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What is the appeal of "objective morality"

Do the results of an action make a difference to the life and welfare of a person? Does it matter if you live or die, prosper of suffer?

In many cases, it is possible to objectively measure phenomena, and objectively determine whether they meet some criteria.

In all cases, however, the selection of criteria to measure against is subjective.

If it matters to me whether I live or die, but it does not matter to you, then we will judge differently the morality of actions you take that put my life at risk.

Can you recommend an objective measure by which we can resolve such moral conflicts, between what matters to me and what matters to you?
 

Good suggestion, but I prefer two sets of 3D6, provided by me, each of us using one of the sets, and each set being suitably weighted to ensure that all conflicts are resolved in my favor.

Can you recommend an objective measure by which we can resolve this difference of opinion about conflict resolution methods?
 
Good suggestion, but I prefer two sets of 3D6, provided by me, each of us using one of the sets, and each set being suitably weighted to ensure that all conflicts are resolved in my favor.

Can you recommend an objective measure by which we can resolve this difference of opinion about conflict resolution methods?

4D4
 
According to Rand and phwim rational beings cast aside moral considerations and act only in their own self interest like the heroes in Atlas Shrugged.

(I'm glad someone else picked up in the Rand reference it explains a lot.)
First of all, I am thrilled to be the first person to be accused of being both a secret admirer of William Lane Craig and Ayn Rand in a single thread.

But you misrepresent both Rand and me.

If I understand Rand, she says that it is objectively true that one ought, morally speaking, act selfishly.

What I said is that, if there are no objectively true moral norms, then prudence requires that one act selfishly, and to do that effectively, one should try to stop accepting any (necessarily subjective) moral norms.

Not really the same thing at all. For one thing, my conclusion is conditional on a premise that Rand rejects (namely that there are no moral norms).
 
Not to worry. Hedonism is a kind of moral realist theory, so insofar as you reject realism, I don't think you're in Rand's camp.


Sorry, as you may have already guessed, I'm not too well versed in the literature. I had to grope around wikipedia a little to get any sense of what you're saying here. I think I agree with the part that all normative statements are statements of preference, and that they do not refer to an objective feature of the world. And this would make me an Anti-Realist, is that right? Who knew? Anyhow, give it a name.

I do not think that objective morality is a coherent concept. If anyone could give it a rigorous definition, for starters, I would be impressed. But what would it even look like, so to speak? Would an objective moral be discovered or derived? How could one demonstrate its objectivity to another?

Also, I highly doubt that we have any choice but to act in self-interest. Is it possible for an entity that we could describe as having agency to act in any way besides that of self-interest?
 
Sorry, as you may have already guessed, I'm not too well versed in the literature. I had to grope around wikipedia a little to get any sense of what you're saying here. I think I agree with the part that all normative statements are statements of preference, and that they do not refer to an objective feature of the world. And this would make me an Anti-Realist, is that right? Who knew? Anyhow, give it a name.

I apologize for making you look stuff up. Please, feel free to ask me to define any terms that are unfamiliar.

But, yes, you are an anti-realist.

I do not think that objective morality is a coherent concept. If anyone could give it a rigorous definition, for starters, I would be impressed. But what would it even look like, so to speak? Would an objective moral be discovered or derived? How could one demonstrate its objectivity to another?

As I've tried to argue in this thread, there are certain objective non-moral norms (of practical and theoretical reasoning) that I think we all accept. If I'm right about that, then at least we would see that the concept of objective norm is not nonsensical.

But that's a long way from concluding that there are objective moral norms too. Kant tried to show that there are certain values which are objective, in the sense that any rational being would accept the value claim. Among these values are that existence as a rational being is good, not for this or that purpose, but simpliciter. If we can find one objective value, we could use this to derive objective norms.

I'm not saying that Kant's arguments necessarily worked, but that's one approach. Obviously, the realist has quite a task before him if he's to show that there are objective moral norms and that we can come to know them somehow.

Also, I highly doubt that we have any choice but to act in self-interest. Is it possible for an entity that we could describe as having agency to act in any way besides that of self-interest?

Here, I have to disagree. (The thesis you describe here is call psychological egoism, by the way.) People do selfless acts, as when a soldier saves his platoon by jumping on a grenade. The egoist would have to think that the soldier is so confused that he believes his death is more in his self-interest than allowing his fellow soldiers to die. That would require quite a stretch in the notion of self-interest.

Thus, I think that it appears that people do occasionally intentionally act in ways contrary to self-interest.
 
Who's 'we', kemosabe?

The most moral solution is for me to pull out a gun now and shoot you in the back while you're under the impression we're still talking about dice.

Exactly. "Might makes right" - a very easy to adopt basis for morality. Very old school too. My god is the right god because my tribe defeated your tribe. Very old testament.

The modern version would pit my economy against yours, or my political system against other ideas. Adopt my mode of living to gain the boons.
 
Here, I have to disagree. (The thesis you describe here is call psychological egoism, by the way.) People do selfless acts, as when a soldier saves his platoon by jumping on a grenade. The egoist would have to think that the soldier is so confused that he believes his death is more in his self-interest than allowing his fellow soldiers to die. That would require quite a stretch in the notion of self-interest.

Thus, I think that it appears that people do occasionally intentionally act in ways contrary to self-interest.

I'd explain it by suggesting the locus is misplaced. There's a naive idea that "self interest" is stuck to a notion of a "self" which may be erroneous. If I identify strongly with my peers, my "self" may include membership in this group. I "am" a police officer, or a soldier and my little group can be strongly bound to my self identification. One only has to look at how traumatic we feel when such associations are lost - I may lose my sense of who I am when I am fired, or my spouse dies, or any of a number of significant changes in my associations.

Under this rubric, what appears as selfless sacrifice is explained as an expression of this larger idea of "self."

I think it can also appear in the reactions we have to societal changes - why, for instance, gay marriage might feel like an attack on me personally, since part of my extended self is an idea I have about marriage. Or why nationalism is a thing and why there's an emotional connection to immigration policy - I very much identify with this larger (even if fictional) group I call "American." Changes might then be perceived as, not just analyzable economic/political choices, but with a presence in my mind that's very personal.

I'm thinking of the rabid sports fan who feels betrayed when the star player is traded...
 
What you said, if I understand you, is that it is not an objective fact that one ought to believe truth over falsity, generally speaking. If that's the case, it seems to me reasonable to say that there is no (objective) reason to prefer truth to falsity.


Well you are the one who has been talking about "truth vs falsity", and you have asked me the same question about that several times now. And I have replied to you in detail each time about precisely that.

What we are talking about in this thread is William Lane Craig's claim that human "morales" (whatever is meant by "morals", and for which you could not provide any clear definition), are what he calls "objective", and by which he means (afaik) that such a thing (i.e." morales") are inherent and inescapable in humans ... about which I say, that can only mean that the so-called "objective morals" must therefore be part of the physically existing cellular make-up of each human person (otherwise they could not be an "objective", ie factually existing, part of the person ... and from that set of claims, WLC then jumps to saying that "because the morality is objective, that means it must have been planted there by God"

That's what we are talking about in this thread.

About which, you have been saying that (1) you believe he is right to say that the so-called "morality" is objective, and (2) that such morality is beyond the capacity of science to investigate that.

I asked you (at least 4 times now), for any example of what you could call moral behaviour that was inherently impossible for science to study. And so far you have not been able to produce any such example at all.

You also produced examples saying they were objective examples of something somehow connected to some undefined notion called "morals", all of which were not merely the total opposite of ever being objective, but where you yourself actually started each of those examples by noting that they were merely the individuals personal (ie "subjective") "beliefs".

Again - can you please give any example of what you could reasonably call moral behaviour, that is inherently incapable of being studied by science. And that means a "real" behaviour, and not merely a thought or idea in somebody's mind.


I've no idea why you think the highlighted bit is true. Surely mathematical theorems are objective, but you cannot find them "physically existing" in our cells.


If what is called "morality" is said to be "objective" in the sense that I think WLC means, i.e. as an inherent inescapable thing within the human body, then afaik it must be a physical part of the cellular structure that composes every single part of the human individual. If you take away all the cells, then you have no physical "objective" existence left ... if the so-called "morality" is claimed to physically exist as an "objective" feature, i.e. a factual existence, then afaik it must be part of the cell structure (according to WLC's claim of "objective" morality).

As far as the maths are concerned - no! Mathematical theorems are not in themselves "objective" entities which have any physical existence. The theorems, "proofs" , axioms etc., are abstract ideas or explanations that describe the properties of either real existing "objective" events/objects/processes, or else which equally describe hypothetical or predicted events as yet unobserved. The "theorems" are not in themselves, material objects with "objective" existence, i.e. "factual" physical existence.


Here's my claim: we accept certain non-moral norms as objectively true, including the norm that true beliefs are better than false. I think this is not really all that controversial. If it is the case, then at least the notion of objective norms is not nonsensical, and so there is a possibility of objective moral norms in that sense.

That's pretty far from showing that there are objective moral norms. At this point, all I aim to show is that the notion isn't obviously nonsense.


I think it's just a unnecessary, and probably very misleading, practice to keep talking in philosophical terminology about things called "norms". However, I did say to you before that I would not rule out an objective facet of such human characteristics as "morals", i.e. some aspect of particular genes which lead us towards acting in particular ways. That is of course possible. For example, in Psychopathy, afaik, the most identifiable feature (according to medics and psychiatrists) is a "lack of empathy" towards other people ... and afaik, those same medics believe that lack of empathy might be the result of specific cellular features of certain genes in the case of individuals diagnosed or identified as "psychopaths". However, afaik, the classification of "psychopathy" itself, is far from clear and is, or has been, a matter of dispute within that branch of psychiatric medicine, and the term "psychopathy" itself may be just an umbrella term covering a large number of ill-defined or poorly understood characteristics which are mostly if not entirely not specific mental illnesses (i.e., quite different in that sense to certain other mental conditions, such as schizophrenia). Now, I am very far from being a medic/psychiatrist, so much of that may be misguided or inaccurate, however, the point of making that analogy is to say that - I agree that in cases like that, all sorts of aspects of human behaviour, including examples of acts or morality (extremely ill-defined and tenuous as that is), might indeed be linked in some way to physical structural factors in the persons genes ... that is possible.

However, I already discussed that in the previous replies where I said that, despite explanations such as the above, I think it is nevertheless clear that what we are calling acts of moral behaviour, are likely to be governed far more by "nurture" rather than "nature", i.e. as "learnt behaviour" that seems quite clearly driven by our own personal wish to avoid the consequences of alienating everyone else around us by acting in an entirely selfish way, i.e. with no "moral" concern for others in our social group (e.g. a complete lack of any help or compassion towards others), because that is easily seen by any human individual to be a dangerous path of conflict which places the individual in opposition to hundreds or thousands of other people immediately around them.

Children, for example, probably learn that very early in life, when they try to steal the toys of other children in a playgroup ... they may do that very blatantly, just ripping the toy from the hands of the other children around them ... but they are then immediately made aware, often forcibly made aware, that such behaviour will not be tolerated and will lead to nasty consequences for them. So most, if not all, of us probably grow up from the earliest childhood, realising that we cannot simply get our own way with everything by treating others as if they were dispensable objects for which we had no concern, care or compassion at all. You are forced by those around you to learn from the earliest months and years, that you cannot survive unless you exhibit at least a minimum standard of what are in the end "moral" actions and concerns for those around you. And to that extent, that is entirely a learnt behaviour of "nurture" rather than "nature". If there is any discernible contribution from physically existing genes (i.e. "cells"), then I think such contribution is far less clear than the very obvious and huge contribution of that learned societal necessity of acting towards others in a way that aids your own survival and acceptance within the immediate social group.
 
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I apologize for making you look stuff up. Please, feel free to ask me to define any terms that are unfamiliar.

But, yes, you are an anti-realist.



As I've tried to argue in this thread, there are certain objective non-moral norms (of practical and theoretical reasoning) that I think we all accept. If I'm right about that, then at least we would see that the concept of objective norm is not nonsensical.



Saying "we all accept" something is not an argument. The Society for The Secret Wishful Thinking Party Rockers can say, "We all accept that it is best to believe that our beliefs create objective reality. Sometimes." That only means that it is time for them to begin making their argument.


But that's a long way from concluding that there are objective moral norms too. Kant tried to show that there are certain values which are objective, in the sense that any rational being would accept the value claim. Among these values are that existence as a rational being is good, not for this or that purpose, but simpliciter. If we can find one objective value, we could use this to derive objective norms.

I'm not saying that Kant's arguments necessarily worked, but that's one approach. Obviously, the realist has quite a task before him if he's to show that there are objective moral norms and that we can come to know them somehow.



You seem to have a pretty good handle on what you are up against if you wish to show that an objective moral norm is even possible. Do you have at least a working definition of "objective moral norm"?




Here, I have to disagree. (The thesis you describe here is call psychological egoism, by the way.) People do selfless acts, as when a soldier saves his platoon by jumping on a grenade. The egoist would have to think that the soldier is so confused that he believes his death is more in his self-interest than allowing his fellow soldiers to die. That would require quite a stretch in the notion of self-interest.

Thus, I think that it appears that people do occasionally intentionally act in ways contrary to self-interest.


Well, what this Anti-Realist Egoist has to think is that the heroic soldier preferred to jump on the grenade, rather than not. I don't know how else to see it. If he preferred to act in another way than he did, then he wasn't acting of his own volition, in which case, I don't think it is any longer a discussion of morality. I'm picturing some sort of brain parasite that caused his body to lurch and throw itself on the grenade. Then it isn't a story of heroism, it's a story of some bizarre fluke pun intended. Then again, if they award medals to pigeons, maybe the parasite could get one.

Fun discussion. Have a spooky Hallowe'en! :)
 
What we are talking about in this thread is William Lane Craig's claim that human "morales" (whatever is meant by "morals", and for which you could not provide any clear definition), are what he calls "objective", and by which he means (afaik) that such a thing (i.e." morales") are inherent and inescapable in humans ... about which I say, that can only mean that the so-called "objective morals" must therefore be part of the physically existing cellular make-up of each human person (otherwise they could not be an "objective", ie factually existing, part of the person ... and from that set of claims, WLC then jumps to saying that "because the morality is objective, that means it must have been planted there by God"

That's what we are talking about in this thread.

I have never said anything about Craig's discussion of objective morality, because I am not familiar with it.

But the claim that objective morals must "be part of the physically existing cellular make-up of each human person," is just honestly nutty, whether it comes from Craig or from your own inference.

You and I have made no progress in pages of discussion. I believe I'll let this thread die.
 
Saying "we all accept" something is not an argument. The Society for The Secret Wishful Thinking Party Rockers can say, "We all accept that it is best to believe that our beliefs create objective reality. Sometimes." That only means that it is time for them to begin making their argument.

Fair enough. Here's the beginning of an argument for the first norm I mentioned.

First, when I say that a statement is objective, I mean that any rational person acquainted with relevant evidence and arguments regarding the statement would come to the same conclusion regarding its truth. Thus, the usual observational claims about the world around us are objective, as are the claims of mathematics.

Now, I don't think that I can adequately define "rational being", but at a first pass, it is a being capable of reason, of distinguishing good argument from bad, of evaluating evidence and coming to the conclusion most supported by those factors of which he's acquainted. These are, I think, the characteristic features of rationality.

But these characteristic features are aimed at coming to a true conclusion over a false conclusion. Everything about uniquely rational capacities aims at drawing the right conclusion, where "right conclusion" really means "the one that is more likely to be true." Thus, all rational beings have a decided preference for truth, at least broadly and generally speaking, and hence all rational beings recognize that believing truth is better, broadly and generally speaking, than believing a falsehood.

(As usual, there is an issue that actual flesh-and-blood persons are imperfectly rational, which allows for the possibility that real persons can reject an objective claim even if they have enough knowledge to support it, but this is no more or less an issue for objective norms than for other objective statements.)





You seem to have a pretty good handle on what you are up against if you wish to show that an objective moral norm is even possible. Do you have at least a working definition of "objective moral norm"?

I've sketched the meaning of the word "objective" above.

A norm is, roughly, an ought statement or at least an evaluational statement of some form. For the most part, I think that "ought statement" suffices for our purposes.

So, all that's left is to distinguish moral norms from non-moral norms. First, moral norms are norms of practical, not theoretical, reasoning (i.e., they are about what we do, not what conclusions we draw). But it is not so easy, I think, to distinguish moral from non-moral practical norms. Roughly, I think the difference is that the latter exclusively refers to self-interested reasons for action, whereas the former includes concern for others, but this is not as precise as I'd like.

In practice, it is not usually all that difficult to distinguish one from the other, but I am not familiar with demarcation principles in practical philosophy.

Well, what this Anti-Realist Egoist has to think is that the heroic soldier preferred to jump on the grenade, rather than not. I don't know how else to see it. If he preferred to act in another way than he did, then he wasn't acting of his own volition, in which case, I don't think it is any longer a discussion of morality. I'm picturing some sort of brain parasite that caused his body to lurch and throw itself on the grenade. Then it isn't a story of heroism, it's a story of some bizarre fluke pun intended. Then again, if they award medals to pigeons, maybe the parasite could get one.

Fun discussion. Have a spooky Hallowe'en! :)

The standard reply to the kind of reasoning you give above is that you have trivialized the claim of psychological egoism. You first said everything we do is motivated by self-interest, but now you suggest that self-interest is synonymous with choosing what to do. No one denies that the soldier chose to jump on the grenade, and hence preferred it to other alternatives, but it does not seem that doing so could reasonably be called "self-interest".

Only if we define "self-interest" so broadly to mean "whatever I choose to do" could we claim that psychological egoism is plausible, but doing this simply trivializes the thesis to: everyone chooses to do whatever he chooses to do.
 
...First, when I say that a statement is objective, I mean that any rational person acquainted with relevant evidence and arguments regarding the statement would come to the same conclusion regarding its truth. Thus, the usual observational claims about the world around us are objective, as are the claims of mathematics.


No... that is rubbish.

If all humans evaporated a circle still will have the length of its perimeter equaling the product of its diameter and an unchanging constant... the sum of the angles of a triangle will still be a constant number for all triangles.

The sun and the earth will still be pulling against each other with a force that is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers of gravity.

However if humans do not exist then morality will cease to have any meaning or significance.

Thus morality is SUBJECTIVE upon humanity... math and physics and chemistry etc. are not subject to any human existence.
 
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