His position does not stop at mere correlation, but it entails correlation. For example, note the word "because" in poll option #2. Orel thinks preferences are the reason for moral judgments.
I got that. I realized we wouldn't just be talking about the moral behavior once you two started adding presuppositions to my statements.
I told Orel that
A2 would be interesting to discuss, but I don't actually know what he thinks about ice cream (or whether he believes that the eating or tasting of ice cream is a behavior).
I don't see why any of it would be interesting to discuss. Again...
I can imagine presuppositions that explain a moral statement as well.
If my preferences don't match your preferences....
What exactly is the truth value of these preferences?
In some ways this comes down to the burden of proof, but since you are offering a critique of Orel's position you are required to provide the argument against it. The only argument you have given resides in your trash example, but no one in the conversation thinks your argument works (Orel, Chriliman, and myself).
The trash example doesn't work....because there's an almost endless list of possible preferences both real and non real, optional and non optional, related to the moral behavior or not....as long as the only limit is one's imagination (and that is the only limitation I can see).
My critique is....so what? It's got zero relation to truth. Pointing out that you're capable of imagining preferences doesn't explain morality in any meaningful way. Each possible preference (even impossible ones) has the same relationship to truth.
Right, and therefore you think that it is rational to both say that murder is evil, and to have no preference as to whether or not murder generally take place. That's crazy.
Is it someone I'd like dead?
Everyone else in the conversation believes that if someone says that murder is evil then they have a preference that murder not take place.
Yeah? Is that what they're doing?
Do you think you have a mind full of moral values or preferences?
Are you going around saying "this is good...that's bad....these are ok" in your mind?
This question about correlation is, as Orel said, uncontroversial. We prefer that evil things not occur. That's inherent in the definition of 'evil'.
No offense but when you generalize the term that much...it doesn't mean anything.
We make moral judgments about behavior. Just behaviors. We can end up accidentally using morals to describe a non behavior....like "Democracy is a morally good social system"....but we don't really mean that. It's just that the word good is very broad and easily used in multiple contexts.
It could be used to describe something that functions well....a good car.
It could be used to describe something that meets certain criteria....a good survey.
Something desirable....a good price.
These are simply all too ambiguous. I can prefer a good car at a good price but still see it as immoral if I use deception to do so....right? I can see using deception as preferable to being deceived. Try making a moral statement out of that.
The point here is that this has no real ability to explain anything about morality.
Go ask a salesman if he sells more if he presents a lot of choices and the customer chooses their preference....or if he just tells them what they want.
As for a counter argument....sure, I can make one. It won't have any explanatory power either but hey....it will supercede preferences, and make morality objective. That feels rather like showing off though.