I've just finished reading Sam Harris' book today and by chance this thread popped up.
<...>
[By the way, it seems that the fact-value distinction and the is-ought distinction are not identical even though they often overlap.]
What I said was that the fact-value distinction and is-ought distinction are not identical.
I'm assuming that you're explaining Harris' philosophy here? Either that or I am entirely unfamiliar with the distinction between fact-value and is-ought. This too is possible, I took these classes long ago. I thought 'is-fact-positive-descriptive' were all basically the same, and the opposites of 'ought-value-normative-prescriptive' and recall thinking they had so many different words for same concept merely to confuse me!
I don't think it is true that "The Nazis are bad" is effectively equivalent to "The Nazis ought not to behave in the way that they do" if you think otherwise then you are asserting that ought-statements can be derived from is-statements, something which most people here (including me, actually) disagree with and which pretty much only Harris seems to agree with (in fact, to some extent it is the crutch of his argument that it is "obvious" that a statement such as "Nazis are bad" is essentially the same as "The Nazis ought not to behave the way they do")
I don't follow this, it seemed to me Westprog had it right. The 'Nazis are bad' is an ought statement because it's a value judgment, it doesn't matter how it's phrased, that's just semantics. It doesn't appear to be 'deriving' it to put it in 'ought' terms, merely translating.
But, even if you say that these are ought-statements in disguise, then what about these statements:
The Nazis were efficient administrators.
'Nazi administration ought to be considered efficient.'
Opinion seems inherent to the sentence, efficient is a value.
(Incidentally, to be a twit, I'd note that
Germans were considered efficient, and the evidence I've seen suggests that Nazi administration was not up to their standard for various reasons.)
The Taliban had an exotic code of morality.
'The Taliban morality prescriptions ought to be considered exotic in light of its rarity and brutality amongst human cultures today.'
Again it appears to be opinion to me, 'exotic' compared to what? All of history? Central Asia (amongst many other places) has had its share of rather...different...morality codes throughout history. It's hardly the only one Westerners would find strange and unpleasant, thus it becomes 'exotic' because it existed in the 21st century.
Are these fact statements or value statements? If you think they are value statements (and I think you would have a good case) then could you explain the ought-statements that they translate into.
I'm wondering if I totally missed something here. Are you saying merely by the use of words you can make a normative statement into a positive one? I mean, for real, not just cheating like that. Or is this just what Harris is doing?
Doesn't that go for just about everything?
Incidentally, from reading this thread and a cursory look around the web, this guy strikes me more as a prospective cult leader than a rational. So he says other religions are irrational and dangerous, don't (just about) all of them say the same, at least somewhere in the book or in private? He uses science as his pretense, but it appears to me like he's looking for Truth.
TM
It appears from just a peek that intolerance seethes from this guy. It's not just religion either, just going from the Wiki he judges people on the basis of whether they believe silly things. Who
cares if someone believes Elvis lives? Who knows how serious they are and why they believe it anyway. Does anyone really want intolerance in the scientific world, or science defined by him? Would the innovators be allowed? What happens to Tesla, Einstein, Cavendish or Newton? What does 'well-being of conscious creatures'
mean? It sounds to me like no bacon or some people become bacon!
