That's precisely what I'm saying. Hydrogen is flammable also expresses feeling I have about hydrogen. Murder is bad also describes things that will happen if you perform certain acts. One is written in an normative way and the other is written in a descriptive way, but as I argued, you can push in from both sides to fuzzy boundary.
This makes no sense. "Hydrogen is flammable" is not a statement meant to convey feeling. No person alive, other than apparently yourself, would take it that way. Likewise, "murder is bad" is generally not meant to describe the factual reality of murder. You can ask anyone who says that murder is bad what they mean by it and you will generally find that they are conveying opinion, not describing facts.
I can see the mistake you are making now, however. You say "But that they have that opinion is a fact! So it's the same kind of statement." But that is missing the point. The reason that "murder is bad" is not a factual statement is because there is no "I think that" attached to it, and because "Bad" is not expressed in practical terms. This is an important distinction that you are ignoring in order to make your point. But the simple fact of the matter is that phrasing the statement to remove the element of opinion makes it a different statement. So no, "murder is bad" and "Hydrogen is flammable" are not the same kind of statement. Rather they differ in the same sense that "Murder is bad" differs from "Murder causes people to die".
I see no sensible reason to try to equivocate the two by means of saying "But really, murder is bad IMPLIES a reality about murder which is objectively true, so that makes the entire statement objective truth." No. That is simply bending logic in an attempt to make a point. The distinction is there.
Not quite. What I'm saying is that opinions are relationship facts. We simply state them in the 'primitive' way because that's the must useful.
You seem to be saying that people are currently expressing themselves in a subjective way because they do not understand the underlying reality enough to make purely factual statements that express the same thing.
If that's what you're saying, you give people too much credit by far. A person why says "god is good" is not expressing an underlying reality in a primitive way. He is not expressing anything meaningful. His statement is rooted in ignorance and as far from objectively true as it is possible to be. A person who says "murder is bad" generally means to express the same sentiment. It is not based on reason. It is only marginally more meaningful than the previous statement. It is still subjective.
For example, consider "it's raining out". What could be a more descriptive, factual statement? But if someone says "it's raining out", how is that any different from "I have collected facts and evidence that, in my opinion, justify concluding that it's in fact raining out"? See how fact statements and opinion statements can each be pushed in towards the other from either side? You just have to figure out the facts and processes that lead to the opinion, and then you can turn the opinion statement into a fact statement.
I see your point, but disagree with the conclusion. "It is raining out" is an honest attempt to present facts about reality. "Murder is bad" is generally NOT meant to do that. No, it's not even an honest attempt to express feelings, which are indeed part of reality, because in that case "I think that" would have been added to it. "Murder is bad" is often an attempt to present someone's feelings AS objective facts about murder itself. It is misleading in this way.
It is true that you can turn the statement INTO a fact statement by changing the wording. But then it means something else from what it was intended to mean. You are making a mistake by assuming that all opinions are honest efforts to present facts about reality. And even if they were all intended to do just that, those that fail horribly could still not reasonably be called factual statements. There is such a thing as a meaningless statement, you know.
There are several ways to discuss murder. One is to honestly present the facts. Another is to present one's opinion and claim that it is fact. (NOT: fact that they have that opinion). The second is clearly different from the first, and your attempt to equivocate the two does nothing but remove useful information.
Sure, but height is different from person to person. Relationship facts can differ from person to person, that doesn't make them less facts.
Okay. If I say "People are tall", is that a factual statement? Is it true? Is it false?
Of course not. People are only tall relative to other things. Furthermore, the difference in height varies a great deal from person to person. This kind of blanket statement can never be universally true or false, not when discussing something like "tallness".
The exact same holds for murder. "Murder is bad". Really? For who? When? What is meant by bad? Is this statement true or false? Are people who disagree right or wrong? It's neither.
Go back to "it's raining out". If you understand that to really be saying "I have evidence that justifies my believing that it's raining out" (which is what anyone who says "it's raining out" means), it now becomes different from person to person. You may have no reason to believe it's raining out.
Yes, but regardless of whether it is successful or not, it is an honest attempt to convey fact. "Murder is bad" is not. It's an entirely different kind of statement, that cannot be true or false. This is because "Bad" is not defined in any objective fashion: Its meaning varies from person to person. Therefore it's subjective.
Yes, as much as "murder is bad" is. That's precisely what I'm saying.
No, this is simply wrong. Hydrogen is flammable, regardless of what anyone thinks of it. You can test if hydrogen is flammable by igniting it. It will subsequently be inflamed, regardless of what anyone thinks of it. There is no human interpretation necessary.
Nope. Our opinions are just as much part of reality as rocks and rivers are.
The belief exists, obviously. But the belief itself does not directly affect reality (OTHER THAN ITSELF). It is simply ludicrous to claim that one's beliefs affect whether or not hydrogen is flammable or whether the sun will come up tomorrow. It is false. It is absurd. It is absolute insanity.
If you insist on claiming this, then there is nothing I can do to convince you otherwise. If you insist that your beliefs will determine reality, then this discussion is pointless.
You choose to see one side of the equivalence I'm arguing. I'm saying that there are only facts. Opinions are a species of fact.
This is false. It is a fact that humans have opinions. That does not make the things that the opinions are expressing facts. If my opinion is that red is really blue, then that is not a fact. If my opinion is that a certain band is good, then it's a fact that I have that opinion, but the opinion itself is not fact.
That is only because you choose to view it that way. You could equally well choose to view it as "murder itself has precisely the properties needed for me to consider it bad". Now it's about murder itself.
No. Those statements are completely different. Someone who says that "Murder is objectively bad" is NOT trying to make a statement about the properties of murder that makes them consider it bad. Those properties can be inferred, yes. But that is not what the statement is meant to say.
There is no difference between "I am so constructed as to think that murder is bad" and "murder is constructed such that I will think it's bad". These are, again, relationship facts, just like "hydrogen is flammable" which states that hydrogen is such that it will interact with oxygen (which exists and is precisely what it is) in a particular way.
Sure, but the first two statements are ones you just came up with, and not the topic of discussion. We were talking about "murder is bad", which is entirely different from "I think murder is bad" or "Murder has certain properties that make me consider it bad".
But it doesn't differ from person to person. I, JoelKatz, like ice cream does not conflict with you, Sophronius, do not like ice cream.
So the enjoyment of ice cream does differ from person to person. So the enjoyment of ice cream IS a subjective matter. Otherwise it could not vary from person to person. So the statement that ice cream is enjoyable is subjective.
You seem to be confused with the statement "I enjoy ice cream", which is a factual statement, and entirely different from the statement "Ice cream is enjoyable" (which makes a general statement that cannot be true for everyone). Of course, if a clause "For most people" were to be added, it would become a factual statement again.
Now, if someone says that ice cream tastes good, they do usually mean "for me" or "for most people". This does not hold for someone who says that "murder is objectively bad", as the word objectively is meant to indicate.