I just work with what's already there courtesy of thousands of years of geniuses arguing about the topic.
So far Harris doesn't make the cut into that elite group.
That is anything but a loss for Sam Harris.I just work with what's already there courtesy of thousands of years of geniuses arguing about the topic.
So far Harris doesn't make the cut into that elite group.
Geniuses arguing for thousands of years and they only figured out slavery was a bad idea 150 years ago? I suspect "geniuses" means something a bit different to you.
I would hope not.
That is anything but a loss for Sam Harris.
Paul
![]()
![]()
![]()
Kant (1724-1804) and Bentham (1748-1832), to name two of those geniuses, were against slavery. They were well in advance of their time, in a way which Harris simply isn't. So if moral prescience about future attitudes is evidence of having something to contribute to the topic, Kant and Bentham have it in spades and Harris has bupkis.
Just saying.
Hopefully armed with these new facts you will amend your view.
I suggest that it is not mere coincidence that Harris' supporters are those unfamiliar with moral philosophy and its history, while those who possess such familiarity think that what he is saying is a combination of old news and simple error.
Hmmm...that two 'geniuses' managed to happen upon an idea that the merest schoolchild knows today is an example of the value of their arguments?
I'm not unfamiliar with moral philosophy and it's history if undergraduate and graduate courses plus some bloody thick books are what you mean, or various bibles if that's what AlBell means.
Whoa there, come back with those goal posts.
What on Earth could possibly count as a goal for you, if being decades or centuries ahead of their time and giving rigorous reasons for doing so doesn't get the ball into your goalposts? What must a moral philosopher do to impress fls?
Then how is it you are so totally unfamiliar with figures like Bentham and Kant?
How is it you do not appear to know utilitarianism or the is/ought distinction from holes in the ground? Forgive my skepticism but this is like someone claiming to be a physics postgraduate who doesn't know who Newton or Einstein were and has no clue about their work.
I sort of agree and sort of disagree. Provided the action is sufficiently specific, then yes. Just as the sky does not always look blue, and does not look blue to a colorblind person. But under particular conditions, the sky does in fact emit a particular color spectrum. In this same sense, there is only one correct moral value, but not necessarily only one correct interpretation. A colorblind person sees things differently, but does not see 'incorrectly'.So, if I understand you well, you would take this statement to be correct:
A specific action has one single correct interpretation. If there is a difference in opinion regarding the morality of an action, someone is wrong.
If multiple people can have irreconcilably different *correct* opinions over precisely the same thing, then yes. But I'm not sure what it would even mean for an opinion to be 'correct' about something that's subjective as you are using that term.This seems to flow logically from what you are saying. If multiple people can have different correct opinions, say half thinks it is good and half thinks it is bad, then morality would not be subjective but objective by definition.
Do you disagree with this?
Since Sam Harris' views are based on utilitarianism, the best strategy would simply to be focusing on defeating his argument using the arguments that would be used to defeat the argument for utilitarianism.
That's an odd thing to presume.
That would be unexpected.
I sort of agree and sort of disagree. Provided the action is sufficiently specific, then yes. Just as the sky does not always look blue, and does not look blue to a colorblind person. But under particular conditions, the sky does in fact emit a particular color spectrum. In this same sense, there is only one correct moral value, but not necessarily only one correct interpretation. A colorblind person sees things differently, but does not see 'incorrectly'.
If multiple people can have irreconcilably different *correct* opinions over precisely the same thing, then yes. But I'm not sure what it would even mean for an opinion to be 'correct' about something that's subjective as you are using that term.
A person with normal vision will say the sky looks blue and the grass looks green. A person who is color blind will see no such difference. This doesn't make color subjective.
The sky looks blue in the day time. It looks black at night. This doesn't make color subjective.
A person's opinion of the morality of an action is somewhat like what color they see something is. It tells us something about them, something about the circumstances under which they perceive the object, and something about objective properties of the object itself. It is the job of scientific inquiry to separate these things for morality, just as it did for color.
Not really. Most people don't know about them so it's a reasonable presumption any given person does not.
However I didn't presume it, I concluded it based on your posts thus far. To me they seem inconsistent with you having any meaningful degree of familiarity with Kant, Bentham or the is/ought division.
Whereas the academic philosophers who have reviewed Harris' work all seem to be saying exactly what I have been saying: that it's rehashed utilitarianism and that his claims to solve the is/ought problem fail to do so.
On the contrary, we get people pretending to possess expertise in fields they have no functional competence in all the time around here.
Since Sam Harris' views are based on utilitarianism, the best strategy would simply to be focusing on defeating his argument using the arguments that would be used to defeat the argument for utilitarianism.
A person's opinion of the morality of an action is somewhat like what color they see something is. It tells us something about them, something about the circumstances under which they perceive the object, and something about objective properties of the object itself. It is the job of scientific inquiry to separate these things for morality, just as it did for color.
This seems to correspond with something i was thinking about earlier. The property of the act which allows people to distinguish it as moral or immoral, such as whether a child suffers or an animal dies, is not changed by having an opinion about that act.
Linda