Egg
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2007
- Messages
- 1,585
I think my quibble with this lies in the point that the moral claims we're talking about are entirely reliant on some kind of value axiom. The value cannot be true or false since it's a value and not a claim.I don't believe that moral claims are incapable of being objectively true. But if they were, then yes, including that one.
If we have limited knowledge or limited time in which to make a decision, we may have to act on the basis of claims whose truth we are not thoroughly convinced of. But that is a very different from acting on the basis of a claim we believe is not even capable of being true.
If a claim is no better and no worse objectively supported than the contradiction of that claim, it is irrational to act on one rather than the other.
If we take your sentence as an example:
"If moral claims are not capable of objectively being true, we should just ignore them the same way we ignore other claims that are not capable of being true."
My guess is that the "should" here is based on the axiom of valuing truth. Perhaps knowing the truth might be considered to have intrinsic worth, perhaps it's value lies in better reaching some other value (such as well-being or happiness). For the sake of argument, let's say you consider truth to have an intrinsic value.
My next point is really an issue of language and of how we might state this value. Firstly, I think we should deal with turning it into an objective statement by making it something like "JoelKatz values truth". While such a statement can clearly be either true or false, it's a different statement from the axiom behind the "should".
We can state this value in a way that makes it appear like an objective statement or claim by saying "truth is intrinsically valuable". But the problem here is the one you touched on in your previous post with your "by whom?" question to "ice-cream is enjoyable". As far as we're aware truth can only be intrinsically valuable to somebody. The statement expresses an idea and not a fact about the universe and, as such, cannot be true or false.
I think you're probably right to say that it would be irrational to act on some claim no better supported than another. Since we all rely on such axioms as well-being or truth or family having intrinsic value, perhaps ultimately we have to face that at the heart of all our reasoning lies irrationality - that we need some irrationality to form something to base our rationality on.
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