There is no other plausible explanation. I'm not sure what you're referring to. What is your explanation for people's general agreement that torturing children for pleasure is wrong other than that it's a property of torturing children for pleasure that human beings will generally agree that it's wrong?
I have already addressed this argument half a dozen times. Maybe seven is your lucky number, I don't know, but I don't see how it would be productive to do so again if you ignore it every time.
And yet, every time I ask you why you think morality is objective, you respond by pointing out that colour is objective, as if this answers the question.
That's a cartoon version of my argument. But every scientific conclusion will be of the form "I can't think of any other/better explanation for the evidence". So to the extent that's a refutation, it's a universal refutation of all scientific conclusions. You can always say "your explanation is wrong, there's a better one you can't think of".
No, that's what things like peer review are for. If nobody else can think of a better explanation, it is entirely valid. The issue here is that you fail to address the counter arguments that are subsequently put forth, saying only that you can't imagine how your explanation could be wrong.
Feel free to refute them if you can.
Pointing out that they are logical fallacies should have done the trick. Of course now you claim that I misunderstand your argument. So you'll have to point out how your "colour is objective" argument does prove that morality is objective. Until you do that, there is no point in trying to refute it.
You seem to be responding here to argument other than mine. For example, I never said killing infants was objectively wrong. (And I don't think it is. Again, "killing infants is wrong" is like "the sky is blue". Sure, sometimes, not other times. That doesn't make the sky's blueness subjective.)
You say that killing infants is wrong in the same way that the sky is blue. Anyone would take that to mean that killing infants is objectively wrong. You also said that science would figure out why killing children is wrong, not why we consider it wrong, but why it IS wrong. You also said that the morality of an action doesn't depend on what humans think of it. You further stated outright that morality is objective.
I don't see how you could possibly say then, that you never claimed that killing infants is objectively wrong, when this is so clearly implied by everything you have said up until this point.
I very strongly suspect that our disagreement is mainly due to your or mine inability to understand your position. However, every time up until know when I paraphrased your position, you said "yes, I am clearly saying that". You make statements like "morality is the property of an act rather than of human judgement" or "morality is measuring an objective value, we just don't know what yet" yet proceed to act as if you have made no extraordinary claims, as if you are only stating the obvious. I find it all very confusing, yet however charitably I try to interpret you, no matter how many times I ask for clarification, what you say still doesn't make sense to me.
Edit: Anyway, "killing infants is wrong" is a normative statement, while "the sky is blue" is a descriptive statement. One is a value judgement, the other a description of how something is perceived. Your attempt to equivocate two fundamentally different statements makes no sense. But then, that is basically what our whole argument is about, as I understand it. You insist that normative statements are the same as descriptive statements. I don't understand why anyone would consider that a sensible position, so I expect that you'll say I misunderstand. But I don't see how.
If our minds "paint the world" then how do you explain the agreement that torturing children for pleasure is wrong? Coincidence? Magic?
This'll help. I mean, it's not as if we have gone over this 7 times already.
I am going to stop replying to this every time you bring this up until you make an attempt to understand and reply to the responses I have given so far.
Look at, for example, ice cream preferences. What could be more subjective than that? Yet ice cream preferences are not random. There is a clear majority preference for vanilla ice cream. I defy you to come up with any conceivable explanation to explain this preference that doesn't involve objective properties of vanilla ice cream such as how much sugar it has, inherent properties that affect how it interacts with particular physical sensors that make up normal human taste and smell (properties it would have even if humans didn't exist), and so on.
Ok, this is basically the same argument again in a new coat, but fine, let's call it the ninth time.
Yes, the properties of ice cream determine (in part) the preferences that people have for various flavours. Nobody has ever denied this and there is 0 point in bringing it up. The reason that the argument doesn't work is because, as you just admitted yourself, the preferences are still subjective. The preferences are not, as you insist in the case of morality, a purely objective property of the ice cream itself. There is not a single, objective value that ice cream preferences are supposed to measure. The preference for vanilla ice cream is not the "correct" one, no matter how many people prefer it. Science will never determine that vanilla "should" be desired, or that people who prefer peanut butter flavoured ice cream are "wrong" to do so.
I sincerely hope that this is the last time that you claim that I am arguing that moral agreement is due to coincidence or magic.
The alternatives to objective properties that explain the agreements are coincidence and magic.
Yea, that.
So, just a question. If morality is purely the property of the acts themselves, how come people can disagree on the morality of a single action?