If countless people had been presenting what they claim is evidence for little green men and none of it had come anywhere close to convincing you then at some point (at least I hope) you'd be confident that they didn't exist. And we're not talking about a few arguments and claims over the last few weeks. We're talking about a serious investigation over decades. And that's not hyperbole.
It depends, what you are presenting is essentially an argument from silence. But you're neglecting a very important part of arguments from silence, which is identification of what kind of evidence would be expected should little green men exist. So what evidence for God do you think is missing that makes the supposed lack compelling?
You'd think me foolish for still entertaining some thoughts on them being real. Then again, those who do believe in little green men would suggest that simply because I have not been convinced, how could I claim to know with confidence that no such beings exists?
Yeah, you're basically arguing that something is false because you are not aware of compelling evidence that it is true. It's an argument from ignorance at worst, an argument from silence at best.
Yeah, you've basically demonstrated exactly what I stated. You're convinced by an argument from ignorance.
What? Your qualifying statement about sufficiency to live a meaningful life leaves a huge spread.
You mustn't forget that any argument that denies I can be justifiably confident about any given matter and is simply arrogant also applies to you.
Again, I am a philosophical skeptic. I don't believe what I think to be true can be held up as knowledge, and only accept it as the best I can arrive at for pragmatic purposes. I am painfully aware of various epistemic challenges ranging from what I see as crippling(Munchaussen's trilemma, Gettier problems) to difficult(Hume's fork, Hume's criticism of deduction, the complete lack of formal justification for abduction). I certainly wouldn't bet my life on my supposed knowledge.
Yes, you do. Don't play games with me. I don't appreciate it.
No games, your meaning is unclear to me.
It's a problem that has yet to be addressed. If I steal candy from a child then the morality is in there somewhere. You have the act and the context. I don't think it's that difficult. Why is it a problem for you?
I don't know the consequences, your design in stealing candy from a child, your relationship with the child, etc. The act is just one consideration, and I would argue it is the smallest part.
If someone wants to impose their will on others then that will happen however one determines morality, be it objective or subjective. If enough people consider something to be wrong then that society will deem it wrong. They may decide on punishment for doing what they consider to be wrong. Again, that happens whether morality is subjective or objective. If it's an argument that applies to both, it's useless.
Sure, but without some objective element what is and isn't deemed wrong is arbitrary. The holocaust can't be deemed wrong because the society that engaged in it viewed it as right at the time, chattel slavery can't be held to be wrong because it was approved of in the society that it was done in. Everything is permissible, and the only way to determine what is right or wrong is whoever has both the capacity and desire to provide external censure of some form. The only rule, if there is nothing objective about morality, is strength and will to power. Which renders any moral discussion pointless, except perhaps through some form of collusion. Even then, there remains an objective moral standard in might makes right, though.
Should I ruin my shoes to save the child? It seems simple to me And you asked the question precisely because it's a simple moral problem. So I'd say that you're wrong.
Is it simple? And what pertinent feature alters the simplicity from the one you presented in your question?
If you can't determine what the objective moral position actually is, then it's a complete waste of time claiming that it exists.
Perhaps, but I don't see morals and ethics as something that requires debate. Because the only person I'm concerned with in that regard is myself.
It's galactically simple. Is an act right or wrong in itself? Or only relative to the context. Neither you nor anyone else addressed that in any way that approaches a reasonable argument I'm afraid.
Again, you're presenting a false dilemma. Objective morality doesn't have to be based in the act itself.
Maybe you've only come across the question and not the context. Singer asked it to highlight the different ways we help others. It's a simple answer when it's the drowning kid and new shoes. We can all answer it because it's a black and white question in that context. But me not going out to dinner and send the money to a charity which might accentuate in a child's life being saved? That is a lot more nuanced. More difficult to answer. And, what Singer wanted to show, people don't like answering it because it makes them think about what they do themselves. It's why you won't answer it.
I've encountered the context, and my read of it wasn't about "different ways we help others" but to raise a challenge about how we tend to have an out-of-sight out-of-mind view of morality. I brought it up because you seem to be presenting a dilemma between spending money on yourself and addressing the needs of others, which you seem to think is somehow complicated by a lack of immediacy and visibility. So my raising it is in line with Singer's context.
Oh, good grief. You obviously don't. You are judging me right now because of my arguments and my beliefs.
Am I? You seem to think yourself a mind reader, that's twice in one post.
Because you haven't answered it. It's not easy to answer although It's a simple yes or no. Am I wealthy? Do I have money to spare? Is it a special ocassions? Do I give generously to charities anyway? You gave the Singer question in response because it's a blazingly simple to answer in contrast. It's why Singer asked it, to highlight the difference between the two questions.
No, Singer wasn't highlighting the difference. He was comparing the similarities and asking what the pertinent difference is that makes us act like they're not equivalent.
It appears that you don't understand that.
That's a fallacy. We don't vote on what is right or wrong. If we all individually agree that something is wrong then we can all take steps to prevent someone from doing it. We each think that stealing personal goods is generally wrong and it seems that almost everyone agrees (even thieves know it's wrong). So...we make laws to punish those that steal.
Oh? So how do we "take steps'? How does such collective action take place? And what is it about popularity of an opinion that is supposed to make it wrong?
It's why gay marriage is legal but stealing my car isn't. Enough people individually came to those decisions.
If you say so, though I'm not sure how the fact that people supposedly came to it on their own is supposed to make it any less arbitrary if there's nothing objective about right and wrong.
Two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner.