intended meanings readily shows, does not cut it.

Quote:
MORE: I suppose one could argue the military rank of a private was subjectively superior to a 4 star general, but that would be nonsense.
And little more than another improper use of terminology, but it certainly could be done. For example, a private, because of his rank, would not be subject to the pressures of waging a war as the general would; nor would the private be subject to the possible guilt associated with the necessities of office a general has--the necessary ordering of men such as the private to their certain deaths--and in that manner, it could very well be argued that a private's rank is "superior" to a general's rank, but again, this is a trivial point, made all the more irrelevant due to the words you did use and the inherent meaning they carry with them, as illustrated above.

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MORE: The earth’s age demonstrates that what people believe (or accent to) has no effect upon objective knowledge.
Incorrect. It has no "effect" on objective facts that are independent of whether or not an individual chooses to believe or disbelieve that they are "objective facts," such as the age of the Earth.

NO ONE can successfully argue or even bring into question in any relevant sense that the age of the Earth is "Not X" once it is known that the age of the Earth is, in fact, "X."

It is a fixed number.

Conversely, the "rightness" or "wrongness" of an action is not a "fixed number" and anyone can and does successfully argue that what one person considers "right" another considers "wrong."

Again, it is inherent within the proper use and application of the terminology; the very purpose of creating the words "right" and "wrong" in a moral sense.

Quote:
MORE: As a proposition objective morality communicates itself as far as possible, whether people accept it or not.
I don't know what you're talking about. Once again, "morality" is not a being that can "communicate itself...whether people accept it or not."

Please clarify.

Quote:
dk (originally): For example, scientists can’t test or demonstrate the existence of “string theory”, but if “string theory” exists then its certainly objective.

ME (responding): Do you mean to say, "But if 'string theory' can be satisfactorily demonstrated to be a fact of nature, then it is certainly objective," because if so, then I concur?

dk (finally): No the objective nature of string theory means it either exists or is non-existent.
Once again, you lost me. A "theory" is also not a being that "exists" in the manner you appear to be implying.

Please re-read my question to you.

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MORE: String theory states a general case that applies to the specific by the process of deduction.
Um...if you mean that string theory is an example of the use of deductive reasoning, then I concur.

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MORE: The objective age of the earth is contingent upon the principle of causality which states that all finite things are caused.
Why do I sense a tremendous amount of straw is about to be stuffed?

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MORE: The principle of causality applied deductively to the the specific case of “age of the earth” denotes an objective necessity, whether we believe it or not, whether the fact we believe is correct or wrong.
Do you mean, the objective age of the Earth is independent of any individual, personal belief? If so, I not only concur, but pointed this out prior.

Quote:
MORE: String theory is also a general law, that can be applied deductively to the specific case to necessitate an objective fact.
What do you mean when you say "applied deductively to the specific case to necessitate an objective fact?" Did you dream you were eating and woke up to find your thesaurus half gone?

Do you mean that string theory has been tested sufficiently to be considered reliable in "its" ability to account for universal symmetry and accurately predict particle position?

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MORE: My point is that, if objective morality exists it states a general principle that when applied to the specific case necessitates an objective fact.
Non sequitur.

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dk (originally): Analogously, if morality exists then it’s objective.

ME (responding): False. It is not analogous. Morality is an abstract concept not a theory that can be demonstrated to be true.

Just like bd, you're concocting an invalid analogy that is not applicable.

dk (finally): - Declarative statements absent supportive text are dogmatic, either explain the comment or name your authoritative source of doctrine.
I did explain my comment. Your analogy was not applicable, because morality is an abstract concept, not a theory that can be demonstrated to be true.

String theory can be demonstrated to be true; the "rightness" or "wrongness" of a human action canot likewise be demonstrated to be true, since there is no one "thing" in contention.

With string theory, either the facts support the theory or they do not. It is therefore contingent upon objective facts "out there."

The "rightness" of masturbation, however, is not a theory with facts that can or cannot "support it." What would that theory of rightness be and what would be the facts "out there" that would support it?

Even if anyone were to argue that the "theory of rightness" is that God exists and mandates morality, it still would not be evidence of an objective morality, since God's mandate would be an example of a subjective judgment call on God's behalf.

It would simply be a decree: "Masturbation is immoral."

That decree, however, does not make the immorality of masturbation an "objective fact;" it would simply mean that masturbation has been decreed by God to be immoral.

Take careful note of the words "decreed by God" for the irrefutable evidence of a subjective action.

Quote:
dk (originally): Morality constructs terms of right and wrong from human nature to regulate conduct with reason.

ME (responding): No, "it" does not, because there is no "it" to personify in this manner. Humans construct terms of right and wrong from our nature to regulate conduct with reason.

dk (finally): - I’m stating a general principle that when applied to a specific case necessitates a objective fact.
No, you are not. You are begging the question by simply declaring that "objective morality" exists as a general principle that accounts for an objective "fact."

In other words, you're not using words properly and in the process presenting nothing but hopeless non-sequiturs.

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MORE: You seriously need to get past your indoctrination.
(snip)(snip)(snip)
With the majority of the nonsense you post, I have no idea what that means either. What "indoctrination" are you talking about?

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dk (originally): or people are slaves to their fate then morality is nonexistent.

ME (responding): Non-sequitur, also on so many levels that I have no idea where to begin.

How does it follow that morality is "nonexistent" if people are "slaves to fate?" Morality, as has been demonstrated ad nauseam is a subjective, human construct; a judgment call based upon social moors and personal empathy/sympathy psychology.

If I were "slave" to a "fate" (and by this I'll assume you mean a predetermined outcome of my existence), how would that preclude me from declaring that masturbation is moral?

dk (finally): - If people don’t participate in their destiny then objective morality doesn’t exist. I’ve said this 10 times if I’ve said it once.
You can say it all you want, but until you clarify what the hell you're talking about, it won't make it true.

How does one "participate" in their "destiny" and why would "objective morality" be in any way contingent upon this (beyond the fact that such a construct cannot possibly exist, of course)?

What was that you had said regarding mere "declarations?"

Quote:
MORE: If a self evident assumption is proven true or false it ceases to be self evident, or an assumption.
This, too, makes no sense. Technically, there is no such thing as a "self evident" assumption. An assumption by "its" very nature, is not "self evident;" it is contingent.

Please cease with the misapplication of colloquial usage of terms.

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MORE: The principle of the excluded middle states something can either be, or not be in the same sense at the same time.
If you mean that the PEM asserts that at least one is true, then I concur.

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MORE: Applying the general principle of the excluded middle
What "general principle" are you talking about? The Principle of the Excluded Middle asserts that, given a statement and its negation, p and ~p, at least one is true, but the PEM must be used in conjunction with the Principle of Non-Contradiction (PNC)--and only together--to assert that exactly one is true.

Both, however, are contingent upon a third principle which asserts their conjunction (unless we're arguing dialetheism, in which case, none of this is applicable).

Again, you're misusing terminology and its ultimate purpose, rendering just about everything you type trivial at best.

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MORE: deductively to the specific case necessitates an objective fact.
(snip …snip)
Those snips came too late.

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MORE: You need to get past indoctrination, to substantiate your declarative statements.
You need to stop taking horse tranqulizers and crystal methamphetamine in place of your morning's coffee.

Quote:
MORE: If you claim something is non-sequitur then demonstrate the point logically, with reason. That's how discussions proceed.
The term "non-sequitur" is self evident. It means that your conclusion cannot be derived from your premises, such as in the above nonsense about the PEM.

Again, I'll demonstrate:

Quote:
Applying the general principle of the excluded middle
Aka: Given p and ~p, the PEM asserts that at least one is true.

Quote:
deductively to the specific case
And exactly how do I do this? Deduction is an inference in which the conclusion about particulars follows necessarily from general or universal premises.

You're telling me to apply a principle of logic that asserts either p or ~p is true in a specific given deductively to the "specific case" (which I'll assume to be "masturbation is moral and masturbation is not moral").

PEM asserts at least one of these givens is true (and both can be true), but that does not mean that either of these givens is ultimately true, i.e., valid when plugged into a syllogism.

It is an assertion for the sake of syllogism, not an immutable law of nature, as you are misconstruing, nor does it:

Quote:
MORE: necessitates an objective fact
P: Masturbation is moral.
~P: Masturbation is not moral.

PEM assertion: at least one is true (both can be true).

Where does that leave us? Which one do we take as true in order to "apply deductively" to the "specific case" that "necessitates an objective fact"?

An assertion for the sake of argument is nothing more than that, yet you are implying that the principle is somehow applicable outside of its use and purpose in a formal, two-value logical syllogism.

Please justify this misapplication.
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