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You haven't given your position
Yeah, red herring. See how you stopped mentioning verb tenses because they're irrelevant? Now you're trying to change the subject to hide your embarrassment. I'll address your issues with ambiguity as soon as you acknowledge your red herring.Nope.
I pointed out he wasn't referring to the behavior in my argument.
He was referring to my tolerance for trash.
He's made the exact same appeal at least twice since then. It's not a red herring, I'm not teaching you logical fallacies or grammar. I was dead on the nose, he proved it, I can quote him if you're struggling with the reading.
And I'm definitely reevaluating your capacity for rational thinking.
Sorry....that's a different preference.
You're saying that I prefer the trash being taken out like you've never seen the house of some slob who doesn't.
I don't know why you believe that you can safely assume such things based on my statement alone.
Would it be simpler if I was the only possible person in the equation?
I'm alone in the home, i hate taking out the trash, and prefer to not do it.
I think taking out the trash is morally good.
Is that easier? Probably not, right?
Yeah, red herring. See how you stopped mentioning verb tenses because they're irrelevant? Now you're trying to change the subject to hide your embarrassment. I'll address your issues with ambiguity as soon as you acknowledge your red herring.
So you could still say they prefer someone else take out the trash
I'm pretty sure it was part of my original statement.
That's not a preference about the presence of trash. It's a preference of who does it upon a conditional.
That condition was described as "if it must be taken out".
So the conditional is need. Now "it must be taken out" is ambiguous because obviously that's not really the same for everyone. It's dependent upon circumstances as well as other possibilities. Perhaps a roommate decides to take it out. Perhaps one develops a staph infection and while bedridden at the hospital, has their home emptied.
I'm not trying to describe every scenario here. It's not like it matters if I even take it out....hating it the whole time.
They haven't even asserted any connection to morals and real behavior. So far, morals are just statements about possible behavior. It doesn't matter if the trash is taken out or not.
Yea, it really only matters(morally) if the trash situation begins to effect the slob negatively enough for them to need to do something about it in order to not be negatively effected.
Zippy in his very next post....
He literally added a statement to my argument about tolerance for trash to *ahem* clarify it for me.
- p1: "I really dislike smelly garbage sitting in my house."
I never said you claimed p1. You're not following. Your whole tangent with Orel was based on your claim that the preferences in our discussion must be a "statement of preference for a behavior." I explained why you are wrong and then gave p1 as an example of an "explicitly non-behavioral" preference.
I can't even remotely describe whatever your or Orel's "uncontroversial common sense everyone knows" theory is at this point. It appears to have something to do with behavior and nothing to do with preference or morality.
Can you state it simply?
...Feel free to define Orel's theory according to option (2) in the poll, or according to A1 from <this post>...
Just unclear where the disagreement is between you and Orel/Zippy
You think his incidental change in verb tense vindicates your red herring? No, no it doesn't. We can make statements about your preference for the presence of trash in other tenses:I don't have issues with ambiguity. I knew exactly what he was doing. I pointed it out.
Zippy-Then I have no preference that the trash be taken out.
Me- That's not about me taking out the trash, it's about my tolerance of trash.
You- blah blah verb tense doesn't change anything blah.
Zippy in his very next post....
He literally added a statement to my argument about tolerance for trash to *ahem* clarify it for me.
- p1: "I really dislike smelly garbage sitting in my house."
Not only were you wrong....but provably so. Verb tense was entirely relevant and zippy was suggesting exactly what I thought he was.
Already addressed here:
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Already addressed here:
You think his incidental change in verb tense vindicates your red herring?
You really dislike for there to be smelly garbage in your house.
Tense never had anything to do with it. Red herring.
If I didn't make the claim...why are you adding it to my statement?
I never said you claimed p1. You're not following. Your whole tangent with Orel was based on your claim that the preferences in our discussion must be a "statement of preference for a behavior." I explained why you are wrong and then gave p1 as an example of an "explicitly non-behavioral" preference.
With all of this in mind, in the present case we are free to make the preference explicitly non-behavioral:
- p1: "I really dislike smelly garbage sitting in my house."
- p2: "I hate taking out the trash and prefer when someone else does it" (Ana's quote, #362)
- m1: "I see taking out the trash as morally good behavior" (Ana's quote, #362)
As <everyone knows>, p1 can ground m1 even in the presence of p2. When Ana claims that p2 is somehow decisive in precluding grounding preferences such as p1, he is <clearly wrong>.
Okay, let's keep it simple. What is your argument for why Orel's theory is incorrect? Feel free to define Orel's theory according to option (2) in the poll, or according to A1 from <this post>.
Uhhh.... Yeah it is. Changing verb tense doesn't change the subject or the object. We can use any combination of subject/object in any verb tense. Your complaint is that he talked about a different object for your preference. Well la dee da, that isn't because he changed verb tense.Uhhh...it's not a red herring.
No, you need to learn to read. You can make statements about your preferences for things that aren't behavior all you want. Those are going to be at least one premise in your argument for any moral good. That's the whole point.I pointed this out because you specifically didn't want me to formulate a statement with a non-behavioral preference. As an example, I mentioned preferring vanilla.
Already addressed here:
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I am tired of your interminable evasion. Until you answer the following question I am not going to add any new content to our dialogue:
Uhhh.... Yeah it is. Changing verb tense doesn't change the subject or the object. We can use any combination of subject/object in any verb tense. Your complaint is that he talked about a different object for your preference. Well la dee da, that isn't because he changed verb tense.
No, you need to learn to read.
You can make statements about your preferences for things that aren't behavior all you want.
I'm not sure what you're saying here...
That a moral only really matters when it affects you negatively?
Essentially, yes, morality really only matters to the degree that it effects people, either positively or negatively.
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